The Communication Load That Compounds
A founder or senior executive with a full schedule spends between four and six hours per week on professional communications that require care — not the quick replies that take 90 seconds each, but the emails that require a draft, a review, and a redraft because the relationship, the stakes, or the sensitivity demand it. Add meeting preparation, briefing notes, document summarisation, and the professional communications that require strategic thought before sending, and the administrative weight on a senior person's week is significant.
This is not a workload that should be delegated to a junior assistant — many of these communications require contextual knowledge of the relationships and situations involved. But it is also not a workload that should require the executive's full cognitive attention for every draft. The communication structure, the tone calibration, the document format — these are aspects of professional writing that follow definable patterns. The executive's judgment and relationship knowledge are the inputs. The drafting work is the execution.
William — the KissMySkills executive assistant agent — handles the execution layer: drafting the emails, preparing the briefing notes, writing the talking points, summarising the documents. The executive provides the context and judgment. William produces the first draft at professional quality. The executive reviews, adjusts for nuance, and sends — a fifteen-minute review rather than a forty-five-minute writing session, repeated across every high-stakes communication in the week.
What an Executive Assistant Agent Actually Does
The value of a good executive assistant is not calendar management — it is communication and document production that would otherwise consume the executive's most valuable hours. An AI executive assistant agent replicates this value across the specific tasks that create the most friction in a senior professional's week.
Drafting professional communications that require careful wording. Preparing meeting materials before important conversations. Summarising complex documents into executive summaries with decision-ready findings. Writing talking points for presentations and difficult conversations. Assessing sensitive professional situations and recommending an approach before any communication is sent.
William asks about the audience, relationship, and goal before producing any output — because the register that is right for a message to a board member is different from the register that is right for the same message to a direct report, and generic professional tone applied universally produces communications that feel impersonal in every direction.
Email Drafting for High-Stakes Communications
The emails that consume the most executive time are not the ones that can be answered in two sentences. They are the ones where the relationship is complex, the stakes are high enough to require care, or the message needs to achieve a specific goal without creating a secondary problem.
The difficult follow-up after a meeting that went badly, where the relationship needs to be preserved but the issue cannot be left unaddressed. The response to an unreasonable request that needs to be declined without damaging a relationship that matters. The announcement of a decision the team is not going to welcome, where the framing determines whether it creates alignment or resentment. The client communication after something went wrong, where the response needs to be honest, take responsibility appropriately, and restore confidence without admitting liability.
William's input is a description of the situation, the relationship, and what the email needs to achieve. The output accounts for all three — not a generic professional template but a draft calibrated to the specific communication goal and the specific relationship context. Review takes fifteen minutes. Writing from scratch would take forty-five.
Meeting Preparation That Takes Minutes, Not Hours
Meeting preparation routinely takes two to three times longer than the meeting itself — and most of that time is spent on structural work that follows predictable patterns. An agenda needs time-boxed items with desired outcomes. A briefing note needs context, key positions of the parties involved, and the decision to be made. Talking points need to be specific to the executive's contribution, not a summary of the full topic.
William produces a complete meeting preparation package for any meeting type: a structured agenda with time allocation and named owners for each item, a briefing note covering the context attendees need and the decision to be reached, and the executive's talking points — the specific points to make, the questions to ask, and the positions to take — rather than general notes on the subject. A one-hour board meeting that previously required two hours of preparation takes thirty minutes with William handling the documentation layer.
Document Summarisation With Decision-Ready Output
The documents that arrive in an executive's inbox — board packs, legal agreements, analyst reports, contractor proposals, strategic reviews from the team — each competes for reading time against everything else in the week. Most cannot be read in full without deprioritising something else. Most need to be acted on before there is time to read them properly.
William summarises complex documents into executive summaries structured for decision-making: the key findings, the implications for the business, the options available, and the recommended action. The format is designed for a reader who needs to understand the document well enough to make a decision without reading every page — which is the actual requirement for most senior document review tasks.
Navigating Sensitive Professional Situations
Some professional situations require careful strategic thinking before any communication is sent — situations where the wrong response creates legal exposure, damages an important relationship, or sets a precedent the business will be managing for months. A performance issue that needs to be addressed without creating an unfair dismissal claim. A client complaint that needs to be acknowledged without admitting liability. A resignation from a key person that needs to be handled in a way that preserves the relationship and the knowledge transfer.
William provides situation assessment before recommending any communication approach: what the considerations are, what the risks are in different responses, what the recommended approach is, and what to avoid saying. The executive then decides and communicates with the full picture rather than navigating a sensitive situation under time pressure without a strategic framework.
How to Use William Across the Week
William is most effective when activated as each task arises rather than in a single weekly session — because the context for a specific email or meeting preparation is freshest immediately before it is needed. Load the William skill file into Claude Projects. Paste the activation prompt at the start of a session. Describe the situation: who the communication is for, what the relationship is, what the message needs to achieve, and any relevant context. William asks clarifying questions if needed, then produces the output.
The same project handles all EA tasks — email drafting, meeting preparation, document summarisation, situation assessment — because the agent's configuration covers the full executive assistant scope. William works with Claude, ChatGPT, or any AI chat that accepts system prompts.
The agent behind this guide. William drafts high-stakes emails, prepares meeting agendas and briefing notes, summarises documents into decision-ready findings, and assesses sensitive situations — you provide context and judgment.