You built something
worth passing on.
Now pass it on.
Free prompts for parents and young people working together in a family business. For the conversations that turn helping out into building something — and show the next generation that what’s here in Cornwall is worth staying for.
Youth unemployment in Cornwall is a structural problem with a human face. Young people who grew up here, love it here, and want to stay — but can’t find work that values what they know and where they want to be. Meanwhile, their parents are running businesses that need exactly the skills those young people have, often without knowing how to bring them in properly.
This pack is for both sides of that conversation. For the parent who wants to bring their child into the business meaningfully — not just to give them something to do, but to genuinely transfer knowledge, build skills and share something they’ve spent years creating. And for the young person who is ready to contribute properly but needs a framework to do it in.
The prompts in this pack are conversation starters as much as content generators. Use them together. Sit at the same table. Let the AI help structure what you both already know.
6 categories covering the handover of skills and responsibility
Understanding the business · Social media and content · Customer communications · Financial basics · Building a real role · Thinking about the future
Because Cornwall’s next generation deserves a reason to stay
Every young person who finds meaningful work in a Cornish family business is one fewer person who has to leave. This pack costs nothing because what it protects — the knowledge, the businesses, the communities — is worth far more than any price we could put on it.
Cornwall’s independent businesses were built by people who stayed when leaving was easier. The next generation of those businesses needs young people who want to build something here — not just work somewhere. This pack exists to help families have the conversations that make that possible. The knowledge in your business is irreplaceable. Pass it on before it’s lost.
Most of these prompts work best when used together. Parent and young person, same table, same screen. One person reads the prompt aloud, the other fills in their half. Paste into Claude.ai or ChatGPT (both free). Read the output together. Edit until it sounds right. Use it.
Some prompts are marked for the parent. Some for the young person. Most are for both. The label tells you who leads — but both voices should be in the room.
Understanding the Business — what it actually is and how it works
3 prompts · The knowledge that lives in your parent’s head · Getting it out
Before a young person can contribute meaningfully to a business, they need to understand where it came from. Not the sanitised version — the real one. This prompt helps a parent tell that story in a way their child can actually use.
“Help me explain the story of my business to my [son / daughter / young person] who is starting to get involved. The business is called [name] and I started it because [the real reason]. The hardest moment was [describe honestly]. What I’m most proud of is [be specific]. What I want them to understand about what it takes to run this is [the thing you most want them to know that you haven’t said out loud before]. Write this as a short, honest business origin story — warm, real, suitable for sharing with a young person who is about to become part of it.”
After the AI produces the output, read it back together. Ask the young person: what surprised you? What do you want to know more about? The conversation that follows is often more valuable than the document itself.
Tip: Save this story. It becomes the foundation of your About page, your grant applications, and eventually — the story your child tells about why they took it on.
Most young people who grow up in a family business have no idea how the money actually works — not because they’re not interested, but because nobody has ever explained it in plain terms. This prompt does that.
“Help me explain how the finances of my business work to a young person with no business background. My business makes money by [describe your revenue]. Our main costs are [list the main ones]. What’s left after costs is roughly [give a sense of the margin]. The hardest financial challenge we face is [seasonality / cash flow / late payments / other]. Explain in plain English — no jargon. Use a simple example. Under 300 words. Written as if explaining to a smart, curious 17-year-old.”
Tip: Show them an actual invoice and a bank statement alongside this explanation. Real numbers make abstract concepts land immediately.
A young person who understands why customers choose your business can represent it authentically in conversations, on social media, with suppliers. This is the foundation of every piece of marketing they’ll create for you.
“Help us identify what makes our family business genuinely different from our competitors. The parent’s view: [what you believe makes the business special]. The young person’s view: [what you’ve observed or heard from customers]. From both perspectives, identify the two or three things that are genuinely distinctive and write them as clear, confident statements that could be used in marketing. Honest and specific. No clichés.”
Young people often notice what customers value in ways that parents have stopped seeing — because they’re too close to it. The fresh perspective is genuinely useful. Take it seriously.
Social Media & Content — where young people often lead
4 prompts · Your knowledge, their instinct · The handover that makes sense
Handing social media to a young person without a brief leads to content that doesn’t sound like the business. A clear voice guide and guardrails give them freedom to be creative within a framework that protects the brand.
