A plumber in Round Rock told me he spends an hour every night writing follow-up emails to customers who asked for quotes that day. Five or six emails, each one different because each job is different. He types them on his phone sitting in his truck. Some nights he skips it entirely because he is too tired. Those skipped emails are lost revenue.
I showed him how to use ChatGPT to draft those emails in under five minutes total. He now does all six in the time it used to take him to do one. The emails sound like him, reference the specific job, and close with a clear next step. His close rate went up because he stopped letting leads go cold overnight.
This is the single easiest AI win for any service business. No setup fees, no software to install. Here is how to do it.
Why most business emails are bad
Most customer emails from small businesses fall into two traps. The first is too short: "Hey, here's your quote. Let me know." No warmth, no reason for the customer to choose you over the other companies they called. The second is too long: three paragraphs about your company history that nobody asked about.
The sweet spot is 4 to 6 sentences. Acknowledge what the customer needs, reference something specific about their situation, state what you are offering, and give them one clear action to take next. That formula works for quotes, follow-ups, thank-yous, and complaint responses. ChatGPT hits that formula every time because it has seen millions of professional emails.
The prompt that works for follow-up emails
Open ChatGPT on your phone or laptop. Paste this prompt, then fill in the blanks with your real details:
Write a follow-up email from [your name] at [your business name] in [your city]. The customer's name is [name]. They asked about [describe the job or service]. I quoted them [price or range]. The tone should be friendly, confident, and short. End with a clear call to action to schedule or confirm. Keep it under 6 sentences.
That is it. You will get a draft in about three seconds. Read it once, change anything that does not sound like you, and hit send. The whole process takes less than a minute per email.
A landscaper in Georgetown told me he modified this prompt slightly for his business. He added "mention that we handle HOA approval paperwork" because that is his main differentiator in the neighborhoods he serves. Now every follow-up email mentions it automatically.
Four more email types you can handle in seconds
Thank-you after a completed job. Prompt: "Write a short thank-you email to [customer name] after completing [job type]. Mention that we appreciate referrals and link to our Google review page. Keep it warm and brief." This is the email that gets you five-star reviews. Most businesses never send it because it feels like a chore. With AI, it takes ten seconds.
Response to a complaint. Prompt: "Write a professional response to a customer complaint. The customer is upset about [issue]. Acknowledge their frustration, explain what we will do to fix it, and offer [resolution]. Tone: calm, empathetic, solution-focused. Do not be defensive." Complaint emails are the hardest to write when you are frustrated. Let AI handle the first draft so your emotions do not leak into the reply.
Re-engagement for past customers. Prompt: "Write a short email to a past customer we haven't heard from in 6 months. Remind them of the work we did ([describe it]). Offer a [discount/seasonal special/free check-up]. Keep it casual and non-pushy." A Cedar Park HVAC company I work with sends these every quarter. They get a 12% response rate, which turns into about $8,000 in recovered revenue per quarter.
Appointment reminder. Prompt: "Write a friendly appointment reminder for [customer name]. Their appointment is [date and time] for [service]. Include our address. One short paragraph." This replaces bland automated reminders with something that sounds human.
How to make it sound like you, not a robot
The number one complaint I hear from business owners in Liberty Hill and Cedar Park is "it does not sound like me." That is because generic prompts produce generic output. The fix is context. Tell ChatGPT how you talk.
Add one line to any email prompt: "Match this tone: [paste a real email you have sent before that you liked]." ChatGPT will mimic your sentence length, word choices, and personality. Do this once, save the prompt as a note on your phone, and reuse it every time.
Another trick: tell it what not to do. "Do not use exclamation points. Do not say 'I hope this email finds you well.'" Constraints make AI output better because they narrow the range of acceptable outputs to something that sounds like a real person.
The five-minute daily email routine
Here is what the most efficient business owners I work with do. At the end of the workday, they open ChatGPT and batch all their emails at once. Follow-ups from today's quotes, thank-yous from completed jobs, reminders for tomorrow. They paste the prompt, swap in the customer details, review the draft, and send. Six emails in five minutes instead of thirty.
The key is making it a habit, not a project. You do not need automations or integrations. Just open ChatGPT at 5 PM every day and knock out your emails before you leave. That single habit will improve your close rate, increase your reviews, and keep past customers coming back.
If you want help building a complete email system for your business, including templates for every scenario and a custom voice profile that sounds exactly like you, book a session at wilcoailab.com/contact or email tj@wilcoguide.com. We also cover this in our free quarterly AI workshops across Williamson County.
Founder of WilCo AI Lab. Runs a 145,000+ subscriber newsletter network. Co-founded lightbreak. Builds with AI every day from Liberty Hill, TX.