APAP's AI Hub for the Performing Arts: Reframe | Reclaim | Reshape
Tools to Power Advocacy, Messaging, and Strategy in the Age of AI
AI doesn't replace creativity. It amplifies it. Use generative AI to synthesize data, generate first drafts, and surface messaging insights, freeing up your team to focus on strategy, relationships, and nuance.
Below you'll find templates, guides, and tips designed to help you generate ideas quickly, tailor tone effectively, and refine messages with clarity and purpose. Use these resources as springboards for fast drafting, strategic alignment, and mission-driven communication.
Use AI as a thought partner, not a final editor. You bring the lived experience, strategy, and community wisdom. AI helps you move faster and free up energy for deeper engagement. Claim your edge. Claim your space.
Table of Contents:
Prompt Starters for Fast, Targeted Use
Prompt starters are concise, action-oriented instructions designed to help you quickly engage trusted generative AI tools. They're especially helpful when you're short on time but need strong content—fast.
These ready-to-use examples are tailored for common advocacy, communications, and strategy needs. Use them when you're drafting messaging, prepping for meetings, gathering data, or translating ideas into advocacy-ready language.
Whether you're a seasoned communicator or just getting started with AI, these starters can unlock clarity, speed, and sharper strategy.

Quick Start Guide: Use this 3-step shortcut to try a prompt right now:
  1. Copy a prompt from below into ChatGPT or Perplexity.
  1. Customize it with your city, org name, or audience.
  1. Ask follow-ups like "Make it shorter," "Add urgency," or "Rewrite for a board member."
"Draft an op-ed linking arts education and economic mobility in my city."
Use this when you're preparing a back-to-school opinion piece, grant narrative, or local media story. This prompt helps AI generate a regionally grounded narrative that makes the case for the performing arts as a driver of upward mobility, community stability, and economic strength.
Modify it for your context:
  • "…in Birmingham"
  • "…based on Blue Meridian-style investment logic"
  • "…with examples from APAP member orgs"
"Translate Labor Day into a performing arts workforce message."
Use this when developing social media copy, a local speaking point, or messaging to a civic leader around the Labor Day holiday. It helps frame creative workers—and arts education—as central to workforce development, not just "extras."
You might follow up with:
  • "Now rewrite it in a tone that would resonate with a school board member."
  • "Make this into a tweet + Instagram caption."
"Give me 3 data points to support an arts policy ask for school board officials."
Use this when drafting testimony, writing a letter to a policymaker, or building a one-pager. It helps surface concrete stats that tie the arts to student success, mental health, or community well-being.
Great follow-up prompts include:
  • "Cite your sources."
  • "Add one example of local impact or a school-based program."
"Refine this content so it reads smoothly, maintains the original tone, and lands with more clarity and flow—without removing any essential meaning."
Use this when you've drafted something that's solid in intent but clunky in execution. This is great for internal memos, board communications, or public-facing updates that need polish but still sound like you.
Great follow-up prompts include:
  • "Preserve the advocacy tone."
  • "Keep the urgency but improve the sentence flow."
How to Write Better Prompts: The Basics of Prompt Engineering
A great prompt is the difference between a generic response and one that actually sounds like you. Mastering prompt engineering means you can transform AI from a simple tool into a powerful thought partner. These four building blocks help you get more useful, targeted output from any generative AI tool, ensuring that the results are tailored to your specific needs, tone, and strategic objectives. Understanding these elements unlocks AI's full potential for advocacy, communication, and creative strategy in the performing arts.
By thoughtfully constructing your prompts, you guide the AI toward generating content that resonates with your audience and aligns with your mission. This approach reduces the need for extensive editing and brings you closer to your desired outcome more efficiently.
Role
Tell the AI who it is. Assigning a persona to the AI helps it adopt a specific tone, expertise, and perspective. Example: "You are a communications director at a mid-sized performing arts nonprofit." This immediately frames the AI's responses within a relevant professional context.