“Help me create a social media brief for my [son / daughter] who is taking over our business social media. Our business is [name] — a [type] in Cornwall. Our tone should be [warm / direct / funny / professional / local]. Things we should always talk about: [list]. Things we should never post: [list your boundaries]. Our best-performing post so far was [describe it]. Write this as a one-page brief they can refer back to — clear enough that they can work independently but specific enough to keep everything on-brand.”
Tip: Review their first three posts together before they post independently. After that, weekly check-ins are enough. Trust builds with evidence.
The first content batch sets the tone, builds confidence and shows the parent that the business is in good hands. This prompt draws on the young person’s authentic knowledge of the business.
“Help me create a week of social media content for my family’s business called [name] — a [type] in [town], Cornwall. I’ve grown up around this business and I know it well. This week I want to post: one post about what the business does and why it matters, one behind-the-scenes post, one post about something I’ve learned from working here, one product or service highlight, and one local or seasonal Cornwall post. Our voice is [describe]. Each under 100 words. These should sound genuine — written by someone who actually knows and loves this business.”
Read these before they’re posted, but resist the urge to rewrite them entirely. The young person’s voice is part of what makes this authentic. Edit for accuracy — not to make it sound like you.
Tip: The “something I’ve learned from working here” post is consistently the most engaging content a family business can share. People love seeing knowledge being passed between generations.
A family business working together is one of the most compelling and shareable stories on social media — especially in Cornwall where that story connects to something people genuinely care about.
“Write a social media post introducing our family business team — a parent and their [son / daughter] working together in [business name] in Cornwall. The parent’s role: [describe]. The young person’s role: [describe]. What we’ve discovered about working together: [one honest observation from each — the good and the real]. What we both believe about this business and why it matters in Cornwall: [describe]. Warm, specific and genuine — not a corporate family values post, but a real account of two people building something together. Under 150 words.”
Tip: Include a photo of both of you. Posts that show real faces consistently outperform text-only posts.
Responding to comments, questions and DMs consistently and in the business voice is one of the most valuable things a young person can take responsibility for — and one of the easiest to get wrong without guidance.
“Help me create a response guide for handling customer messages and comments on social media for [business name]. Write model responses for: a positive comment, a question about a product or service, a complaint, a pricing enquiry, and a collaboration request. Our tone is [describe]. Things we always do: [e.g. use the customer’s name / respond within 24 hours]. Things we never do: [e.g. argue publicly / promise things we can’t deliver]. Clear and practical — something I can use as a reference every time I respond.”
Tip: Save the model responses as quick replies in Instagram and Facebook. Consistency becomes effortless.
Customer Communications — the voice of the business in writing
3 prompts · Consistent, professional, genuinely Cornish
Responding to a new customer enquiry is one of the most commercially important things a business does — and one of the easiest to do badly when you’re new to it.
“Help me write a response to a customer enquiry for [business name]. A customer has asked about [describe the enquiry]. I want to acknowledge their enquiry warmly, answer their question or ask what I need to answer it, tell them what happens next, and make them feel like they’re dealing with someone who knows what they’re doing. I’m [age] and relatively new to handling enquiries — help me sound confident and professional without sounding like a script. Under 150 words.”
Tip: Show the parent your first three enquiry responses before sending independently. Then agree a review process — spot-check rather than approve everything.
A warm, personal post-purchase thank-you is one of the simplest and highest-return things any small business can do. Making it the young person’s responsibility creates a habit that compounds over time.
“Write a post-purchase thank-you message template for [business name] in Cornwall to send to customers after buying or using our service. I want it to feel genuine — not automated — and invite them to leave a review, return, or tell a friend. Our tone is [describe]. Under 100 words. Suitable for email or text. Sound like a real person who is genuinely grateful — because it is.”
Tip: Set a reminder to send this within 24 hours of every completed purchase or job.
Learning how to handle difficult customers professionally — without caving, without escalating, without taking it personally — is one of the most valuable business skills there is.
“Help us handle a difficult customer situation at [business name]. What happened: [describe factually]. The parent’s view of the right response: [describe]. The young person’s instinct: [describe]. Write a professional, calm response that acknowledges the concern, states the business’s position, and offers a fair resolution. Then write one paragraph of honest guidance to the young person about handling this kind of situation in future — not a lecture, but experience shared.”
The most valuable thing a parent can pass on is not knowledge — it’s judgement. These situations are where judgement is built. Let the young person respond first before you weigh in.
Before you use the financial prompts — please read
Do not paste real figures into a free AI account.
