…
. Must not use placeholders. Must be between 450-500 words inclusive. Must end with a paragraph promoting the e-book with link as given. We need to count words. Let’s craft about 470 words. We need to include title with “AI” and “ai”. Title line: “Title: …” then maybe “Title: Automating Side‑by‑Side Vendor Contract Comparisons with AI for Solo Event Planners”. Ensure includes “AI” and “ai”. It has AI uppercase and ai lowercase? The phrase “AI” includes uppercase; “ai” lowercase appears inside “Side‑by‑Side”? Not. Could include “ai” explicitly: “Title: Automating Side‑by‑Side Vendor Contract Comparisons with ai and AI for Solo Event Planners”. That includes both “ai” and “AI”. Good. Now content: We’ll write headings using HTML heading tags? The requirement says plain HTML paragraphs and headings (e.g.,…
). For headings we can use etc. Probably okay. Use WordPress block comments? They gave example for paragraph only. We’ll just use standard HTML with headings and
paragraphs. Ensure no placeholders. We need to incorporate facts from e-book: steps, fields, examples, table. Must be concise but include those details. Let’s draft ~470 words. We’ll need to count words. Let’s write then count. Draft:
Solo event planners juggle many vendors, and comparing cancellation policies can eat up hours. AI automation turns this tedious task into a quick, repeatable workflow.
Step 1: Define the comparison fields. List the clauses you need to evaluate for every contract: cancellation by vendor, date‑change/rescheduling fees, deposit forfeiture terms, exceptions (sell/transfer or sublet), force majeure definition, notice method, and refund percentage by time window.
Step 2: Build an extraction prompt for your AI. Feed each vendor PDF or scan into your AI workbench and ask it to pull out the values for the fields above. Example prompt: “Extract the following from the contract: (1) vendor‑cancellation refund terms, (2) date‑change fee structure, (3) deposit refundability, (4) client transfer/sublet rights, (5) force majeure events covered, (6) required notice format and deadline, (7) refund schedule by days prior.” The AI returns structured data you can copy into a spreadsheet.
Step 3: Use a side‑by‑side template. Populate a table with the extracted data. Below is a sample for three common vendors.
| Field | Caterer | Photographer | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cancellation by vendor | Full refund up to 60 days, then 50% up to 30 days, then 0% | $1,000 deposit non‑refundable; 100% refund if cancelled 90 days out, then 0% | 50% deposit non‑refundable; 100% refund if cancelled 180 days out, then sliding scale to 0% at 60 days |
| Date‑change/rescheduling fees | Flat $200 fee, allowed once | 15% of total, allowed twice | 10% of venue fee, unlimited |
| Deposit forfeiture terms | No deposit (pay‑as‑you‑go) | Deposit non‑refundable | 50% of deposit non‑refundable |
| Exceptions (sell/transfer) | Allowed with 30‑day notice | Not allowed | Allowed with venue approval |
| Force majeure clause | Includes acts of God, pandemic, supplier bankruptcy | Covers natural disasters only | Broad: acts of God, war, government orders |
| Notice method | Email, deadline 5 PM local time | Certified mail, deadline midnight UTC | Email or portal, deadline 5 PM EST |
| Refund % by time window | 100% if ≥60 days, 50% if 30‑59 days, 0% <30 days | 100% if ≥90 days, 0% <90 days | 100% if ≥180 days, 75% 120‑179, 50% 60‑119, 0% <60 days |
Activate risk detection. Run a “gotcha” prompt: “Identify any conflicting deadlines, missing clauses, or hidden costs across the extracted data.” The AI flags issues such as a venue requiring 120‑day notice while the caterer only gives 60 days, helping you spot gaps before they become problems.
Draft client summary. Ask the AI to produce a plain‑English report: “Summarize the key differences, highlight risks, and recommend which vendor offers the most flexible cancellation terms.” The output can be pasted directly into your client email or proposal.
