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How to Draft Clauses & Add Language with Spellbook
How to Draft Clauses & Add Language with Spellbook
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Written by Sarah Beatty
Updated over a month ago

Draft can be used to quickly add language to your documents.

Ways you can use Draft:

  1. Ask it to write clauses for your document. Be as specific as possible and it will generate a clause for you to add. An example prompt could be "Write a limited liability clause that benefits my client ABC".

  2. Ask it to summarize changes in the document. An example prompt could be "summarize changes in this document in 300 words or less".

  3. Write a follow-up email to your client. An example prompt could be "Write an email to my client summarizing the changes I've made and explain why I made them. Make it 300 words or less."

  4. Ask it to write a letter or pleading. An example prompt could be "Write a letter to X about Y event"
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  5. Ask it to summarize advice for you to share with a client. An example prompt could be "Write a summary of what the new Working for Workers Act could mean for my client"โ€‹

See our quick demo video below as an example:

NOTE- Spellbook uses the context of the document and defined terms to customize language for your specific scenario. Language can be reviewed and modified before being inserted into your document.


How to Use Draft in Spellbook

1. Begin on the "Assistant" Tab.

2. Click the "Draft" Spell.

3. Type your prompt in the textbox - be as specific as you can to get the best results.

4. Cycle through generated text to find the one that best suits your needs.

5. Or, click the garbage can to dismiss the ones you don't like.

6. Use Copy to Clipboard to share with a colleague, or paste somewhere else.

7. Click "Insert at Cursor" to add the text to your document where your cursor is located.

8. Format to match the rest of your document and you're all set!


๐Ÿ’ก If you have any other questions about this please donโ€™t hesitate to contact Spellbook Support at Success@spellbook.legal

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