Free tier accounts on Claude.ai and ChatGPT may use your inputs to train future models by default. Pasting actual revenue figures, margins or bank data into a free account carries a data privacy risk — even if small. Choose one of these approaches before using the prompts below.
Option A — Use approximate ranges, not real figures. Instead of “our revenue is £67,000” write “our revenue is in the £50k–£100k range.” The output quality is identical. The data risk is zero.
Option B — Use a paid account with training disabled. Claude.ai Pro and ChatGPT Plus both offer settings that prevent your conversations being used for model training. If you use these prompts regularly for sensitive business information, a paid account is worth it. On Claude.ai Pro: Settings → Privacy → disable conversation training. On ChatGPT Plus: Settings → Data Controls → turn off “Improve the model for everyone.”
Financial Basics — what profit actually means
3 prompts · Use approximate ranges or a paid account · The literacy that changes everything
Invoices are the basic unit of business finance — and most young people have never been taught what one means. This prompt explains it using a real example.
“Explain to me what a business invoice is and what each part means. Use an example from our business — but use approximate figures rather than exact amounts (e.g. ‘roughly £X’ or ‘in the range of £X–£Y’): [describe the line items, approximate totals, payment terms, VAT if applicable]. I’m [age] and have never dealt with invoices before. Explain clearly and simply — what each number means, why it matters, and what happens if an invoice isn’t paid. Under 300 words. No jargon.”
Tip: Follow this up by having them raise their first invoice — with guidance. Doing it once makes everything concrete.
A young person who understands the reasoning behind your prices can defend them confidently to customers — and make better pricing decisions themselves one day.
“Help us explain how we set prices at [business name]. Our costs for a typical product or service are approximately: [list main cost components with approximate ranges — e.g. ‘materials roughly £X–£Y’, ‘around X hours of time’]. Our price is approximately [price range — e.g. ‘in the £X–£Y range’]. The reasoning behind it: [cost-plus / market rate / value-based]. What we’ve learned about pricing over the years: [one honest thing — a mistake, a lesson, something that surprised you]. Explain as a short practical guide for a young person who will eventually make pricing decisions themselves. Under 250 words. Use approximate figures throughout — no exact amounts.”
Tip: Include the lesson you learned from pricing something wrong. It’s the most memorable part.
A young person who understands what a good, typical and difficult month looks like can take real responsibility. This prompt shares that knowledge honestly without oversharing what’s private.
“Help me explain to my [son / daughter] what a good month, a typical month and a difficult month look like in our business — without sharing specific figures I want to keep private. In a good month the signs are: [indicators — enquiry levels, bookings, customer feedback, not numbers]. In a difficult month: [describe]. What I do when we have a difficult month: [describe your response — practically and emotionally]. Write as an honest guide to reading the health of a small business — the kind of knowledge that takes years to develop but that I want to share now. Under 300 words.”
Tip: This prompt is already designed to avoid specific figures — it uses indicators and descriptions rather than numbers. That’s intentional. The conversation is just as valuable without the exact amounts.
Building a Real Role — real responsibility, not just helping out
4 prompts · The difference between being useful and being needed
The most common failure in family business involvement is that the young person’s role is never properly defined — so they’re always “helping” rather than being responsible for anything. A clear role description changes that entirely.
“Help us write a role description for [young person’s name] joining [business name]. Their main responsibilities will be: [list what they will genuinely own — not ‘help with’]. Skills they bring: [what they’re already good at]. Skills to develop: [specific]. How success will be measured: [shared understanding of what good looks like]. How we’ll review this together: [agree a regular check-in]. Write as a proper role description — not a contract, but a clear agreement between two people who respect each other.”
Young people in family businesses often feel they can never quite be in charge of anything. A written role description makes clear what belongs to them. Respect that boundary.
Giving a young person a real project to own from brief to delivery is the fastest way to build both skill and confidence. This prompt helps them plan and present it properly.
“Help me plan and present a project I want to take ownership of in our family business [name]. The project is: [describe it — e.g. redesigning our Instagram / launching a new product / building a Google Business profile / starting a customer newsletter]. Why I think it’s worth doing: [explain the business case]. What I’ll need: [time, tools, budget if any, support from the parent]. How I’ll know if it worked: [measure of success]. Write as a short project proposal I can present — confident, clear and showing I’ve thought it through. Under 300 words.”
Tip: For the parent — listen properly before responding. Ask questions before offering opinions. The quality of your listening shapes the quality of the next proposal.