Context
Give background. Provide the AI with essential background information to ensure its output is relevant and accurate. The more specific details you offer, the better the output will be. Example: "We're preparing for a city council hearing on arts education funding cuts in New York City." This grounds the AI's understanding in the current situation.
Task
Be clear about what you want. Explicitly state the desired action or outcome. Vague instructions lead to generic results. Example: "Write a 3-minute opening statement that is urgent, data-backed, and accessible to a general audience, advocating for sustained funding." This specifies the format, tone, and purpose.
Constraints
Set limits. Define boundaries for the AI's response, such as length, style, or forbidden words. Constraints prevent bloat, maintain focus, and keep the AI on track. Example: "Keep it under 300 words. Avoid jargon. Do not use the phrase 'at the end of the day.' Incorporate a call to action to contact council members." This refines the output to meet precise requirements.

Pro Tip: Stack these elements together in one comprehensive prompt for the best results. You can also add specific examples of your writing style: "Here is an example of my writing style: [paste sample]" to help AI match your voice and enhance consistency across your communications.

Iteration is the skill: Your first prompt is always a draft. Think of AI as a conversational partner. Follow up with refining commands like: "Make it shorter," "Add more urgency," "Rewrite for a funder audience," or "Give me 3 variations." The most effective AI users engage in an iterative process, treating each interaction as a step towards a more perfect output. This conversational approach allows you to fine-tune responses until they precisely meet your needs.
Prompt Templates for Voice, Style, and Augmenting Length
For Distinct Voices and Styles
Use these prompts to shift tone, tailor messages for specific audiences, or unlock new ways to express your impact. Each template helps you communicate effectively with stakeholders ranging from policymakers to community members.
Storytelling Voice (Emotive + Personal)
"Write a narrative-style story highlighting the impact of our arts program through the eyes of a student or family member."
Use When: Moving hearts or spotlighting transformation.
Thought Leadership Voice (Credible + Visionary)
"Draft a piece from an arts leader connecting trends in education or workforce development to the civic power of the arts."
Use When: Influencing cross-sector partners or funders.
Advocacy Voice (Clear + Persuasive)
"Write a data-backed call-to-action for a public meeting that connects arts programs to student success or workforce readiness."
Use When: Swaying policy or public opinion.
Grant or Funding Voice (Focused + Outcomes-Oriented)
"Create a funding proposal narrative explaining how our arts programming addresses community priorities like equity and education."
Use When: Drafting proposals for institutional funders.
Board and Internal Strategy Voice (Confident + Mission-Aligned)
"Summarize our advocacy strategy in a tone that is clear and mission-aligned, designed to build internal buy-in."
Use When: Communicating with boards or staff.
Social Media Voice (Conversational + Bold)
"Generate an engaging caption highlighting how the performing arts drive local impact, tailored for youth-friendly platforms."
Use When: Driving shareable calls to action.
For Reframing and Tone-Shifting
"Rewrite this content in the voice of a community-rooted leader building cross-sector partnerships, without losing the original urgency."
Use When: Refining messages for civic partners.
To Shorten Copy Without Losing Nuance or Impact
The following prompts were drafted leveraging ChatGPT. Use these when tightening email copy, op-eds, funding briefs, or slide text—while preserving key ideas and emotional resonance.
