Sample delivered report
Your AI Anxiety Check Report
This is a fuller sample of the paid output. The real report would be generated from the buyer's answers, but this shows the intended value: curated next steps, practical modules, copy-paste prompts, and a plan that turns anxiety into controlled practice.
How to read this sample
This is proof of the paid report, not your personal result.
Your own report would use your answers to choose the result type, pressure pattern, learning modules, prompts, and library path. This sample shows the kind of value you are unlocking.
Executive summary
You do not need more AI noise. You need a safer first operating system.
Your answers suggest that AI feels risky because the boundary is unclear. You are not asking "am I smart enough?" You are asking "what can I safely use this for, and how do I know whether the answer is reliable?"
This report filters that problem into a short learning path. Your first goal is not to master AI. Your first goal is to build one repeatable, low-risk work habit where AI helps you think, draft, summarise, or check without taking over judgement.
Spend the next 7 days building a safe-use routine around one real but low-risk work task. Ignore tool comparisons, advanced automation, and workplace hype until you can complete that routine calmly.
1. Your readiness radar
Your strongest signal is caution, not inability.
The radar below is not a judgement of your intelligence. It shows where your current friction sits. In this example, safety clarity is high-pressure, workflow awareness is emerging, and prompt fluency is still early.
You may have used AI casually, but not yet as a reliable work habit.
You can name useful work tasks, but need help choosing the safest first one.
You are highly aware that privacy, accuracy, and judgement matter. That is an asset.
You need prompt structures that ask AI to clarify, check, and stay within boundaries.
2. Your next seven days
What to do, what to ignore, and what to build.
The value of this report is not that it gives you every possible AI tip. It removes most of them. For your pattern, the useful path is narrow and practical.
Do first
- Create a personal "do not paste" list.
- Pick one low-risk task from your real workday.
- Use AI as a shadow reviewer before asking it to produce final work.
- Save one prompt that reliably helps.
Ignore for now
- Lists of 50 AI tools.
- Automation workflows that touch sensitive data.
- Claims that everyone else is already expert.
- Advanced prompting jargon before you have a safe habit.
Build next
- A checking routine for facts, tone, context, and privacy.
- A reusable prompt library for your role.
- A short personal rule for when AI should not be used.
- A weekly review habit to track confidence.
3. Your curated library path
The report does not end on this page.
Your paid report links into a maintained content library. In this sample, the assets are shown as included value rather than open navigation, so you can judge the shape of the product without getting pulled away from the purchase decision.
What can workplace AI see?
Use a plain-English visibility check before putting work content into any AI tool.
Included in your paid reportThe human-agent work ladder
Understand whether AI should act as assistant, reviewer, coordinator, or something more advanced.
Included in your paid reportWhat level of AI work are you ready for?
Choose the next smallest honest step before trying advanced workplace AI workflows.
Included in your paid reportWorkslop prevention checklist
Stop AI-assisted work from looking polished while creating cleanup work for someone else.
Included in your paid reportSafe-use checklist
Build your first boundary before using any AI tool for work.
Included in your paid reportHow to summarise a document safely
Use AI for a summary framework before sharing sensitive content.
Included in your paid reportHallucination red flags
Know which answers need slower review before you use them.
Included in your paid reportPrompt repair workflow
If your first prompt gives vague output, use the repair method instead of starting again.
Included in your paid reportAI memory audit
Create a safer reusable work profile so AI stops starting from zero every time.
Included in your paid reportThe paid report also includes The AI Anxiety Field Guide: a stable reference for safe-use rules, structured prompts, and checking routines you can return to after the report.
4. Your first safe workflow
Use AI to shadow a task before it helps produce the task.
A good first workflow should be useful, low-risk, and easy to repeat. You are looking for a task where AI can improve structure or clarity without needing private details.
Draft improvement
Use AI to review a generic email, message, or update. Remove names, numbers, client details, and confidential context first.