Prepare your contracts. Upload all vendor contracts (PDF or scanned) into your AI workbench, run the extraction, fill the side‑by‑side table, activate risk detection, and draft the summary. Repeating this process for each event builds a reusable library that saves hours every planning cycle.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Solo Event Planners: How to Automate Vendor Contract Comparison and Negotiation Drafting.
Now we need to count words. Let’s count manually. I’ll copy the text and count. Title line: “Title: Automating Side‑by‑Side Vendor Contract Comparisons with ai and AI for Solo Event Planners” Words: Title:(1) Automating2 Side‑by‑Side3 Vendor4 Contract5 Comparisons6 with7 ai8 and9 AI10 for11 Solo12 Event13 Planners14 So 14 words before content. Now content paragraphs. I’ll count each paragraph. Paragraph1: “Solo event planners juggle many vendors, and comparing cancellation policies can eat up hours. AI automation turns this tedious task into a quick, repeatable workflow.
” Words: Solo1 event2 planners3 juggle4 many5 vendors,6 and7 comparing8 cancellation9 policies10 can11 eat12 up13 hours.14 AI15 automation16 turns17 this18 tedious19 task20 into21 a22 quick,23 repeatable24 workflow25. 25 words. Paragraph2: “Step 1: Define the comparison fields. List the clauses you need to evaluate for every contract: cancellation by vendor, date‑change/rescheduling fees, deposit forfeiture terms, exceptions (sell/transfer or sublet), force majeure definition, notice method, and refund percentage by time window.
” Words: Step1 1:2 Define3 the4 comparison5 fields.6 List7 the8 clauses9 you10 need11 to12 evaluate13 for14 every15 contract:16 cancellation17 by18 vendor,19 date‑change/rescheduling20 fees,21 deposit22 forfeiture23 terms,24 exceptions25 (sell/transfer26 or27 sublet),28 force29 majeure30 definition,31 notice32 method,33 and34 refund35 percentage36 by37 time38 window39. 39 words. Paragraph3: “Step 2: Build an extraction prompt for your AI. Feed each vendor PDF or scan into your AI workbench and ask it to pull out the values for the fields above. Example prompt: “Extract the following from the contract: (1) vendor‑cancellation refund terms, (2) date‑change fee structure, (3) deposit refundability, (4) client transfer/sublet rights, (5) force majeure events covered, (6) required notice format and deadline, (7) refund schedule by days prior.” The AI returns structured data you can copy into a spreadsheet.
” Count words. Step1 1:2 Build3 an4 extraction5 prompt6 for7 your8 AI.9 Feed10 each11 vendor12 PDF13 or14 scan15 into16 your17 AI18 workbench19 and20 ask21 it22 to23 pull24 out25 the26 values27 for28 the29 fields30 above.31 Example32 prompt:33 “Extract34 the35 following36 from37 the38 contract:39 (1)40 vendor‑cancellation41 refund42 terms,43 (2)44 date‑change45 fee46 structure,47 (3)48 deposit49 refundability,50 (4)51 client52 transfer/sublet53 rights,54 (5)55 force56 majeure57 events58 covered,59 (6)60 required61 notice62 format63 and64 deadline,65 (7)66 refund67 schedule68 by69 days70 prior.”71 The72 AI73 returns74 structured75 data76 you77 can78 copy79 into80 a81 spreadsheet82. 82 words. Paragraph4: “Step 3: Use a side‑by‑side template. Populate a table with the extracted data. Below is a sample for three common vendors.
” Words: Step1 1:2 Use3 a4 side‑by‑side5 template.6 Populate7 a8 table9 with10 the11 extracted12 data.13 Below14 is15 a16 sample17 for18 three19 common20 vendors21. 21 words. Paragraph5: The table HTML. We need to count words inside the table content (excluding tags). Let’s extract the visible text. Table header: Field, Caterer, Photographer, Venue Rows: Row1: Cancellation by vendor, Caterer: Full refund up to 60 days, then 50% up to 30 days, then 0%, Photographer: $1,000 deposit non‑refundable; 100% refund if cancelled 90 days out, then 0%, Venue: 50% deposit non‑refundable; 100% refund if cancelled 180