General Prompt (Default Use)
"Please shorten the following text while preserving nuance, tone, and core meaning. Make it more concise without making it sound generic or losing impact: [Insert copy]"
For Storytelling/Op-Eds
"Condense this story-driven paragraph to ~30% fewer words, keeping the emotional arc intact and ensuring it still moves the reader: [Insert copy]"
For Policy or Advocacy Updates
"Edit this for brevity and clarity—preserve the urgency and policy relevance, but make it easier to scan or quote in a policy memo: [Insert copy]"
For Slides or Talking Points
"Summarize this into a headline and 1–2 supporting bullets that would fit cleanly on a slide or in a board update. Keep the core insight intact: [Insert copy]"
To Expand Copy Without Adding Fluff
General Prompt (Default Use)
"Expand this paragraph slightly (by ~30%) to add richness, detail, or specificity—but keep the tone mission-aligned and don't dilute the message: [Insert copy]"
For Grant/Philanthropy Language
"Build this out into a more funder-friendly paragraph that emphasizes strategic relevance, community benefit, and measurable impact: [Insert copy]"
For Contextualizing a Statistic or Example
"Add a sentence or two of framing that helps this stat or example land more clearly for someone unfamiliar with the field: [Insert stat/copy]"
To Pull a Theme Into Focus
"Add a sentence that reinforces the underlying theme of [claiming space / creativity / civic power / economic mobility], without sounding repetitive or forced: [Insert copy]"
What AI Tools you can Use and Why
Generative AI tools streamline strategic communication for performing arts organizations by synthesizing information and refining professional content.
Highly effective for drafting op-eds, sharpening talking points, and brainstorming targeted messages. Cost: Free / Pro from $20/mo
Ideal for uploading and analyzing long strategic plans, reports, or transcripts to extract key themes. Cost: Free / Pro from $20/mo
Seamlessly drafts, summarizes, and rewrites documents directly within Microsoft 365 applications. Cost: Included in M365 / Pro from $20/mo
Integrated directly into Google Workspace to assist with real-time drafting and summarizing in Docs and Gmail. Cost: Free / Advanced from $20/mo
Functions as a research assistant to find reliable statistics and citations for grant applications and impact reports. Cost: Free / Pro from $20/mo
Automatically records, transcribes, and summarizes meetings to save time on manual note-taking. Cost: Free / Pro from $10/mo
Transform ideas and reports into polished, professional presentations in minutes without design experience. Cost: Free / Pro from $16/mo
Generate headlines, CTAs, and copy directly within your visual design projects. Cost: Included in Canva Pro
Create custom, original visuals for campaigns and social media without needing a dedicated designer. Cost: From $20/mo
Access and compare outputs from multiple AI models through a single, unified interface. Cost: Pay-as-you-go
Claude vs. Claude for Work vs. Anthropic API: When to Use Which
Fitting AI Into Your Daily Workflow
You don't need to overhaul how you work. Start small, build habits, and let AI handle the time-consuming parts so you can focus on strategy and relationships. Integrating AI tools strategically can significantly enhance productivity, allowing arts organizations to dedicate more resources to creative endeavors and community engagement rather than administrative tasks.
A Practical Weekly Rhythm for Arts Org Staff
Monday — Set the Week
Use ChatGPT or Perplexity to scan for relevant news, policy updates, or funding announcements. Prompt: "Summarize this week's news about arts education funding and workforce policy in [your state]." This ensures you're always informed about the latest developments impacting your organization.
Before Any Meeting
Use Claude or ChatGPT to prep talking points. Prompt: "I'm meeting with [funder/city official/board member]. Draft 3 key points I should make about our program's impact." This helps you articulate your message clearly and persuasively, making every interaction more impactful.
After Any Meeting
Use Fireflies.ai to auto-transcribe and summarize. Then ask ChatGPT: "Turn these meeting notes into a follow-up email and a list of action items." This streamlines post-meeting procedures, ensuring timely communication and clear accountability for next steps.
When Writing Anything
Start with a rough draft or bullet points, then use AI to refine. Never start from a blank page — give AI your raw ideas and let it structure them. Whether it's a grant application, a press release, or internal communication, AI can help polish your thoughts into coherent and compelling copy.
End of Week
Use AI to draft your weekly update, board memo, or social post. Prompt: "Summarize these 3 accomplishments into a 150-word staff update that's warm and mission-aligned." This saves time on routine reporting, allowing you to focus on strategic planning and reflection.

The 10-Minute Rule
If a writing task would take you more than 10 minutes, try prompting AI first. Use your time for the 20% that requires your unique judgment — relationships, nuance, and lived experience.
