Skip to content

Draft an article or report from source material

Use this workflow to turn interviews, meeting notes, previous documents, rough ideas, and reference links into an article, weekly report, proposal, or release note that remains easy to verify and edit.

Prepare

  • required facts, numbers, and quotations;
  • notes, transcripts, previous drafts, and references;
  • audience, purpose, and publishing channel;
  • length, structure, tone, and deadline;
  • private or unverified information.

Example prompt

Read the meeting notes, feature list, and previous release notes in launch-notes. Draft a release article for existing users. First create a fact checklist and outline, then write about 800 words. Do not include internal decision-making or invent performance claims. Save the checklist and article as separate Markdown files.

What happens

  1. The agent inventories the material and separates confirmed facts from opinions and gaps.
  2. It proposes a structure for the audience and purpose.
  3. It creates a reviewable outline before drafting.
  4. It marks uncertainty instead of hiding it behind polished prose.
  5. It saves the draft for direct review in the workspace.

Review the result

Confirm that every feature, number, and date has a source; the opening states a reader outcome; internal production discussion stays out; the language sounds natural; and unresolved facts remain visible.

Adapt the verified draft for the website, email, social media, or an internal update. Stable tone and fact-checking rules can become a skill.

Released under the MIT License.