Shared Knowledge, Saved Time
Using AI Projects for Farmers’ Markets
When AI understands your specific market, it becomes a practical tool for fundraising, content creation, and repeatable workflows.
A Simple System for Fundraising and Content Creation
AI is most useful when it understands your specific market, not just farmers’ markets in general.
That’s where AI Projects come in.
Instead of starting from scratch every time you write a newsletter, apply for a grant, or draft a sponsorship email, Projects allow you to give AI a shared knowledge base about your market: who you are, what you do, and how you communicate. Once set up, that knowledge can be reused consistently across many tasks.
Recommended Project Setup
Create two separate AI Projects:
- Fundraising & Sponsorship Project
- Content Creation & Marketing Project
Keeping these separate prevents tone confusion and helps AI stay focused on the task at hand.
What Is an AI Project? (Plain English)
An AI Project is a dedicated workspace that contains:
- Documents you upload
- Instructions about tone and priorities
- A history of related conversations
Think of a Project as a folder.
Inside that folder:
- You can start many different conversations (called chats)
- All of those chats can refer back to the same uploaded documents
- AI “knows” it is working for your market every time
How Projects Work Technically (Beginner-Friendly Explanation)
Projects vs. Chats
This is the most important concept to understand.
- A Project is the container (or folder)
- A Chat is one specific conversation inside that container
You do not need a new Project for every task.
You do need new chats within a Project for different tasks.
When to Start a New Chat (Inside the Same Project)
Start a new chat when:
- You are switching tasks
(e.g., from writing a grant to drafting a sponsor email) - A conversation has gotten long or messy
- You want a clean slate but the same background knowledge
- You’re working on a new week, event, or document
Example:
- One chat: “Draft grant responses for X funder”
- New chat: “Create sponsor email for local business”
- Same Project, different chats
All chats still have access to the uploaded documents.
When to Stay in the Same Chat
Stay in the same chat when:
- You are refining or editing the same piece of work
- You are asking follow-up questions about the same document
- You are iterating on wording, tone, or length
Think:
One task = one chat
What Projects Remember (and What They Don’t)
Projects Do Remember:
- Documents you upload
- Instructions you give within the Project
- Your market’s programs, tone, and priorities
Projects Do Not Reliably Remember:
- Live websites
- Links alone
- Verbal references to past conversations outside the Project
That’s why uploading documents is essential.
Step 1: Define the Purpose of Each Project
Project 1: Fundraising & Sponsorship
Use this Project for:
- Grant applications
- Sponsorship packages
- Impact summaries
- Funder and donor emails
- Year-end reports
- Board-facing updates
Tone focus: clear, confident, impact-driven.
Project 2: Content Creation & Marketing
Use this Project for:
- Newsletters
- Social media posts
- Blog articles
- Event promotion
- Website copy
- Program explanations
Tone focus: warm, welcoming, community-centered.
Step 2: Upload Your Core Documents
- Market Overview Document (Written Once)
Create a single document (PDF or DOC) that includes:
- Market name and location
- Mission and purpose
- Community role
- Years of operation
- Market vibe or personality
- Vendor categories
- Voucher and food access programs
- Partnerships
- Seasonal schedule and events
- Goals and challenges
This is your foundation document.
Upload it to both Projects.
- Website and Online Presence Summary
Instead of relying on AI to “remember” your website:
- Ask AI to review your website, Google Business Profile, and social media
- Ask it to create a 1–2 page summary of how your market is presented publicly
- Save that summary as a PDF or DOC
- Upload it to the Project
This creates a stable reference point.
- Existing Documents
Upload anything you already have:
- Grants
- Sponsorship materials
- Press releases
- Annual reports
- Vendor handbooks
- Newsletters
Even older documents are helpful
Step 3: Add a Writing & Tone Guide
Create a short document called something like:
“How to Write for Our Market”
Include:
- Preferred tone
- What to avoid
- Primary audiences
- Writing style preferences
- Accessibility expectations
Upload this to each Project.
