Turn rough notes into a crisp executive summary
You are a chief of staff. Read the notes below and produce a 5-bullet executive summary, a one-line headline, and three follow-up questions a CEO would ask. Keep each bullet under 20 words. Notes:
<paste notes>
#summary#business#briefing
Turn rough notes into a crisp executive summary β for an executive audience
You are a chief of staff. Read the notes below and produce a 5-bullet executive summary, a one-line headline, and three follow-up questions a CEO would ask. Keep each bullet under 20 words. Notes:
<paste notes>
Audience: an executive audience.
#summary#business#briefing#audience
Turn rough notes into a crisp executive summary β for a technical audience
You are a chief of staff. Read the notes below and produce a 5-bullet executive summary, a one-line headline, and three follow-up questions a CEO would ask. Keep each bullet under 20 words. Notes:
<paste notes>
Audience: a technical audience.
#summary#business#briefing#audience
Explain like I'm a smart 12-year-old
Explain <topic> to a smart 12-year-old in three short paragraphs. Use one concrete analogy from everyday life. End with a single question that checks they understood the core idea.
#explainer#teaching#analogy
Explain like I'm a smart 12-year-old β for an executive audience
Explain <topic> to a smart 12-year-old in three short paragraphs. Use one concrete analogy from everyday life. End with a single question that checks they understood the core idea.
Audience: an executive audience.
#explainer#teaching#analogy#audience
Explain like I'm a smart 12-year-old β for a technical audience
Explain <topic> to a smart 12-year-old in three short paragraphs. Use one concrete analogy from everyday life. End with a single question that checks they understood the core idea.
Audience: a technical audience.
#explainer#teaching#analogy#audience
Reframe an email to sound more confident
Rewrite the email below so it sounds more confident and direct without sounding aggressive. Keep the same meaning, drop hedges ("just", "maybe", "I think"), and shorten by ~30%. Email:
<paste email>#rewrite#tone#email
Reframe an email to sound more confident β for an executive audience
Rewrite the email below so it sounds more confident and direct without sounding aggressive. Keep the same meaning, drop hedges ("just", "maybe", "I think"), and shorten by ~30%. Email:
<paste email>
Audience: an executive audience.#rewrite#tone#email#audience
Reframe an email to sound more confident β for a technical audience
Rewrite the email below so it sounds more confident and direct without sounding aggressive. Keep the same meaning, drop hedges ("just", "maybe", "I think"), and shorten by ~30%. Email:
<paste email>
Audience: a technical audience.#rewrite#tone#email#audience
Stress-test a decision with a red team
Act as a sharp red team. I am about to <decision>. List the five strongest reasons this fails, ranked by likelihood. For each, give one early warning signal I can watch for. Be specific. No platitudes.
#decision#red-team#analysis
Stress-test a decision with a red team β for an executive audience
Act as a sharp red team. I am about to <decision>. List the five strongest reasons this fails, ranked by likelihood. For each, give one early warning signal I can watch for. Be specific. No platitudes.
Audience: an executive audience.
#decision#red-team#analysis#audience
Stress-test a decision with a red team β for a technical audience
Act as a sharp red team. I am about to <decision>. List the five strongest reasons this fails, ranked by likelihood. For each, give one early warning signal I can watch for. Be specific. No platitudes.
Audience: a technical audience.
#decision#red-team#analysis#audience
Negotiation prep with BATNA
I am negotiating <thing> with <counterparty>. Help me prep: (1) my interests vs positions, (2) likely interests of the other side, (3) BATNA on both sides, (4) three opening moves with rationale, (5) two scripts for tough moments.
#negotiation#preparation#strategy
Negotiation prep with BATNA β for an executive audience
I am negotiating <thing> with <counterparty>. Help me prep: (1) my interests vs positions, (2) likely interests of the other side, (3) BATNA on both sides, (4) three opening moves with rationale, (5) two scripts for tough moments.
Audience: an executive audience.
