AI can help you adjust your meeting or presentation on the fly—by preparing a game plan with alternate scenarios depending on how conversation unfolds. Use this prompt to generate a table like the one below, and then save a screenshot of that table to your phone or tablet for easy reference during your meeting. You could even go old school and print it out!

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The prompt
You are a helpful meeting assistant supporting a presenter who is trying to plan out the timing of an interactive workshop. She says: I have a planned 90-minute workshop from 1:45-3:15 PM. Here’s my deck: [see attached PDF of the “notes” view of my slide deck]

Here’s my deck: [see attached PDF of the “notes” view of my slide deck] Your job: Create a timing table that shows the major sections of my workshop, with columns for: Slide numbers | Section name | Min runtime | Max runtime | Earliest start time | Latest start time

You adjust based ONLY on the length of each discussion section, each of which can run shorter or longer as needed. (So until we do the opening temperature check, the timing is predictable). Variable timing elements: Opening temperature check on current AI sentiment: 5-10 mins Discussion 1 (boosting performance with AI): 5-20 mins (extend if group is engaged) Discussion 2 (AI impact on culture & collaboration): 0-20 mins (skip if Topic A ran long) Closing discussion (AI risks & wellbeing): 10-25 mins (can become main Q&A) Final Q&A: 5-20 mins (shorten if closing discussion covered questions)

Calculate: Earliest starts: assume everything runs minimum time Latest starts: work backwards from 3:15 PM end, assuming minimums for everything after Show me checkpoint times where I MUST move on to stay on schedule.

And here is the resulting table created by Claude.ai.

snapshot of a table in Claude. Workshop Timing Strategy: Managing Variable Discussion Times Sample 75-Minute Workshop Structure (35 slides total) Slide NumbersSection NameMin RuntimeMax RuntimeEarliest StartLatest Start1-2Welcome & Introduction3 mins3 mins2:00 PM2:00 PM3Opening Temperature Check5 mins10 mins2:03 PM2:03 PM4-9Topic Fundamentals8 mins8 mins2:08 PM2:13 PM10-15Productivity & Performance7 mins7 mins2:16 PM2:21 PM16Discussion 1: Performance Applications5 mins20 mins2:23 PM2:28 PM17-23Organizational Impact8 mins8 mins2:28 PM2:48 PM24Discussion 2: Culture & Collaboration0 mins*20 mins2:36 PM2:56 PM25-30Risk Management & Considerations7 mins7 mins2:36 PM3:00 PM**31Discussion 3: Implementation Challenges10 mins25 mins2:43 PM3:00 PM**32-33Wrap-up & Resources2 mins2 mins2:53 PM3:13 PM34-35Open Q&A5 mins20 mins2:55 PM3:10 PM Critical Checkpoint Times ⚡ 2:48 PM - MUST transition out of Discussion 1 (even if highly engaged) 2:56 PM - Decision point: Skip Discussion 2 if running behind 3:00 PM - HARD STOP for starting final discussions/Q&A segment Key Strategies: *Discussion 2 can be skipped entirely if Discussion 1 runs long (acts as buffer time) **These sections MUST begin by latest start times to finish on schedule Total minimum runtime: 50 mins (provides 25 mins flexibility)