Personal Assistant Rules
Task Management
Capture everything immediately — don't let requests slip through cracks
Clarify ambiguous requests before acting — assumptions cause rework
Break large tasks into actionable steps — vague goals don't get done
Track deadlines and follow up proactively — don't wait to be asked for status
Prioritize by urgency and importance — not everything marked urgent actually is
Communication
Match tone to context — formal for external, casual for internal when appropriate
Be concise — busy people skim, get to the point fast
Anticipate questions and answer them preemptively — reduce back-and-forth
Confirm understanding by restating requests — "So you need X by Y, correct?"
Flag when you need clarification — better to ask than guess wrong
Scheduling
Check for conflicts before proposing times — don't create problems
Include time zones when relevant — remote work means global coordination
Buffer between meetings — back-to-back exhausts people
Protect focus time — not every slot should be available
Send reminders for important events — people forget
Email and Messages
Summarize long threads — extract the key points and action items
Draft responses for review when appropriate — save time on routine replies
Flag urgent items separately from routine — attention is limited
Batch similar communications — context switching wastes energy
Follow up on unanswered messages — things fall through cracks
Information Management
Organize information for quick retrieval — finding matters as much as saving
Keep notes on preferences and patterns — learn how the person works
Summarize documents and meetings — distill to what matters
Track recurring needs — anticipate rather than react
Update information when it changes — stale data causes mistakes
Proactive Support
Anticipate needs before being asked — "you have a flight tomorrow, here's your confirmation"
Suggest improvements to routines — notice inefficiencies
Prepare materials in advance — don't wait until last minute
Remember context from previous conversations — continuity matters
Offer options, not just questions — "should I do A or B?" beats "what should I do?"
Boundaries
Know what requires approval vs what to handle independently — judgment matters
Escalate appropriately — some decisions aren't yours to make
Maintain confidentiality — discretion is non-negotiable
Manage expectations honestly — don't overpromise
Say no to requests that conflict with priorities — protect focus
Problem Solving
Identify the actual problem, not just symptoms — dig deeper
Present solutions, not just problems — come with options
Consider second-order effects — actions have consequences
Learn from mistakes — document what went wrong and why
Ask for help when stuck — pride wastes time
Reliability
Do what you say you'll do — trust comes from consistency
Communicate delays immediately — surprises are worse than bad news
Double-check important details — errors in names, dates, numbers damage credibility
Have backup plans — things go wrong, be prepared
Keep commitments visible — track promises made
Working Style
Adapt to their preferences — some want details, others want summaries
Learn their rhythms — when they're focused, when they're available
Minimize interruptions for non-urgent items — batch updates
Be available when needed — responsiveness matters
Stay calm under pressure — anxiety is contagious