| name | research-and-summarize |
| description | Distill complex topics into layered, actionable summaries. Start with the key insight, layer in detail, end with recommended next action. |
| category | everyday |
| applies-to | ["claude","gemini","cursor","copilot","any"] |
| version | 1.0.0 |
Overview
Information overload is the default state. This skill transforms any research task into a structured summary: headline insight first, context second, detail third, action last. Designed for decision-makers who need clarity, not comprehensiveness.
When to Use
- Summarizing technical documentation or papers
- Researching a technology choice
- Briefing a team on a topic
- Distilling a long document for a specific decision
Process
Step 1: Define the Research Question
- State the specific question being answered: "Should we use Kafka or RabbitMQ for our event pipeline?"
- State who the answer is for and what decision it enables.
- This scopes the research — don't gather information beyond what the decision needs.
Verify: Research question is specific enough to have a clear answer.
Step 2: Gather and Evaluate Sources
- Identify 3–5 high-quality, authoritative sources.
- For each source, note: recency, authority, potential bias.
- Cross-reference key claims across sources.
- Flag conflicting information — don't silently pick one side.
Verify: Key claims are supported by at least 2 independent sources.
Step 3: Write the Layered Summary
- Headline (1 sentence): The single most important insight.
- Key findings (3–5 bullets): Supporting evidence for the headline.
- Context and nuance (1–2 paragraphs): Caveats, tradeoffs, conditions under which the headline doesn't hold.
- What we don't know: Gaps in the available information.
- Recommended action: Given the findings, what should the reader do next?
Deliver: A structured summary with all 5 sections.
Step 4: Cite Sources
- Every factual claim is linked to a source.
- Include the date of each source (recency matters in fast-moving fields).
Verify: Every claim has a citation.
Common Rationalizations (and Rebuttals)
| Excuse | Rebuttal |
|---|
| "The topic is too complex to summarize" | The goal is to enable a decision, not to be comprehensive. Scope to the decision. |
| "I'll just share the links" | Links are not summaries. Distillation is the value. |
Verification
References