#negotiation#preparation#strategy#audience
Negotiation prep with BATNA β for a technical audience
I am negotiating <thing> with <counterparty>. Help me prep: (1) my interests vs positions, (2) likely interests of the other side, (3) BATNA on both sides, (4) three opening moves with rationale, (5) two scripts for tough moments.
Audience: a technical audience.
#negotiation#preparation#strategy#audience
Translate jargon into plain English
Read the passage below. Output two columns: the original sentence on the left, a plain-English version on the right. Replace every piece of jargon with concrete words. Passage:
<paste>
#translation#plain-language#editing
Translate jargon into plain English β for an executive audience
Read the passage below. Output two columns: the original sentence on the left, a plain-English version on the right. Replace every piece of jargon with concrete words. Passage:
<paste>
Audience: an executive audience.
#translation#plain-language#editing#audience
Translate jargon into plain English β for a technical audience
Read the passage below. Output two columns: the original sentence on the left, a plain-English version on the right. Replace every piece of jargon with concrete words. Passage:
<paste>
Audience: a technical audience.
#translation#plain-language#editing#audience
Long-context Q&A across a doc set
I am attaching <N> documents about <topic>. Build a question bank of 15 questions a new hire would ask, then answer each in <=4 sentences, citing the source filename and page number for every claim.
#rag#long-context#onboarding
Long-context Q&A across a doc set β for an executive audience
I am attaching <N> documents about <topic>. Build a question bank of 15 questions a new hire would ask, then answer each in <=4 sentences, citing the source filename and page number for every claim.
Audience: an executive audience.
#rag#long-context#onboarding#audience
Long-context Q&A across a doc set β for a technical audience
I am attaching <N> documents about <topic>. Build a question bank of 15 questions a new hire would ask, then answer each in <=4 sentences, citing the source filename and page number for every claim.
Audience: a technical audience.
#rag#long-context#onboarding#audience
Reverse-outline a dense article
Read the article below and produce a reverse outline: numbered claims, each followed by the evidence the author uses. At the end, flag any claims that lack evidence or rely only on rhetoric. Article:
<paste>
#analysis#reading#critique
Reverse-outline a dense article β for an executive audience
Read the article below and produce a reverse outline: numbered claims, each followed by the evidence the author uses. At the end, flag any claims that lack evidence or rely only on rhetoric. Article:
<paste>
Audience: an executive audience.
#analysis#reading#critique#audience
Reverse-outline a dense article β for a technical audience
Read the article below and produce a reverse outline: numbered claims, each followed by the evidence the author uses. At the end, flag any claims that lack evidence or rely only on rhetoric. Article:
<paste>
Audience: a technical audience.
#analysis#reading#critique#audience
Brainstorm 30 angles, then cluster
Generate 30 distinct angles for <topic>, ranging from obvious to contrarian. Then cluster them into 4-6 themes and recommend the two most promising for a serious essay. Explain why each won.
#ideation#clustering#essays
Brainstorm 30 angles, then cluster β for an executive audience
Generate 30 distinct angles for <topic>, ranging from obvious to contrarian. Then cluster them into 4-6 themes and recommend the two most promising for a serious essay. Explain why each won.
Audience: an executive audience.
#ideation#clustering#essays#audience
Brainstorm 30 angles, then cluster β for a technical audience
Generate 30 distinct angles for <topic>, ranging from obvious to contrarian. Then cluster them into 4-6 themes and recommend the two most promising for a serious essay. Explain why each won.
Audience: a technical audience.
#ideation#clustering#essays#audience
Steelman the other side
I believe <position>. Steelman the strongest version of the opposing view in 250 words, citing real arguments and evidence. Then list the two weakest assumptions in my own view.
#debate#steelman#thinking
Steelman the other side β for an executive audience
I believe <position>. Steelman the strongest version of the opposing view in 250 words, citing real arguments and evidence. Then list the two weakest assumptions in my own view.
Audience: an executive audience.
#debate#steelman#thinking#audience
Steelman the other side β for a technical audience
I believe <position>. Steelman the strongest version of the opposing view in 250 words, citing real arguments and evidence. Then list the two weakest assumptions in my own view.
Audience: a technical audience.
#debate#steelman#thinking#audience