--- name: output-executive-summary-first description: Use when the audience is a lawyer, partner, or in-house client who needs the bottom line before the analysis — the BLUF (Bottom Line Up Front) format. Leads with a one-sentence conclusion, then a 3–5 bullet executive summary, then the full analysis. Apply as the default structure for substantive legal analysis responses and memos in a legal AI product. license: MIT metadata: id: output.executive-summary-first category: output priority: P0 intent: [bluf, executive-summary, formatting, legal-memo, bottom-line-first] related: [output-creac-structure, output-client-letter-style, output-docx-export-style, conversation-disclaimer] source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal) version: "1.0" --- # Executive Summary First (BLUF) ## When to use this Apply BLUF (Bottom Line Up Front) formatting when: - The reader is a B2B professional — a lawyer, partner, in-house counsel, or business executive — who reads under time pressure. - The output contains substantive legal analysis, a risk assessment, or a recommendation. - The response is longer than 150 words and could confuse the reader about what they should actually do. - The user's question has a clear answer that should not be buried. BLUF is the **default output structure** for substantive legal AI responses. Exceptions (outputs that do not use BLUF): - Short factual answers (one or two sentences) — a BLUF header would be disproportionate. - Conversational turns that do not deliver analysis. - Drafted documents (contracts, letters) — these have their own internal structure. ## The pattern ``` **Bottom line:** [One-sentence conclusion — the answer to the user's question.] **Summary** - [Key point 1 — the most important finding or risk] - [Key point 2] - [Key point 3] - [Key point 4 — optional] - [Key point 5 — optional] **Full analysis** [The complete reasoning, organized by issue, section by section] ``` ## Rules for each section ### Bottom line (one sentence) - State the conclusion, not the question. - Be specific: "The clause is likely unenforceable" is better than "There are enforceability concerns." - Include the primary reason in the sentence if it fits naturally: "The clause is likely unenforceable because it is unlimited in geographic scope." - Use calibrated language: "likely", "almost certainly", "should be enforceable if X" — not "definitely" or "will." - Never start with "Based on the information provided..." — that is throat-clearing, not a conclusion. ### Summary (3–5 bullets) - Each bullet is one substantive point the reader will act on. - No more than one line per bullet (two lines maximum for complex points). - Order: most important finding first, then supporting points, then any caveats or recommended actions. - Do not pad with "This is a complex area" or "Advice of local counsel is recommended" as a bullet — if required, those go in the disclaimer at the end. - Avoid repeating the bottom line verbatim — the bullets should add substance, not restate. ### Full analysis - Use CREAC structure ([[output-creac-structure]]) for each legal issue within the analysis. - Use clear headings for each issue. - Citations go in the analysis, not in the summary bullets. - Disclaimers go at the end of the full analysis, not at the beginning. ## Example **Bottom line:** The lease as drafted is likely unenforceable on three grounds; we recommend rejecting and counter-proposing. **Summary** - The 15-year term triggers Lebanese statutory tenancy protections that limit landlord rights to terminate — verify whether the statutory framework applies to commercial leases in this location. - The rent escalation clause is open-ended (no cap or CPI linkage) — this creates unpredictable cost exposure over the lease term. - The absolute subletting prohibition (no subletting without landlord consent for any reason) is uncommonly strict and may impede future operational flexibility. - The service charge methodology is not stated — the tenant has no visibility into future service charge levels. - Governing law and forum (Beirut courts) is favorable for the tenant. **Full analysis** *[Proceeds with section-by-section CREAC for each of the five issues above...]* ## What not to do | Anti-pattern | Why it's wrong | |---|---| | Burying the conclusion at the end | The reader may not get there, or may misread the analysis as more ambiguous than it is | | Opening with disclaimers | Disclaimers go at the end; opening with them signals insecurity and buries the value | | Repeating the user's question back verbatim | The user knows what they asked; starting by paraphrasing their question wastes their time | | Opening with "Based on the information provided..." | Throat-clearing; every legal analysis is based on the information provided | | Padding the summary bullets with non-substantive points | Every bullet should contain a finding that would change the reader's decision if removed | | Using "complex area of law" as a substitute for analysis | Acknowledge complexity, but then do the analysis anyway | ## Paired with - **[[output-creac-structure]]**: the structure used within the "Full analysis" section. - **[[output-client-letter-style]]**: when the BLUF output is formatted as a formal client letter, the Bottom line becomes the opening paragraph and the Summary becomes the numbered recommendations. - **[[output-docx-export-style]]**: when the BLUF output is exported to DOCX, the Bottom line becomes a highlighted paragraph (e.g., in a text box or bold format) at the top of the document. ## Related skills - [[output-creac-structure]] — the analytical structure that follows the BLUF header - [[output-client-letter-style]] — letter format that incorporates BLUF as the opening - [[output-docx-export-style]] — document export that preserves BLUF formatting - [[conversation-disclaimer]] — where disclaimers belong (end, not beginning)