Literature Review Synthesizer
Synthesize multiple research sources into a structured, coherent literature review with themes, conflicts, and gaps identified.
Convert dense research findings, data, or reports into clear, actionable insights your audience can act on.
Help me translate research findings into clear, actionable insights. **The research or data I have:** [Paste key findings, statistics, report excerpts, or data summaries] **Source(s):** [Where this research came from — e.g. our own user interviews, a published study, analyst report, internal survey] **My audience:** [Who needs to understand this — e.g. executive team, product managers, clients, investors, general public] **The decision or action this should inform:** [What do you want your audience to do or decide after reading this?] **Constraints:** - Format: [e.g. slide deck bullets, memo, email, Slack message] - Length: [e.g. under 300 words, 5 bullets, 1 page] Translate the research into: 1. **The headline insight** — one sentence that captures the most important finding 2. **Supporting insights** — 3–5 specific, concrete findings that back the headline (with data where available) 3. **What this means** — implications translated into plain language for this audience 4. **Recommended actions** — 2–3 specific next steps that follow logically from the findings 5. **Caveats** — any limitations of the research the audience should know Don't soften findings. Say what the data actually shows.
Translating dense research, survey results, or reports into clear executive summaries, strategy memos, or stakeholder presentations.
A headline insight, 3–5 supporting findings, plain-language implications, recommended actions, and key caveats — formatted for the specified audience.
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Works best with
Claude Sonnet 4
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