Use AI to review your draft for hidden assumptions, unclear logic, and gaps your brain skipped over.
You've just finished writing something important — a proposal, a policy update, a project plan. You've read it three times. It makes perfect sense to you. But here's the problem: you already know what you meant to say, so your brain fills in gaps automatically. You can't see what's missing or confusing because you're too close to it. AI can be your first objective reader. Ask it to identify assumptions you didn't explain, logic jumps that seem sudden, or context a new reader would be missing. It won't just tell you the writing is fine — it'll point out the exact sentences where someone unfamiliar with your thinking might get lost, confused, or need more explanation. This works especially well before you send anything to someone who's busy, skeptical, or needs to approve your work. Let AI surface the questions they'll have before they have to ask them. Then revise those spots, and your document lands stronger the first time.
Try this prompt today
“I need you to review the document below and identify any places where I've made assumptions the reader might not share, where my logic jumps too quickly without explanation, or where someone unfamiliar with this topic would need more context to follow my thinking. Point out specific sentences or sections that could confuse a new reader. [Paste your draft here]”
March 1, 2026
Get daily AI tips like this one
WorkSmarterWith.ai delivers fresh AI tips, workflows, and prompts every day - tailored to your role.