How a family handles things going wrong — the debrief, the learning, the recovery — is the single most important thing a young person can observe and be part of.
“Help us debrief a situation in our business that didn’t go well. What happened: [describe factually, without blame]. The parent’s view of what went wrong: [honest]. The young person’s view: [honest — even if different]. What we’ve both learned: [one thing each]. What we’ll do differently: [specific, practical]. Write as a short, constructive debrief focused on learning, not blame.”
Include something you got wrong — not just what the young person got wrong. The most powerful business lesson you can give is watching someone take honest responsibility for their own mistakes.
In family businesses the hard conversations happen. The affirmations often don’t. This prompt helps a parent acknowledge a young person’s contribution in a way that’s specific, genuine and motivating.
“Help me write a genuine acknowledgement of my [son’s / daughter’s] contribution over the past [period]. What they’ve specifically done well: [be concrete — name the actual things, moments, results]. The difference it’s made to the business: [describe specifically]. What I want them to know about how I see their potential: [the honest thing you’ve been meaning to say]. Write as something I could say out loud — warm, specific, genuine. Not a performance review. A conversation between two people building something together.”
Tip: Say this out loud, not just in writing. The written version is a record — the spoken version is what’s remembered.
Thinking About the Future — the conversations worth having now
3 prompts · No pressure · Just honest conversations about what could be
One of the most valuable things a fresh pair of eyes brings to a family business is an honest view of what could be better. This gives the young person a structured way to share it — and the parent a structured way to receive it.
“Help me articulate my honest observations about our family business [name] as someone who has grown up around it and is now involved properly. Three things that work really well: [specific]. Three things I think could be better or different: [honest but constructive — observations, not criticism]. One idea I haven’t shared yet because I wasn’t sure how it would land: [share it]. Write as something I could present to my parent — respectful, specific and genuinely helpful. This is not a complaint. It’s a contribution.”
When you hear this, listen without defending. Ask questions. Say thank you. The young person just told you something honest and vulnerable. How you respond determines whether they ever do it again.
Most family business succession conversations never happen — or happen too late, in a crisis. This prompt creates a gentle space for the question of what happens next, without pressure or obligation on either side.
“Help us have an honest conversation about the future of our family business [name]. The parent’s honest thoughts: [what do you want for it — pass it on, sell it, wind it down, you genuinely don’t know?]. The young person’s honest thoughts: [what do you actually want — not what you think you should say?]. What neither of us has said out loud yet: [try to name it]. Write as a starting point for a conversation — not a plan, not a decision, just an honest opening. Under 300 words. No pressure in either direction.”
Tip: There is no right answer. A young person who honestly says “I don’t think this is for me” is giving you information you need. A business passed to someone who doesn’t want it rarely survives.
Many young people leave Cornwall not because they want to but because they can’t see a viable future here. This prompt helps a parent and young person articulate together why Cornwall is worth building a life in.
“Help us articulate why building a business life in Cornwall is worth choosing. The parent’s case for staying: [what has Cornwall given you that you couldn’t have had elsewhere — honestly]. The young person’s honest feelings: [what you love / what worries you about your future here / what would make staying feel right]. What would need to be true for building a life and career here to feel like an exciting choice rather than a compromise: [both answer]. Write as an honest, forward-looking conversation — not a tourist board pitch, but a real assessment from two people who know it well.”
Every young person who finds a reason to build their future in Cornwall rather than leave is part of the answer to a problem the county has been failing to solve for decades. This conversation is bigger than your business.
Tip: Share this conversation — or parts of it — publicly if you’re comfortable. Other families in Cornwall are having it alone. Yours might help them have it too.
The prompts are starting points.
The conversations are the point.
Before anything from this pack goes out into the world, check it together.
- Does this sound like our business — not a generic version of it?
- Has the young person read and agreed with everything before it’s published?
- Has the parent genuinely listened to the young person’s perspective?
- Is any financial information shared at a level the young person is ready to handle responsibly?
- Does this represent the business in a way both of you are proud of?
- This content belongs to your family and your business. You are both responsible for it.
Share this with every
family business in Cornwall.
Free and always will be. Share it with every parent running a business in Cornwall who has a young person ready to be more than a helper. The knowledge in your business is irreplaceable. Pass it on.
If your family would benefit from a workshop, strategy session or support building a proper succession plan — we’re here.
© Grow Cornwall AI 2026 · Free to share · Not for commercial use or resale