Paper Tray Overflow Tab Card
Purpose
Use this prompt-only skill when incoming printouts, forms, handouts, receipts, packets, or desk papers pile up in a tray before anyone knows when to process them. The deliverable is a printable paper tray overflow tab card with a visible fill line, an owner role, and quick triage prompts that turn a growing stack into a clear action trigger.
This skill is for physical tray visibility and low-detail triage only. It does not classify sensitive documents, set records-retention rules, provide legal, medical, tax, financial, or compliance advice, or decide what should be kept, scanned, shredded, filed, or discarded. The card should help users notice overflow and start a review without exposing private contents.
Safety Boundary
Do not request, print, reveal, categorize, or summarize sensitive document contents on the visible tab. Avoid names, account numbers, addresses, student records, medical details, legal case details, tax details, payroll data, client identifiers, passwords, access codes, or confidential project details.
Do not provide document retention schedules, disposal instructions, shredding rules, legal holds, compliance claims, tax guidance, medical record guidance, financial advice, or official document classification. Use broad physical statuses such as review, route, file privately, waiting, recycle only if already safe and obvious, or ask owner.
Use This Skill When
Use this skill when the user wants to:
- Set a visible fill line for an inbox tray or paper stack.
- Assign a neutral owner role for clearing the tray.
- Add quick prompts for routing, reviewing, or privately filing papers.
- Prevent printouts from silently becoming a desk pile.
- Make a small printable tab for a household, classroom, office, studio, or front-desk tray.
- Use an AI-assisted review prompt without exposing sensitive document details.
Do not use this skill for sensitive document classification, document destruction decisions, official retention schedules, legal discovery, compliance workflows, tax filing advice, medical records, payroll records, or confidential client files.
Best Inputs
Ask for practical, non-sensitive setup details:
- Tray location: desk inbox, printer shelf, classroom tray, family command center, studio counter, front desk, or project shelf.
- Tray owner role: household, desk owner, teacher, admin, project lead, front desk, or team.
- Paper types using broad labels: printouts, forms, receipts, mail, handouts, drafts, packets, school papers, or project notes.
- Desired fill trigger: half tray, top line, five items, ten items, one inch, end of day, Friday reset, or before leaving.
- Triage prompts: route, review, sign, scan later, file privately, ask owner, waiting, or clear duplicates.
- Preferred card shape: tray tab, front label, side flag, mini card, divider card, or one-page printable.
- Whether the tray is shared or private.
Do not ask for private document contents, full names, addresses, account numbers, medical details, legal details, tax amounts, payroll data, confidential project names, student records, or client identifiers.
Workflow
- Pick the tray. Identify the physical inbox, printer tray, folder tray, or paper stack location.
- Set the overflow trigger. Choose a visible fill line, count, height, date, or routine cue.
- Assign an owner role. Use a neutral role rather than a private person if the tab is shared.
- Define broad paper lanes. Use safe, low-detail labels that do not expose document contents.
- Create quick triage prompts. Use action verbs that start review without deciding retention or disposal.
- Add privacy guardrails. Keep sensitive details off the tab and move private decisions to the appropriate private process.
- Write the reset routine. Clear the tray when the trigger is reached, then update the visible cue.
- Produce the tab card. Return a concise printable artifact with fill line, owner, trigger, prompts, and safety line.
Output Format
Return the result in this order:
-
Scope Note
- Physical tray overflow trigger only
- No sensitive document classification or visible private details
- No retention, disposal, legal, medical, tax, financial, or compliance advice
-
Tray Snapshot
- Tray location
- Shared or private visibility
- Owner role
- Broad paper types
- Fill trigger
- Reset rhythm
-
Overflow Trigger Plan
- Fill line or count limit
- Visual placement for the tab
- What happens when the trigger is reached
- What stays off the visible card
-
Safe Triage Prompts
- Review
- Route
- Sign or respond
- File privately
- Ask owner
- Waiting
- Remove duplicates when plainly safe
-
Privacy Scrub
- User-provided paper label, if any
- Safer visible label
- Private details to omit
- Why the tab should stay broad
-
Tray Clearing Routine
- Stop adding once the trigger is reached
- Sort only by broad action lane
- Keep contents face down or private when needed
- Move sensitive decisions to the proper private process
- Reset the fill line cue after clearing
-
Printable Paper Tray Overflow Tab Card
- Card title
- Tray owner role
- Fill trigger
- Broad action prompts
- Reset day or cue
- Privacy line: no private document details on this tab
Style Guidelines
- Keep the tab short enough to read at the tray edge.
- Use broad labels and neutral owner roles.
- Make the trigger visible and concrete.
- Favor prompts that initiate review rather than decide what to keep or discard.
- Avoid records-retention, shredding, legal, medical, tax, financial, compliance, or confidential document guidance.
- Keep AI assistance optional and privacy-preserving: users can ask for help summarizing their process, not expose the papers themselves.
Example Prompts
Copy and paste any of these prompts:
-
"My desk inbox tray keeps piling up with printouts, forms, and mail until I can't see the bottom. Make me a printable overflow tab card with a fill line at about 1 inch, a weekly Friday reset cue, and quick prompts like review, route, and file privately."
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"I manage a shared classroom tray for handouts and permission slips. Create a tray tab card with a neutral owner role, a 10-item fill trigger, and safe triage prompts. I need it to say who should clear it without naming individual teachers or students."
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"Our family command center has a paper tray that everyone dumps stuff into. Make a front-label card with a half-tray fill trigger, broad lane labels (bills, school, receipts, to-sign), and a Sunday evening reset routine. No private details on the visible label."
Quality Bar
A strong result turns a messy paper tray into a visible, low-friction action trigger. It should make overflow obvious, assign a neutral owner, and offer broad next-step prompts while keeping sensitive document contents and official retention decisions out of the visible card.