Step 4: Add Supporting Reference Documents
Metrics & Impact Notes
Include:
- Vendor count
- Attendance range
- Voucher dollars distributed
- Growth milestones
Standard Answers Document
Include:
- Mission statement
- One-paragraph market description
- Why the market matters
- How sponsorships help
- Who benefits
Event & Program List
Include:
- Annual events
- Special programs
- Kids activities
Seasonal highlights
Step 5: How to Use Projects Day-to-Day
Once set up:
- Start a new chat for each task
- Keep editing and refining within that chat
- Start fresh chats often, this is good practice, not a mistake
Example prompts:
- “Using what you know about our market, draft a sponsor email.”
- “Write a newsletter section promoting this week’s programs.”
- “Answer this grant question using our mission and voucher programs.”
You do not need to restate your mission or programs each time.
Common Beginner Tips & Reassurance
- You cannot “break” a Project by asking the wrong question
- Starting a new chat does not erase anything
- Uploaded documents are always available
- AI is a drafting tool, not a decision-maker
- You should always review and edit before publishing
Key Message for Markets
AI Projects are about reducing repetition, not replacing people.
A little setup creates a system that saves time all season long.
AI doesn’t replace your voice.
It helps you reuse it clearly, consistently, and with less burnout.
Sample Prompts for AI Projects
These prompts assume the market has already uploaded:
- A Market Overview document
- A Website / Online Presence summary
- Existing docs (grants, newsletters, sponsorships, etc.)
- A “How to Write for Our Market” tone guide
They are intentionally plain English. No magic words required.
Project 1: Fundraising & Sponsorship
(Tone: clear, confident, impact-focused, not salesy)
Grant Writing & Applications
- “Using what you know about our market, answer this grant question: [paste question]”
- “Rewrite this response to be clearer and more outcome-focused while staying accurate.”
- “Shorten this answer to 250 words without losing impact.”
- “What data points from our market should be emphasized for this funder?”
Sponsorship Outreach
- “Draft a sponsorship email to a local bank that focuses on community impact and visibility.”
- “Create a short ‘Why Sponsor Our Market’ paragraph using our programs and audience.”
- “Help me explain how a $2,500 sponsorship supports food access and local farms.”
- “Rewrite this sponsorship blurb so it sounds appreciative, not transactional.”
Reports & Impact Summaries
- “Create a one-page sponsor impact summary using our voucher programs and attendance.”
- “Turn these bullet points into a funder-friendly narrative.”
- “Write a year-end thank-you section for sponsors highlighting shared success.”
Strategy & Framing
- “What themes consistently show up in our fundraising story?”
- “How can we better explain our community impact in simple language?”
- “Suggest ways to describe our market’s value beyond attendance numbers.”
Project 2: Content Creation & Marketing
(Tone: warm, welcoming, accessible, community-first)
Newsletters
- “Draft a weekly market newsletter using our usual structure.”
- “Write a short intro paragraph that sets a welcoming tone for this week.”
- “Turn this list of updates into skimmable newsletter sections.”
- “Rewrite this to sound more friendly and less formal.”
Social Media
- “Write 3 social captions promoting this Sunday’s market, each with a slightly different tone.”
- “Create a caption explaining our voucher programs in plain language.”
- “Turn this newsletter section into a Facebook post.”
- “Help me promote this event without sounding repetitive.”
Blog & Website Content
- “Write a blog post answering this question: What programs help make the market more affordable?”
- “Rewrite this page so it’s easier to understand for first-time visitors.”
- “Create an FAQ section for new shoppers.”
- “Summarize this long explanation into a clear website paragraph.”
Planning & Consistency
-
- “Create a simple content plan for the next month based on our programs.”
- “What messages should we repeat regularly to build familiarity?”
- “Help me repurpose this blog post into social and newsletter content.”
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Maine Federation of Farmers Markets
Social
Contact
mffmmarketingguide@gmail.com
