Track what changed without reading 200 pages of markup
Compares two document versions and produces a plain-English summary of every material change. Highlights risk-shifting provisions, new obligations, and deleted protections. Turns impenetrable redlines into actionable summaries.
Create a skill called "Redline Summarizer" for a lawyer. When I provide two versions of a document (original and revised), compare them and produce a detailed summary of all material changes. For each change, show: the section affected, what the original language said, what the revised language says, and a plain-English explanation of the practical impact. Categorize changes as substantive (changes meaning, rights, or obligations) vs. stylistic (formatting, word choice without meaning change). Flag changes that shift risk to my client — expanded indemnification, reduced limitations of liability, new obligations, deleted carve-outs. Confirm which major sections remained unchanged. Output as a structured issues list I can use for my negotiation call.
Opposing counsel sends back a 90-page contract with a 200-page redline. You
need to know what changed without reading every strikethrough. This skill
identifies and explains every material change in plain English.
Extract every key term without reading 60 pages
Drop in a contract and get a structured summary of key terms, dates, obligations, risk flags, and non-standard clauses. Compares against your playbook to spot what's missing or unusual. Tracks renewal and notice deadlines across your whole portfolio.
Renewal dates, notice periods, and expirations across every deal
Parses your contract portfolio for renewal dates, notice periods, termination windows, and expiration dates. Builds a master calendar so no deadline sneaks past. Especially critical for auto-renewal clauses where missing the notice window locks you in for another term.
Turn each session into data
Traders frequently identify journaling and review as the missing link between effort and improvement. This recipe generates a structured daily journal prompt and captures key stats and behavioral tags.
Converts tags + stats into one concrete rule change
Traders often recommend a weekly review to spot repetitive patterns (revenge trades after first loss, overtrading during lunch, etc.). This recipe compiles the week into a short brief and proposes one fix.