Your draft says it in 200 words. It could say it better in 120.
Paste it in and get a tighter, clearer version that still sounds like you — plus the three biggest changes and why each one matters.
You always know exactly what a friend should do. Your own life? Total fog.
Describe your situation and get the clear-eyed advice you'd give them — same brain, emotion stripped out.
Brainstorms have a habit of giving you the same idea wearing ten different hats.
This gives you ten genuinely distinct ones — different in approach, not flavour — each with a one-line hook. Pick the one that surprises you.
"So... what do you actually do?"
And you watch their eyes glaze as you over-explain.
Tell this what you do and who you're talking to, and get a clean one-liner plus a short version — pitched for that audience, no jargon.
That post that made you furious in three seconds flat? That's usually the tell.
Drop content into this and it flags manipulated framing, missing context, fabricated authority — and tells you how to actually verify it.
If you can't say what your product is in one breath, neither can your customers.
Describe it and your audience, and get a few spoken one-liners that make it instantly clear what it is, who it's for, and why it matters. No jargon.
Some things only click when someone explains them like you're clever but eight.
This gets a concept down to that level first, then builds it back up one layer at a time until you actually understand it.
Sometimes you just want to be lovingly dragged.
This one roasts you based on what you share — teasing, funny, clearly fond, never actually cruel. The kind of roast only a friend earns.
And your mind goes completely blank, or you ramble for two minutes saying nothing.
Feed this your real background and the role, and get a sharp, honest answer you can actually deliver.
How will you feel about this in 10 minutes? 10 months? 10 years?
Most of the things we agonise over shrink fast under that lens. There's a ready-made prompt for it.