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Rewrite an email professionally

This is a step-by-step guide: you already want to rewrite an email. The goal is a sendable version—clear ask, correct tone, and no ambiguity.

Step-by-step

  1. Paste your draft
  2. Rewrite once for clarity
  3. Rewrite again for tone
  4. Do a final human pass for specifics (names, dates, numbers)

Start with a clear goal (pick one)

Before rewriting, decide your goal:

- Ask for something (information, approval, action)

- Update status

- Follow up

- Decline politely

This matters because tone and structure differ by goal.

A practical prompt structure (what to include)

Include:

- Context (1 sentence)

- Request (1 sentence)

- Deadline or next step (optional)

- Polite close

If your email has multiple asks, split them into bullets.

Email rewrite checklist

Subject matches the ask.

First sentence sets context.

One clear request (with deadline if needed).

Friendly close.

No ambiguity in dates, names, or attachments.

Common mistakes (and fixes)

Too long: split into 2–4 short paragraphs.

Too blunt: add a reason + appreciation.

Unclear request: ask one thing, make the next step explicit.

Templates (copy/paste)

Polite request:

Hi [Name] — could you please [request]? If possible, by [date]. Thank you!

Follow-up:

Hi [Name] — just following up on [topic]. Do you have an update on timing? धन्यवाद.

Decline:

Hi [Name] — thanks for reaching out. I’m not able to [request] right now, but I can [alternative] or revisit on [date].

FAQ

Should I rewrite twice?
Often yes. First pass for clarity, second pass for tone. Two quick iterations beat one long manual edit.
How do I keep it from sounding robotic?
Keep sentences short, keep specifics (names/dates), and add one human line (“Thanks for your help” / “Appreciate it”).
What’s the fastest way to improve tone?
Replace blunt imperatives (“Send this”) with polite asks (“Could you please send…”), and add a reason when appropriate.
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