Inputs
URLs, PDF, DOCX, TXT, VTT/SRT, clipboard
Bring articles, reports, transcripts, tickets, or email exports
Browser tool — no install
Turn long articles, research, or meeting transcripts into focused outputs — 1–2 sentence TL;DRs, 3–5 bullet executive briefs, or transcript-aware action-item lists with speaker context.
Inputs
URLs, PDF, DOCX, TXT, VTT/SRT, clipboard
Bring articles, reports, transcripts, tickets, or email exports
Output formats
TL;DR, bullets, executive brief, action items, quotes
Copy-ready for email, Slack, or reports
Controls
Length, tone, format
Adjust for executives, non‑experts, or social snippets
Solve reading overload
Save time by extracting decisions, action items, and core claims from long text. Ideal for product managers preparing stakeholder briefs, content marketers summarizing research, support teams triaging tickets, and remote teams turning transcripts into next steps.
Fast, in-browser workflow
Paste text, upload a document, or provide an article URL. Select a template or custom prompt, choose length and tone, then generate. Edit the result in-line and export copy-ready text for emails or reports.
Start from ready-made prompts
Use or adapt templates for common tasks. Each template includes a short example prompt you can edit to match context (audience, desired length, and specific focuses).
1–2 sentence summary highlighting the main claim and one supporting fact.
3–5 bullets with implications for leadership and one recommended next step.
Extract action items with assignees and suggested due dates when possible.
Pull notable quotes and attribute them to speakers or paragraph numbers.
Rewrite technical passages in plain language while keeping core facts.
Bring content from files, URLs, or clipboard
Works with common formats and exports so you can summarize content where it lives.
Preserve speaker context
When you provide transcripts with speaker labels or timestamps, outputs can preserve that structure and surface decisions, speaker quotes, and identified action items tied to speakers and time ranges.
Copy-ready outputs
Export summaries in plain text or formatted copies ready for email, Slack, or your reporting templates. Use the built-in editor to tweak wording before copying, or paste directly into your documents.
Be deliberate with sensitive content
This browser tool processes content you provide to produce summaries. For sensitive or regulated material, review your organization's data-handling policies and the product privacy page before uploading. Avoid sharing credentials, private keys, or other secrets in text to be summarized.
Summaries aim to surface main claims, facts, and decisions, but they may omit nuance. Validate by spot-checking the generated summary against the original text — verify quotes, dates, and action-item assignees. Use the prompt to ask for source citations or paragraph references when accuracy is critical.
You can paste text, enter a public article URL, or upload documents (PDF, DOCX, TXT). Meeting transcript formats such as VTT and SRT are supported for transcript-aware outputs.
Select a template (TL;DR, executive brief, action items) and use the length and tone controls to set sentence limits and voice (formal, plain, conversational). You can also edit the generated text in the built-in editor or modify the prompt to emphasize a specific audience.
This tool processes the content you provide to generate a summary. For details on retention and storage, review the product privacy and terms pages or contact the team. If you must avoid external processing, redact sensitive information before uploading.
Yes — when transcripts include speaker labels or timestamps, the generator can preserve them in the output and highlight decisions or quotes tied to specific speakers and time ranges.
Use the built-in copy button to paste into email or Slack, or download the plain-text output. The editor helps you format bullets and brief language for direct paste into reporting templates.
The tool supports summarization of text in multiple languages, but quality may vary by language and content complexity. When working in other languages, include a prompt clarifying the desired language and any target audience constraints.
The browser tool is optimized for single-document workflows and quick summaries. For batch or automated processing, contact the team to discuss enterprise or API options that fit larger-scale needs.
Mention the audience (e.g., executives, customers), desired length or bullet count, and any focus areas (decisions, risks, next steps). Example: "Summarize for product leadership in 4 bullets, include one recommended next step and call out any risks."
Yes — the tool includes templates and example prompts for TL;DRs, executive briefs, action items from transcripts, quote extraction, and support-ticket triage. Use them as-is or tweak prompts to match your workflow.