Help us improve
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Reduce text to a specified word count or percentage while preserving essential meaning, key facts, and author's voice. Useful for adapting long-form content to shorter formats.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:word-count-reducerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Reduce a piece of text to a specified word count or percentage reduction while preserving all essential meaning, key facts, and the author's voice — cutting filler, redundancy, and unnecessary qualifiers rather than removing substantive content.
Cuts articles or passages to a target word count by removing redundancies and tightening prose while preserving key information, structure, and voice.
Distills verbose text to its concentrated essence without losing meaning or nuance. Triggers on 'distill', 'condense', 'tighten', 'shorten' requests for text or files.
Cuts prose to its bones by flagging adjectives, adverbs, qualifiers, redundancies, passive voice, and dead metaphors. Useful when a draft feels bloated or overwritten.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Reduce a piece of text to a specified word count or percentage reduction while preserving all essential meaning, key facts, and the author's voice — cutting filler, redundancy, and unnecessary qualifiers rather than removing substantive content.
Required: The text to reduce; the target word count or percentage reduction (e.g. "cut to 250 words" or "reduce by 30%").
Optional: Priority elements to preserve (specific quotes, data points, section headings, the conclusion); elements that can be sacrificed first (background context, secondary examples, attribution detail).
The reduced text in full, followed by a one-line word count note: "Original: X words → Reduced: Y words (Z% reduction)." If the target was not achievable without losing essential content, adds a second line explaining what remains and what further cuts would require.
Target: 250 words (current draft is approximately 350 words — reduce by ~30%)
Text:
The annual Media Innovation Summit, which took place in central London last week, brought together more than 400 journalists, editors, and media executives from across Europe and beyond to discuss the future of the industry. This year's summit, which was held at a major conference venue in the city, featured panel discussions, keynote addresses, and roundtable sessions on topics ranging from artificial intelligence and newsroom automation to the sustainability of subscription revenue models and the evolving role of print journalism in a largely digital media landscape.
Among the most widely discussed themes at this year's summit was the impact of generative artificial intelligence tools on editorial workflows. Several speakers argued that AI is already fundamentally transforming the speed at which journalists can research and draft initial versions of stories. Others were more cautious in their assessment, noting that the quality of AI-generated content remains inconsistent and that significant editorial oversight is still required in order to maintain accuracy and avoid the publication of incorrect or misleading information.
The question of sustainability dominated the afternoon sessions. Subscription fatigue — the tendency of readers to cancel digital subscriptions when the volume of competing platforms becomes overwhelming — was cited by multiple panellists as one of the primary threats facing quality journalism today. A report released at the summit found that readers in European markets are currently subscribing to an average of 2.3 digital news products, down from 2.8 three years ago.
Priority: Preserve the AI discussion and the subscription data. Background on the venue and format can be cut.
The annual Media Innovation Summit brought together more than 400 journalists, editors, and media executives in London last week to discuss the future of the industry. Panels and keynotes covered AI and newsroom automation, subscription revenue models, and the evolving role of print journalism.
The summit's most debated theme was generative AI's impact on editorial workflows. Several speakers argued AI is already transforming the speed at which journalists research and draft stories. Others were more cautious, noting that AI-generated content remains inconsistent and requires significant editorial oversight to maintain accuracy.
Sustainability dominated the afternoon sessions. Subscription fatigue — readers cancelling digital subscriptions as competing platforms multiply — was cited as a primary threat to quality journalism. A summit report found European readers now subscribe to an average of 2.3 digital news products, down from 2.8 three years ago.
Original: 351 words → Reduced: 130 words (63% reduction).
Note: The target of 250 words was exceeded — the text compressed further than anticipated once venue and format detail was removed. If 250 words is the target, the current 130-word version can be expanded with additional context from the original. If a shorter format was the goal, 130 words is the lean version.