AI option comparison and decision notes prompt
A prompt that helps compare different options through pros, cons, criteria, priorities, and reviewable notes before making a decision.
A prompt that helps compare different options through pros, cons, criteria, priorities, and reviewable notes before making a decision.
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You are a thinking and note-organization assistant who compares different options without making the final decision for the user. Using the details below, compare the options, organize pros and cons, and create reviewable notes before a decision. Comparison topic: Options to compare: Comparison criteria: My priority: Known constraints: Output style: Rules: - Do not make a final decision for the user; present the output as editable comparison notes. - Work only with the provided information; mark missing information as points to review. - Write pros, cons, and unclear points separately for each option. - Consider the user’s priorities but do not present the result as a final judgment. - Turn the criteria into a clear table or bullet structure. - Prepare the output as a reviewable and updateable draft. Output format: 1. Short comparison summary 2. Short description of each option 3. Criteria-based comparison table 4. Strengths of each option 5. Points to watch for each option 6. Missing or unclear information to review 7. Evaluation note based on user priority 8. Which option may fit which situation? 9. 5 review questions before deciding 10. Suggested next step
This section helps you understand when and how to use this prompt more clearly.
This prompt helps compare different options by organizing pros, cons, criteria, priorities, and missing information.
It is useful for users who want to compare products, courses, software tools, study methods, travel plans, or other alternatives.
It can be used when you have multiple options and want to compare them in a clear table and note structure.
A user may be choosing between two online courses. This prompt can organize the options by price, duration, content, beginner fit, and practice opportunities.
Writing the options, criteria, and your priority together creates a more meaningful comparison output.
Can this prompt make decisions easier?
It can make the evaluation process easier by organizing the options clearly, but the final decision remains with the user.
Can this prompt compare courses or tools?
Yes. It can create criteria-based comparison notes for courses, software tools, products, or methods.
This example shows how the prompt can turn two course options into criteria-based comparison notes.
Course A may look more suitable for a user who wants to start quickly and practice more. Course B may be considered by users who want deeper theory. Missing details should be checked.
Duration: Course A is shorter, Course B is longer. Beginner fit: Course A seems more accessible, Course B should be checked for level. Practice: Course A appears more aligned with the practice priority. Explanation style: Course B may require more patience because of its theoretical structure.
Current course outline, number of sample projects, instructor style, exercise count, and user reviews can be checked.
1. Which course fits 30 minutes a day better? 2. Which course includes more practice? 3. Is the course truly beginner-friendly? 4. Does the teaching style fit me? 5. Can I build a small project by the end?
This example does not make the decision; it presents the options as editable comparison notes.
Writing the options and known details clearly creates a more useful comparison.
Defining the criteria in advance helps make the output more structured and balanced.
Writing your priority makes the comparison more relevant to your needs.
Listing missing details separately makes it easier to see what should be checked before deciding.
No. It organizes the options, shows pros and cons, and creates review notes; the final evaluation remains with the user.
Yes. It can create structured notes for comparing products, tools, courses, apps, or methods.
Yes. It can prepare a criteria-based comparison table and bullet-point evaluation.
Yes. It can mark missing or unclear details as points to review.
Prompts are for illustration only. Accuracy isn't guaranteed—please read and adapt them for your situation.
This prompt is for general purposes. For legal, medical or financial decisions please consult a qualified professional.