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Editorial Brief Quality Gate Chat

Check an editorial brief for audience clarity, evidence gaps, thin claims, and a useful next step.

MarketingQualityDocumentation
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Chat Prompt

Recommended model

Claude Opus 4.5

Output format

Editorial quality gate

Preview

Chat Prompt

chat thread

Brief: write about best AI image workflows for ecommerce. Mention speed, quality, and all-in-one workspace.

Audience clarity: ecommerce operator or creative team is not specified. Evidence gap: speed and quality need examples or comparison criteria. Thin claim: all-in-one workspace is broad without a concrete workflow example. Next step: define one product photo scenario and required evidence. Risk: article may become generic list content.

Output

Audience clarity / evidence gap / thin claim / next step / risk

Check an editorial brief for audience clarity, evidence gaps, thin claims, and a useful next step.

Full prompt

Editorial Brief Quality Gate Chat

Check an editorial brief for audience clarity, evidence gaps, thin claims, and a useful next step.

Recommended model: Claude Opus 4.5Output format: Editorial quality gate
Full prompt
Chat Prompt
You are an editorial lead reviewing a content brief before writing starts. Turn the provided notes into a practical review that a team can act on. Return the answer with: Audience clarity, evidence gap, thin claim, next step, risk. Ground every claim in the provided notes. Mark missing facts instead of inventing them.

Usage notes

Paste the real notes, constraints, and source material. Keep private data out unless it is necessary for the review.

Prompt FAQ

Before you use this prompt

Quick checks for inputs, model fit, and how to adapt the template without weakening the result.

When should I use Editorial Brief Quality Gate Chat?

Check an editorial brief for audience clarity, evidence gaps, thin claims, and a useful next step. Use it when you already have notes, constraints, or a rough draft and need a structured next step a team can review.

What should I include before running it?

Include the source material, audience, constraints, key facts, and boundaries the answer must not invent. The output is organized as Audience clarity / evidence gap / thin claim / next step / risk.

Thread preview

Brief: write about best AI image workflows for ecommerce. Mention speed, quality, and all-in-one workspace.
Audience clarity: ecommerce operator or creative team is not specified. Evidence gap: speed and quality need examples or comparison criteria. Thin claim: all-in-one workspace is broad without a concrete workflow example. Next step: define one product photo scenario and required evidence. Risk: article may become generic list content.

Output

Audience clarity / evidence gap / thin claim / next step / risk

More prompts in this mode

chat thread

We want to build an AI assistant for small ecommerce teams that turns product photos into campaign assets.

Problem hypothesis: small ecommerce teams lose time turning raw product photos into channel-ready campaign assets. Riskiest assumptions: photo quality is high enough, teams trust AI asset variation, and review time is the real bottleneck. Research questions: who owns campaign asset creation, where revisions stall, and what quality bar blocks publishing. Validation plan: interview 5 operators, test 3 prompt-led asset flows, and compare time-to-first-approved asset. Decision gate: continue only if teams can reach a publishable draft faster than their current workflow.

chat thread

We are exploring a new AI notes product for solo consultants. Help me turn this into a research brief.

Objective: define whether solo consultants need an AI notes workspace or a lighter client-follow-up layer. Working assumptions: they already capture notes, but synthesis and next-step drafting are inconsistent. Audience: solo consultants with recurring client calls and limited operations support. Key questions: which notes become billable work, what gets lost after calls, and where CRM tools feel too heavy. Research plan: run 6 interviews, review 10 recent call-note workflows, and test one follow-up brief prototype.

chat thread

Here is the outline for our AI product landing page. Tell me what is unclear before we design it.

Core promise: visible, but still framed as a feature rather than a concrete user outcome. Unclear point: the page does not explain who gets value first or what workflow changes after signup. example gap: add before-after examples, model output samples, and one short trust signal near the hero. CTA issue: the primary action appears after too much explanation; move a use-oriented CTA closer to the quick-use section. Revision plan: sharpen the hero, add outcome cards, then rewrite objections before polishing visuals.