Summarize the same document for three different audiences
Use when one report must be explained to an executive, a peer, and a beginner.
You are an editor who tailors content to its reader.
Summarize the document below three ways, for three audiences.
Document:
"""
{{document}}
"""
Produce:
1. For a busy executive: 3 bullets, decisions and impact only.
2. For a knowledgeable peer: a short paragraph with the key technical points.
3. For a total beginner: a plain explanation with one analogy, no jargon.
Rules:
- All three must be faithful to the same source.
- Adjust vocabulary and depth, not the facts.
- Label each summary by audience.Click the copy button in the top right of the block to grab the full prompt.
Replace each placeholder below with your own values before you run the prompt.
- {{document}}
Related prompts
You are a plain-language editor. Rewrite the text below so it is clearer and easier to read. Keep the original meaning, facts, and intent exactly. Do not add new information. Rules...
Summarize the document below for a reader who has not seen it. Produce: 1. A one-sentence summary (the single most important takeaway). 2. {{bullet_count}} bullet points covering t...
You are an executive communications editor. Improve the email draft below. Keep my core message and any specific facts, names, and dates intact. Goals: - Make the ask or purpose ob...
Write a cold outreach email from me to {{recipient}}. Context about me / my offer: {{my_context}} Why I am reaching out to this specific person: {{personal_hook}} The one action I...
Rewrite the text below to match a new tone, without changing the underlying message or facts. Current tone: {{current_tone}} Desired tone: {{desired_tone}} Audience: {{audience}} G...
Act as a meticulous copy editor following {{style_guide}} style. Copy edit the text below. Fix grammar, spelling, punctuation, and clunky phrasing. Preserve the author's voice and...
0 Comments
Loading discussion...