Text Tighten
Overview
Rewrite text so it is clearer, shorter, and stronger while preserving the user's intent, facts, and tone target.
Default workflow
- Identify the goal: concise, polished, more executive, more natural, or more persuasive.
- Preserve the original meaning, factual claims, and structure unless the user asks for a deeper rewrite.
- Remove repetition, filler, weak transitions, and vague phrasing.
- Prefer specific verbs, shorter sentences, and cleaner parallel structure.
- Keep the output easy to scan.
Output patterns
Light polish
Use when the draft is already good and only needs cleanup.
- Keep the original structure.
- Improve rhythm and wording.
- Fix redundancy.
Strong rewrite
Use when the draft is scattered, repetitive, or too verbose.
- Rebuild the structure if needed.
- Group related points.
- Use sharper topic sentences.
Executive version
Use when the audience is leadership or the text is for slides, briefs, or decisions.
- Lead with the conclusion.
- Compress explanation.
- Emphasize decision, impact, risk, and action.
Guardrails
- Do not invent facts.
- Do not remove important nuance just to make text shorter.
- Do not make the tone more aggressive unless asked.
- Preserve domain terms that matter.
Useful response formats
Choose the lightest useful format.
- Direct rewrite only: when the user just wants a cleaner version.
- Original + rewritten: when comparison helps.
- Multiple options: when tone is undecided, e.g. concise / formal / stronger.
Typical triggers
- “帮我润色一下”
- “make this tighter”
- “rewrite this to be clearer”
- “shorten this without changing meaning”
- “make this more executive”
- “polish this slide text”