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Master Design with Copilot

Discover how Copilot helps design teams think more clearly, communicate ideas, and reduce admin time. From shaping briefs to refining copy and summarising feedback, Copilot supports designers before, during, and after the creative process.

How Copilot Supports Design Teams

Design Prompt Library – Everyday Prompts You Can Reuse

Explore our Prompt Library to see real‑world examples of how to use Copilot effectively. These ready‑to‑use prompts are designed to help you get better results faster, using the GCSE method to keep requests clear, focused, and practical.

Ideas & Creative Thinking:

Help me explore ideas around this concept so I can develop it further. I’m in the early stages, so use the information provided and suggest directions I could explore.

Generate ideas I could use as inspiration for this project. Use the context provided and present the ideas as a clear list.

Help me think through different creative approaches to this piece of work. Use the information available and keep suggestions practical. 

Expand on this initial idea so it’s clearer and more complete. Use the existing description and build on it.

Briefs & Requirements:

Turn this information into a clear design brief. Use the details provided and structure it so the requirements are easy to understand.

Rewrite this brief so it’s clearer and more focused. Use the existing content and remove any ambiguity.

Summarise the key requirements from this brief. Use the full document and present the output as bullet points.

Highlight any unclear or conflicting requirements in this brief. Use the information provided and explain what needs clarification.

Feedback & Review:

Summarise this feedback so I can quickly understand what’s being asked. Use the comments provided and keep the summary clear.

Group this feedback into common themes. Use the feedback as the source and present the results clearly.

Rewrite this feedback so it’s clearer and more actionable. Use the existing comments and improve clarity.

Identify the most important feedback I should prioritise. Use the information provided and explain why it matters.

Communication & Explanation:

Help me explain this design decision clearly. Use the project context and write it in plain language. 

Rewrite this explanation so it’s easier for non‑designers to understand. Use the existing content and simplify wording.

Create a short design rationale I can share with stakeholders. Use the information provided and keep it concise.

Turn this design explanation into something suitable for an email or document. Use the same message and keep it clear.

Documentation & Handover:

Create clear documentation to support this design. Use the information provided and structure it for easy reference.

Summarise this project so someone else can pick it up easily. Use the available information and keep it practical.

Write a clear handover note for this work. Use the existing content and focus on what others need to know.

Turn these notes into something suitable for saving in project documentation. Use the content provided and tidy it up.

Reviewing & Refining:

Review this content and suggest improvements to clarity. Use the existing text and explain where changes would help.

Rewrite this content so it’s more structured and easier to read. Use the same information and improve flow.

Check this document for consistency in language and tone. It’s been edited by multiple people, so align it throughout.

Simplify this content without losing the key message. Use the existing wording and keep it concise.

Create a short summary of this design work I can refer back to later. Use the project information and focus on essentials.