Copy-paste GPT for Sheets formulas
Adapt these formulas to your sheet. Keep inputs in source columns and AI outputs in separate review columns.
Generate the main research field
A: company/domain
=GPT("For this company/domain: " & A2 & ", produce a concise ICP fit for B2B sales, recruiters, agencies.. Return bullets only.")
Create the action-ready output
A: company/domain · B: context/source notes
=GPT("Using " & A2 & " and context " & B2 & ", create personalized angle. Make it specific, factual, and easy to review.")
Add a QA review column
A: source row · C: AI output
=GPT("Review this AI output for accuracy risks, missing context, and compliance concerns. Source row: " & A2 & " Output: " & C2)
What this workflow is for
LinkedIn Lead Research in Google Sheets with GPT for Sheets is a spreadsheet-native workflow for teams that already keep lists, exports, and campaign planning in Google Sheets. Instead of moving every row into a separate AI chat, GPT for Sheets lets you write one prompt as a formula and run it across the whole table.
Best fit: B2B sales, recruiters, agencies.. Search intent: workflow/upgrade; searcher has LinkedIn lead lists..
Use this page as a practical starting point: set up columns, test formulas on a small sample, add QA checks, then scale to the full list when the output is reliable.
Workflow
Start with a clean sheet where each row is one record and each AI task gets its own output column. For this workflow, a simple version is:
- Column A: Company/Domain
- Column B: Source context, notes, URL, or segment
- Column C: Icp Fit generated by AI
- Column D: Personalized Angle generated by AI
- Column E: Manual review status
- Column F: Next action or export field
Recommended process:
- Run formulas on 10-20 representative rows first.
- Tighten the prompt until the output is specific enough to use.
- Add a review column before copying anything into CRM, email, ad, or publishing tools.
- Fill the formula down only after sample quality is acceptable.
- Keep the original source columns unchanged so you can audit and rerun later.
What to paste/export into Sheets
For what to paste/export into sheets, keep the prompt narrow and grounded in row data. Ask GPT for Sheets to return structured output: short bullets, a score with a reason, or a field that can be pasted into the next tool. Avoid asking for broad strategy and instead make each row produce one useful decision or asset.
Copyable formulas for profile summaries
For copyable formulas for profile summaries, keep the prompt narrow and grounded in row data. Ask GPT for Sheets to return structured output: short bullets, a score with a reason, or a field that can be pasted into the next tool. Avoid asking for broad strategy and instead make each row produce one useful decision or asset.
Personalized first lines
For personalized first lines, keep the prompt narrow and grounded in row data. Ask GPT for Sheets to return structured output: short bullets, a score with a reason, or a field that can be pasted into the next tool. Avoid asking for broad strategy and instead make each row produce one useful decision or asset.
ICP fit and routing
For icp fit and routing, keep the prompt narrow and grounded in row data. Ask GPT for Sheets to return structured output: short bullets, a score with a reason, or a field that can be pasted into the next tool. Avoid asking for broad strategy and instead make each row produce one useful decision or asset.
Copy-paste formulas
The formula cards above are intentionally generic so you can adapt them to your actual columns. The key pattern is: source data in columns A/B, AI output in C/D, and human review in E before exporting.
For higher quality results, add constraints such as tone, target audience, forbidden assumptions, max word count, and required output format. If a row lacks enough context, tell the model to return Needs manual research instead of inventing facts.
Quality control
AI output should be treated as a draft, not a verified database. Add checks before using the results in sales, recruiting, SEO, ecommerce, or customer-facing workflows:
- Verify important facts against the original source.
- Keep a column for confidence, missing data, or manual review notes.
- Do not infer sensitive or protected attributes.
- Review outreach copy for consent, deliverability, and local compliance.
- Save the final approved version separately from raw AI output.
Important: Avoid instructing ToS-violating scraping; frame around user-provided/exported data and manual review.
Related guides
Continue with these GPT for Sheets resources:
- [existing
/linkedin-lead-research-google-sheets-ai/](existing/linkedin-lead-research-google-sheets-ai/) - /ai-lead-enrichment-google-sheets-guide/
- /cold-email-personalization-google-sheets-ai/
- [/gpt-for-sheets/
.](/gpt-for-sheets/.) - GPT for Sheets
FAQ
Do I need to copy data into ChatGPT?
No. GPT for Sheets runs prompts as formulas inside Google Sheets, so you can work row by row without leaving the spreadsheet.
Can I use Claude, Gemini, or OpenRouter models?
GPT for Sheets is designed for model/provider flexibility. Check the product page and docs for the current provider setup options.
Should I trust the output automatically?
No. Use AI output as a structured draft and keep a human review column for anything that affects prospects, customers, candidates, rankings, or revenue.
