Paste a URL. Get 3 conversational, 30–50 word summaries written the way AI engines actually like to quote — direct, benefit-led, and question-led. Pick the one that fits, copy it in.
BLUF — Bottom Line Up Front — means stating the most important information first, then adding supporting detail after. It's a convention from military communications, and it maps almost exactly onto how large language models decide what to cite.
LLMs weight the first 50–80 words of a passage 4–8x more heavily when deciding whether to quote it. A page that buries its answer in paragraph four gets skipped — even if the content underneath is excellent.
"Welcome to our platform. We've been in business since 2018 and believe in quality. Our team works hard every day to..."
"We help small teams manage invoices in under 5 minutes, with automatic reminders so you never chase a late payment again."
There's no single "correct" BLUF — the right opening depends on what the page is and who's landing on it. Every generation gives you all three so you can pick, or test which performs.
States plainly what the page or product is and does. No fluff, fact-first. Best for product pages, documentation, and anywhere the reader just needs the definition fast.
Opens with the outcome for the reader, not the product description. Best for landing pages and anywhere "what's in it for me" matters more than "what is this."
Implicitly answers the exact question a searcher is asking when they land here. Best for blog posts and content built to match how people phrase queries to AI engines.