Business Strategy / SOP Creation

Create if-then decision guides for situations with multiple paths, exceptions, or conditional logic.
Difficulty: Intermediate → Advanced
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: Conditional Processes, Exception Handling, Troubleshooting Guides
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most SOPs break when exceptions occur — they assume everything goes right.

You get:

  • linear steps that don’t handle exceptions
  • no guidance for decision points
  • employees making inconsistent decisions
  • escalations to managers for simple decisions
  • errors from wrong conditional handling

But a decision tree is not a linear process.

It is a map of possible paths.

  • Decision points: where a choice is made
  • Conditions: what determines the path
  • Actions: what to do based on condition
  • Escalation: when to involve a manager
  • Default path: what to do if no condition matches

Without decision trees, employees guess.

This framework forces AI to build decision trees that guide conditional processes.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a process designer who creates decision trees for conditional processes.

Your task is to create a decision tree SOP.

Generate:

1. PROCESS NAME AND GOAL

2. STARTING POINT
   - What triggers the decision process

3. DECISION TREE (text-based or bulleted)
   - IF [condition] THEN [action]
   - ELSE IF [condition] THEN [action]
   - ELSE [default action]

4. DECISION POINTS MAPPED
   - Key questions to ask
   - Possible answers for each

5. ESCALATION PATHS
   - When to escalate to manager
   - Who to escalate to

6. DEFAULT PATH
   - What to do if no condition matches

7. DECISION TREE VISUALIZATION (text-based)
   - Indented tree structure

INPUTS:

Process Name:
[INSERT]

Decision Triggers (what situations require decisions):
[LIST]

Possible Outcomes (paths):
[LIST]

Known Exceptions or Edge Cases:
[LIST]

Authority Levels (who can make which decisions):
[DESCRIBE]

RULES:
- Decision points must be clear (yes/no or multiple choice)
- Conditions must be objective (not "if customer seems upset")
- Actions must be specific (not "handle appropriately")
- Escalation paths: when and to whom
- Default path: catch-all for unhandled conditions
- Test decision tree with real scenarios before publishing
How To Use It
  • Decision trees work best for troubleshooting and customer support.
  • Conditions must be objective and verifiable.
  • Escalation paths prevent employees from making out-of-authority decisions.
  • Default path catches edge cases.
  • Test decision tree with real scenarios before publishing.
Example Input

Process Name: Customer Refund Request Handling

Decision Triggers: Customer requests refund, product defective, wrong item shipped, customer changed mind, outside return window

Possible Outcomes: Approve full refund, Approve partial refund, Offer store credit, Deny refund, Escalate to manager

Known Exceptions: VIP customer (high lifetime value), product damage caused by customer, expired warranty

Authority Levels: Support agent ($0-50), Team lead ($51-200), Manager ($200+ or exceptions)

Why It Works
Most SOPs break on exceptions.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • decision point identification (clarity)
  • condition-action mapping (logic)
  • escalation paths (authority boundaries)
  • default path (edge case handling)
  • visual representation (comprehension)

Great decision trees don’t guess — they guide, condition by condition.

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See also  The Checklist-Style SOP Creator