AI Tools: Time Saved in Key Tasks
AI Ethics & Limitations: What Arts Leaders Need to Know
AI is a powerful tool — but it comes with real limitations and ethical considerations that performing arts leaders should understand before relying on it for advocacy, communications, or strategy. Navigating these responsibly ensures that AI enhances, rather than detracts from, your organization's mission and impact.
What AI Gets Wrong (Limitations)
  • Hallucinations: AI can confidently state false facts, fake citations, or invent statistics. Always verify data before using it publicly, especially in grant applications or public statements.
  • No Real-time Knowledge: Most AI tools have a training cutoff and don't know about recent events, legislation, or funding announcements. Use research-focused AI like Perplexity.ai for current information.
  • It Doesn't Know Your Org: AI has no knowledge of your specific programs, community, or history unless you explicitly provide that context in your prompts.
  • Generic Defaults: Without strong, specific prompts, AI often defaults to bland, corporate-sounding language. Your unique voice and organizational specificity are crucial to making its outputs useful.
Ethical Considerations for Arts Orgs
  • Attribution & Transparency: Be thoughtful about disclosing AI use in public-facing content, particularly for grant applications where funders may have specific policies regarding AI assistance.
  • Bias in Outputs: AI models reflect biases present in their training data. Always review outputs critically, especially when crafting messages about communities of color, disability, or other marginalized groups.
  • Artist Labor & Credit: Be mindful of using AI-generated images, music, or text in ways that could displace working artists or diminish the value of human creativity. Prioritize human artists whenever possible.
  • Data Privacy: Never paste sensitive donor data, staff information, or confidential strategic plans into public AI tools. Utilize enterprise versions with robust data privacy protections when handling proprietary information.

The Bottom Line: AI is a drafting assistant, not a final authority. You bring the lived experience, community trust, and ethical judgment. AI helps you move faster — but you are always the editor and ultimate decision-maker.
Free AI Learning Resources for Arts, Nonprofits, and the Public Sector
These free, beginner-friendly resources provide practical pathways for professionals in the arts, humanities, and public sector to build generative AI skills.
🎭 Arts & Creative Sector
A free, structured intro to AI art covering machine learning, GANs, and generative tools for visual artists and creative professionals.
Beginner-friendly modules on how generative AI applies to music, visual art, and creative content. Free version available.
Free courses on prompt engineering and AI image creation for digital artists and arts educators.
🏛️ Public Sector & Humanities
A downloadable eBook with step-by-step guidance for government orgs on safe, effective generative AI adoption.
A free module for public sector leaders on generative AI use cases in civic work, with practical walkthroughs.
🤝 Nonprofit & Advocacy
Free workshops and tutorials on integrating AI into nonprofit communications, fundraising, and operations.
Five free courses for nonprofit professionals covering campaign creation, fundraising, and personalized outreach.
Signal Leadership in the Age of AI
Use AI Thoughtfully, Lead Authentically
AI can help, but people lead. Always layer AI-generated insights with lived experience, field expertise, and community voice. Transparency and alignment with your mission build trust. Combine the power of these tools with your own real-world insight, lived experience, field expertise, and community voice. Transparency and alignment with your mission build trust.
Lead with Transparency, Signal Credibility
Referencing your use of AI not only models ethical transparency, it also signals credibility and relevance, demonstrating that your organization is leveraging cutting-edge tools shaping today's decision-making, innovation, and civic discourse.
APAP is Here to Help You Claim Your Edge
At APAP, we believe that creativity, innovation, and place-based impact must go hand in hand, and that the performing arts are uniquely positioned to humanize technology, elevate community voice, and must shape what comes next. That belief is why our advocacy team developed this update with support from trusted generative AI tools—to accelerate insight, strategy, and synthesis.
Reach out to us at [email protected] and let us help you localize your impact, align with strategic partners, leverage AI tools, and turn opportunity into action.
Drafted with support from trusted generative AI tools