What this tool does

  • Generates structured answers to broad or specific research questions.
  • Turns raw ideas into outlines, comparison tables, and decision notes.
  • Helps translate complex topics into clear, publishable explanations.
  • Speeds up iteration by refining prompts based on previous output.

Who should use it

Small businesses Students Writers Personal projects Founders Marketing teams

How to use (5-step workflow)

  1. Define scope: ask one focused question with audience and goal.
  2. Request structure: ask for bullets, sections, or a comparison table.
  3. Ask for gaps: request what is missing, unclear, or risky.
  4. Validate: confirm assumptions and check facts before publishing.
  5. Repurpose: convert final output into post, script, or checklist.

Prompt templates

Use these templates as starting points:

  • Topic exploration: "Explain [topic] for [audience] in 5 sections with examples."
  • Decision support: "Compare [option A] vs [option B] by cost, effort, and risk."
  • Content planning: "Create a blog outline on [topic] with H2/H3 structure and key takeaways."
  • Critical review: "Challenge this draft and list weak assumptions, then suggest fixes."

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Using vague prompts without audience or objective.
  • Copy-pasting output directly without fact-checking.
  • Asking too many unrelated questions in one prompt.
  • Skipping follow-up prompts that improve precision.

Output you can create next

After research is ready, move into the other tools to generate visuals and voice versions for your final content package.