Writing an executive summary from long documents with AI cuts a 2 to 3 hour job down to about 45 minutes. You paste or upload the source document, then prompt the AI to extract key findings, decisions required, risks, and recommended actions. On aidowith.me, the Executive Briefing route has 9 steps covering how to structure the summary, what to include for different executive audiences, and how to format it for a 2-minute read. The output is a 1-page brief with 4 to 5 sections: context, findings, options, recommendation, and next steps. It's not a copy-paste of the document. It's a synthesized view your leadership team can act on. Most professionals use this route to handle weekly reports, board prep, and post-project reviews in a fraction of the usual time. The method works for PDFs, Word docs, and pasted text.
Last updated: April 2026
The Problem and the Fix
Without a route
- Reading 60-page documents to pull 4 key points, then writing a summary that still ends up too long
- Not knowing how to structure the summary so executives can make a decision in under 2 minutes
- Missing critical context when you compress a complex document too aggressively
With aidowith.me
- AI extracts findings, risks, and recommendations from any document length in minutes
- Structured 4-section format makes the summary decision-ready for any executive audience
- Prompt chain ensures you compress without losing critical context in the process
Who Builds This With AI
Managers & Leads
Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.
Ops & Analysts
Summaries, process docs, and structured output from messy inputs.
Marketers
Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.
How It Works
Extract and Categorize Key Points
Paste or upload your document and ask the AI to extract the top 5 findings, 3 risks, and 1 recommended action. Get a structured bullet list you can work from, not a wall of text.
Build the Summary Structure
Use the AI to arrange extracted points into the standard executive summary format: context (1 sentence), findings (3 bullets), options (2 bullets), and recommendation (1 clear action). Edit for your audience.
Polish and Format
Ask the AI to tighten the language, remove jargon, and format the final brief for a 2-minute read. Export as a Word doc, PDF, or slide for your executive meeting.
Write Your Executive Summary in 45 Minutes
Follow the 9-step Executive Briefing route on aidowith.me and ship a 1-page brief your leadership team will read.
Start This Route →What You Walk Away With
Extract and Categorize Key Points
Build the Summary Structure
Polish and Format
Prompt chain ensures you compress without losing critical context in the process
"I had a 70-page due diligence report due for a board meeting. I used this route and had a 1-page brief ready in 40 minutes. The board chair said it was the clearest summary they'd seen all quarter."- VP of Strategy at a mid-market consulting firm
Questions
Use a 2-pass approach. First, ask the AI to extract raw key points without compressing them. Second, ask it to prioritize and synthesize those points into your summary structure. This way you don't lose critical context in the first pass. The Executive Briefing route on aidowith.me walks you through this exact method across 9 steps, including a verification pass before you finalize the brief.
One page, or about 300 to 500 words. If it's longer, executives won't read it in full and you'll lose the decision-making clarity you were trying to create. AI is good at hitting this target because you can tell it exactly how many words or bullets you want per section. The route covers formatting for different executive formats: memos, slide decks, and email briefs.
Yes, with the right prompting. For technical documents, ask the AI to flag terms it's translating into plain language so you can verify accuracy. For financial reports, specify the metrics you care about upfront. For legal briefs, have the AI summarize obligations and risks separately. You stay in control of accuracy while the AI handles the heavy lifting of reading and structuring the output.