Low risk, fast feedback
You can judge whether the output sounds right. You are not asking AI to decide, calculate, or handle sensitive information.
Rewrite one low-risk message
Choose a message you would normally spend 10 minutes polishing. Ask AI to make it clearer, then compare the result with your own judgement.
You saved a reusable prompt
The win is not one good output. The win is a prompt and checking routine you can reuse next week.
5. Copy-paste prompt pack
Prompts that make AI act like a work shadow.
These prompts use a stronger structure than a normal one-line prompt: role, objective, context, boundaries, output format, clarification questions, and a final self-check. They are designed to keep you in control while still getting useful work back.
Prompt 1: Safe Task Pathfinder
Prompt 2: Email Shadow Analyst
Prompt 3: Meeting Notes Shadow
6. Seven-day learning modules
One week of controlled practice, not an overwhelming course.
These are not just hyperlinks. Each module contains the task, the exercise, the deliverable, and optional deeper learning. The aim is to build confidence through repetition, not to consume more AI content.
Write your "do not paste" list
Create a simple list of data you will not put into AI tools: customer details, employee information, financials, confidential strategy, passwords, internal disputes, and anything your workplace has not approved.
Choose a low-risk practice task
Pick one task that is useful but not sensitive: rewriting a generic update, summarising public information, turning rough notes into a checklist, or preparing questions for a meeting.
Use the AI Safety Shadow prompt
Ask AI to question the task before producing anything. This teaches you what setup information matters and where the risks sit.
Check the output like a reviewer
Look for invented facts, missing context, tone problems, privacy issues, and anything that sounds plausible but unsupported.
Save the prompt that worked
Keep the prompt, the checking list, and a note about when to use it. This becomes your first reusable AI work asset.
Repeat with one variation
Use the same prompt on a similar low-risk task. Confidence comes from doing the same safe workflow more than once.
Review what changed
Write down what felt easier, what still felt risky, and which workflow you want to practise next. The point is to leave the week with one safer habit, not a perfect score.
7. Learning and development path
Where to go when you want to expand beyond this plan.
Your report should not trap you inside one product. Once your first safe workflow is working, use these curated learning paths to go deeper.
Learn better prompt structure
Use official prompting guides to improve how you give context, constraints, examples, and output formats.
OpenAI prompt engineering guidePractise common office use cases
Look for examples around writing, summarising, planning, meetings, and document review before attempting automation.
Microsoft Copilot support hubUnderstand privacy and data controls
Before using AI at work, understand your tool's privacy settings and your employer's policy.
OpenAI data controls overviewKeep the Field Guide handy
Use the guide when you need the prompts, safety checks, and workflow rules without rereading the full report.
Included in the paid report8. Worksheet
Your first AI practice worksheet.
Safety filter
- I have removed private or confidential details.
- I know what facts I need to check myself.
- The task is low-risk if the output is imperfect.
- I am not asking AI to make a final decision.
Output check
- Does this add facts I did not provide?
- Does this sound like me or my workplace?
- Is any claim unsupported?
- What would I change before using it?
9. Example: before and after
What a safe first win can look like.
"Can you make this update clearer? Project is delayed because a few things changed and I need to let the team know without sounding defensive."
"Here is a concise project update you can adapt: The timeline has shifted due to recent scope changes. I am reviewing the impact and will share revised dates once the dependencies are confirmed."
The task improves wording and structure. It does not require customer data, confidential strategy, private employee information, or AI-owned decision-making.
10. Final recommendation
You are not trying to win AI in one week. You are building a repeatable advantage.
The useful path from here is deliberately narrow: complete the seven modules, save one prompt that works, and practise one safe workflow until it feels ordinary. Then expand. Use the learning links and Field Guide when you want more depth, not as another way to overwhelm yourself.
The next paid upgrade should not be more generic AI content. It should be your next curated kit: a role-specific prompt pack, a workflow builder, or a manager/team conversation guide based on what you want to practise next.