Rewrite for AI-Answer Clarity
Replace weak, vague sections with tight, direct prose that both users and AI systems can parse
What This Prompt Does
Once you've identified a weak section, this prompt takes it and produces a tighter rewrite — same meaning, better clarity, fewer filler words. The model explains what the main problem was, delivers the rewrite, and tells you why the new version works better.
When to Use It
- •The AI-Answer Extraction prompt flagged a specific weak passage
- •A hero paragraph is polished but says nothing concrete
- •An About section is full of corporate language that AI won't cite
- •Training a junior writer by showing before/after rewrites side-by-side
The Prompt Template
Act as a plain-language content editor. Your goal is to rewrite weak sections of this page so they are easier for both users and AI systems to understand. Context: - Page text: [PASTE PAGE CONTENT] - Section to improve: [PASTE SECTION] - Topic: [TOPIC] Task: Rewrite the section so it: 1. states the main point more clearly 2. removes fluff and vague language 3. answers likely user questions more directly 4. keeps the meaning accurate Process: 1. Identify the main point of the section. 2. Remove filler language. 3. Rewrite for clarity and directness. 4. Keep the wording natural and simple. Constraints: - Use plain English that a minimum wage employee would understand. - Keep the rewrite to 2 to 3 short paragraphs. - Do not add unsupported claims. - Do not make the writing sound robotic. - Favor clearer facts, direct answers, and useful specifics over polished marketing language. Output format: Use these headings: - Main Problem - Rewritten Version - Why the Rewrite Is Better
How the Prompt Is Structured
Problem First, Rewrite Second
Forcing the AI to name the main problem before rewriting produces a more targeted rewrite. The model can't fix what it hasn't diagnosed.
"Do Not Add Unsupported Claims"
AI rewriters love to invent credible-sounding specifics. The constraint keeps the rewrite within the facts you've actually got.
"Do Not Sound Robotic"
Plain English isn't boring English. This constraint prevents the common failure where AI rewrites read like a lawyer's brief — technically correct, unreadable.
"Why the Rewrite Is Better"
The final section is the teaching moment. Reading the "why" consistently improves your own writing over time — you learn what patterns the model values.
Example Output
Main Problem
The section sounds polished but never clearly says what the company does, where it works, or what makes it different. An AI reading this would get a "plumbing-adjacent business" impression and nothing more.
Rewritten Version
ABC Plumbing is a licensed residential plumbing company based in Bozeman, Montana. Since 2014 we've handled emergency plumbing, drain cleaning, and water heater service for homeowners across Gallatin County.
Our team answers the phone live, arrives in an average of 45 minutes for emergencies in central Bozeman, and quotes flat-rate pricing before we start the job — no surprises.
Why the Rewrite Is Better
The new version names the entity (ABC Plumbing), the category (residential plumbing), the location (Bozeman, Gallatin County), the services (three specific ones), and three concrete differentiators. Every sentence is self-contained and quotable.
Tips for Better Results
Feed One Section at a Time
Rewrites lose precision when the model is juggling three sections. One section, one prompt, one result.
Verify Every Fact
The rewrite should only contain facts you have. Strike anything the AI produced that you can't back up.
Preserve Brand Voice
If the AI rewrite strips too much personality, ask it to "keep the tone a bit warmer" in a follow-up prompt.
Save the Rewrite Patterns
After 10 rewrites, patterns emerge ("replace superlatives with numbers," "lead with the category"). Turn them into a writing checklist.
Cut the Fluff. Keep the Meaning.
We rewrite marketing copy into concrete, direct prose that AI systems can read and users can trust.