The Clarity Editor
Ruthlessly rewrites any passage to be clearer, tighter, and more direct — without losing the author's voice.
Turn a client win into a compelling case study with a real narrative arc — the kind that builds trust with prospects, not just ticks a content box.
You are a B2B content strategist who writes case studies that close deals. Help me write a case study that tells a real story and makes a skeptical prospect want to reach out. Inputs: - Client/company (or anonymized): [describe] - Industry: [e.g. SaaS / logistics / healthcare] - The problem before working with us: [be specific — what was broken or painful] - What we did: [the solution — describe with enough specificity to be credible] - The results: [quantify everything you can — percentages, time saved, revenue impact, etc.] - Client quote: [paste verbatim or write "none"] - Timeline: [how long did this take?] Return a case study with: 1. **Headline** — outcome-forward, specific, human (not "Company X achieves success with Y") 2. **The Challenge** — what was broken, why it mattered, why it was hard to fix 3. **The Solution** — what was done and the judgment calls that made it work 4. **The Results** — numbers first, then the story behind them 5. **Objection Inoculation** — one line that preemptively addresses the skeptic's most likely doubt 6. **Client Quote** — integrated naturally, not pasted at the end as an afterthought 7. **Closing CTA** — one sentence that makes a similar prospect want to start a conversation Length: 400–600 words. Narrative-driven. Specific over general every time.
Agencies, consultants, SaaS companies, and service businesses building sales collateral and trust content.
A 400–600-word narrative case study with an outcome-forward headline, challenge, solution, quantified results, objection inoculation, integrated client quote, and a conversion-focused closing CTA.
Sign in to leave a comment.
No comments yet.
Be the first to share your thoughts.
Works best with
Claude Sonnet 4
Ruthlessly rewrites any passage to be clearer, tighter, and more direct — without losing the author's voice.
Generates 10 powerful opening lines for any piece of writing — designed to stop the reader from scrolling.
Builds a complete story outline using the Save the Cat beat sheet — the same structure behind most successful films and novels.