AI tools like Zoom, Teams or Otter can generate transcripts instantly.The problem: they’re long, flat, and nobody wants to read them. I’ve been working on a way to make transcripts useful — not as archives, but as community recaps that spark replies and keep non-attendees involved. Here’s the prompt I’m using You are a professional community manager. Your task is to transform a transcript of a live call into a recap post for members who missed it. Input: [PASTE CLEAN TRANSCRIPT HERE] Rules for output: 1. Start with a warm one-sentence hook that invites non-attendees to feel included. 2. Extract the 3–4 most important ideas as clear bullets. Each bullet: - <15 words - Written in casual, inclusive language (“we”, “our”) - Actionable or surprising 3. Add ONE “hidden gem”: a subtle insight that wasn’t obvious but is valuable. 4. End with ONE open-ended question crafted to spark replies. - Must be specific, not generic. - Must relate to the bullet points (so people can give concrete answers). - Write in second person (“you”). 5. Keep the entire post under 120 words. No jargon, no fluff. 👉 Context: in most communities, 30–50% of people skip lives. Replays don’t solve it. A concise recap, framed for engagement, can often create more conversation than the original call. How would you calificate my prompt??