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Agent & Workflow Updated 2026-07-05

Tool Selection Prompt Template and Example

Use this Tool Selection prompt template when you want a structured AI answer instead of a loose request. The guide combines the reusable prompt, a concrete example, and links to nearby templates so the page stays useful rather than being a thin keyword page. Choose tools for a workflow based on capabilities, risk, cost, and handoffs.

Open Tool Selection in the editor

Reusable prompt

Recommend a tool stack that fits the task and control requirements.

Task type: Tool Selection
Objective: Recommend a tool stack that fits the task and control requirements.

Context:
- [Project, product, or topic]: [Project, product, or topic]
- [Audience and situation]: [Audience and situation]
- [Constraints, must-haves, and things to avoid]: [Constraints, must-haves, and things to avoid]

Inputs to provide:
[Paste source material here]

Expected output:
1. Options
2. Comparison table
3. Risks and tradeoffs
4. Recommendation
5. Approval needs

Quality bar:
- Be specific and avoid generic advice.
- State assumptions explicitly.
- Prefer actionable next steps over broad theory.
- If important information is missing, ask up to 3 clarifying questions before answering.
- For time-sensitive or factual claims, label what is known, inferred, and needs verification.

Worked example

The example below fills the same prompt for a realistic Agent & Workflow scenario. It is intentionally modest: the goal is to show how the prompt behaves, not to pretend one template solves every Agent & Workflow problem.

Task type: Tool Selection
Objective: Recommend a tool stack that fits the task and control requirements.

Context:
- [Project, product, or topic]: A real Agent & Workflow task using the Tool Selection prompt
- [Audience and situation]: A teammate who needs a useful answer and clear next steps
- [Constraints, must-haves, and things to avoid]: Be specific, state assumptions, avoid unsupported claims, and keep the output easy to act on.

Inputs to provide:
Sample material: The team needs help with Tool Selection. The current situation is messy, the goal is clear enough to start, and the answer should separate facts, assumptions, risks, and next actions.

Expected output:
1. Options
2. Comparison table
3. Risks and tradeoffs
4. Recommendation
5. Approval needs

Quality bar:
- Be specific and avoid generic advice.
- State assumptions explicitly.
- Prefer actionable next steps over broad theory.
- If important information is missing, ask up to 3 clarifying questions before answering.
- For time-sensitive or factual claims, label what is known, inferred, and needs verification.

How to use this prompt

  1. Replace the placeholders with the actual Tool Selection task, audience, source material, and constraints.
  2. Keep the requested output sections unless you have a strong reason to remove one; they are there to make the AI answer easier to evaluate.
  3. Paste the finished prompt into your AI assistant, then ask one follow-up question that tests assumptions or missing evidence.

What a good answer should contain

  • 1. OptionsUse this section to make the answer concrete: Options.
  • 2. Comparison tableUse this section to make the answer concrete: Comparison table.
  • 3. Risks and tradeoffsUse this section to make the answer concrete: Risks and tradeoffs.
  • 4. RecommendationUse this section to make the answer concrete: Recommendation.
  • 5. Approval needsUse this section to make the answer concrete: Approval needs.

Why this prompt works

  • Tool Selection starts with an explicit task type and objective, which reduces vague answers.
  • It asks for context, source material, and constraints before the model writes the final response.
  • The 5 output sections make the answer scannable and easier to compare across attempts.
  • The quality bar tells the assistant to ask clarifying questions and mark claims that need verification.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Leaving placeholders untouched and expecting the model to infer the missing context.
  • Removing the output structure, then asking for a final answer that is hard to review.
  • Using the prompt for time-sensitive facts without checking sources or dates.