Why research stays in your head
Most research never becomes a deliverable. You spend hours reading, comparing, and thinking, but the output stays in scattered notes or in your head. When someone asks what you found, you give a verbal summary. When a decision needs to be made, the team lacks the documented evidence. The research was done, but it was never packaged.
A research brief is the bridge between raw information and a decision. It forces you to synthesize, compare, and score instead of just collecting.
Step 1: Source collection
Start with the source collection prompt. Paste links, article excerpts, product pages, or notes:
Step 2: Synthesis
Once you have extracted the key points from each source, run the synthesis prompt:
Step 3: Comparison matrix
If your research involves comparing tools, vendors, or approaches, build a comparison matrix. This is the table that makes decisions visible instead of abstract.
Create a table with your options as rows and evaluation criteria as columns. Weight the criteria by importance. Score each option. The matrix does not make the decision for you, but it surfaces the data so the decision is defensible.
Step 4: Opportunity scoring
Before committing to a direction, score the opportunity on three dimensions: potential upside, execution risk, and time to value. A high-potential, high-risk, slow-return opportunity looks very different from a moderate-potential, low-risk, fast-return one.
Use a simple 1-5 scale for each dimension. The score does not replace judgment, but it prevents gut decisions that ignore one of the three dimensions.
Get the full kit
Research Agent Brief Kit
Source collection prompt, synthesis prompt, research brief template, comparison matrix, opportunity/risk scoring sheet, and 2 realistic example briefs. $89 one-time.