Structured tables always remain one of the clearest ways to present information. For years, though, building those tables in WordPress meant dealing with restrictive default blocks, clunky shortcodes, or relying on external tools. A considerable amount of time was used to create the tables, and even more had to be spent on formatting and tweaking the same table.
Although we are in the primary stage of the new AI evolution, the idea of minimizing your effort through automation is no longer just a concept. Anyone can now describe a table in plain language and receive a usable structure in seconds. The shift already removes many of the manual obstacles that once slowed down content creation.
This article focuses on what’s achievable right now. You’ll find prompts that demonstrate how AI can generate different types of tables, along with suggestions for improving the output and steps for turning those raw results into styled and functional tables inside the WordPress editor.
1. Prompt for a Product Comparison Table
Create a comparison table with five sample items named Product A, Product B, Product C, Product D, and Product E. Use column headers: Option to Try for Free, Workflow Support, Learning Curve, and Pricing Plan. Keep the structure fixed.
What You’ll Get
The output will be a horizontally aligned table where the column headers define traits and the rows represent each sample product. It follows a structure that works well for comparing multiple items side by side. One benefit of this format is how easy it becomes to identify gaps or strengths between different options. However, the initial results may feel too similar from row to row, especially if the sample traits are vague. Sometimes the AI fills cells with basic phrases like yes, basic, or available, which do not communicate enough contrast unless further refined.
Use Case
Ideal for affiliate bloggers or SaaS review roundups.
2. Prompt for a Pricing Table
Create a pricing table with three sample plans named Plan A, Plan B, and Plan C. Place the plans as column headers and list the following rows: Monthly Price, Feature One, Feature Two, Feature Three, and Call to Action Text. Keep the structure fixed. Only change the row labels based on what is included in each pricing plan.
What You’ll Get
This will generate a vertically structured pricing table where the plans are shown across the top, and the rows define key pricing and feature differences. The format makes it easy to compare what each plan offers relative to its cost.
Use Case
Best for displaying pricing tiers with feature breakdowns.
3. Prompt for a Feature Comparison Table
Create a feature comparison table with two sample tools named Tool A and Tool B. Include features such as Responsive Layouts, Column Customization, Cell Merging, and Block-Based Editing. Keep the structure fixed.
What You’ll Get
This will generate a row-based feature matrix comparing two tools side by side. Each row lists a specific feature, with corresponding details shown under both tools to highlight differences or overlap.
Use Case
Perfect for showcasing the advantages of your product or plugin.
4. Prompt for a Content Schedule Table
Create a weekly content schedule table with seven rows for each day of the week. Use column headers: Day, Topic, Target Keyword, Author, and Status. Keep the structure fixed.
What You’ll Get
This will produce a calendar-style table with one row per day and clearly labeled columns for planning upcoming content. It provides an organized snapshot of publishing goals and assignments for the week.
Use Case
Useful for content marketers and editorial teams.
5. Prompt for a Pros and Cons Table
Create a pros and cons table for a sample item named Product A. Use two columns labeled Pros and Cons. Include five rows highlighting both strengths and limitations. Keep the structure fixed.
What You’ll Get
This will generate a simple two-column table where each row lists a benefit or drawback of the item being evaluated. The format is balanced and works well for presenting both sides of a decision in a clear and honest layout.
Use Case
Great for highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of a product or feature.
6. Prompt for Creating a Table from a CSV or XML File
Convert the following sample CSV data into an HTML table format. Include a header row and five rows of data. [Paste sample CSV content here]
What You’ll Get
This will generate a complete HTML table structure using the CSV content as source data. The output preserves row order, includes labeled headers, and is ready to be styled or embedded.
Use Case
Perfect for turning raw export data into visual tables.
7. Prompt for Creating a Table from an Image
Extract table data from the following image and convert it into an editable HTML table. Make sure the number of columns and rows matches the original image. [Upload or link to the image]
What You’ll Get
This will return a structured table that mirrors the layout of the image. It recreates the rows and columns with sample content, offering a fully editable version for further use.
Use Case
Great for replicating tables from screenshots or reports.
8. Prompt for Creating a Table from a Blog Post
Scan the following blog post and generate a summary table of the key items mentioned. Include columns for Item Name, Main Feature, Highlighted Benefit, and Price. [Paste blog content here]
What You’ll Get
This will generate a summary-style table that pulls structured information from longer content. It simplifies multiple sections into a concise table for better clarity and faster reading.
Use Case
Turn long-form content into quick, scannable summaries.
From Raw Output to Publish-Ready Tables
After generating a table with AI, the next step is making it fit your site. Instead of pasting raw HTML or adjusting layout with shortcodes, it’s much faster to drop the result into a visual editor that supports block-based customization. If you’re using the ブロックエディター, you can copy and paste the generated table directly into the editor, which will automatically convert it into the default Table block.
From there, you can transform it into a テーブルバーグ block using the block toolbar and begin refining the layout with more control.

Using Tableberg, the original structure stays intact but becomes easier to style. You can replace static text with icons, insert buttons for interaction, highlight specific rows or columns, and adjust layout spacing or colors as needed. This workflow keeps everything inside the editor and removes the need to rebuild the table manually.
最後の言葉
AI gives you the foundation. It builds the structure, defines the layout, and gets the table in place without the usual time and effort. But what follows after that matters just as much.
With the structure ready, plugins like Tableberg help you take the next step. You can polish the design, add interactive elements, and align the table with the rest of your content—all from inside the editor. The process becomes faster, cleaner, and more focused on presentation rather than construction.
This combination of AI-generated structure and editor-based refinement makes table creation both practical and publish-ready.