C019 πŸ“ Summarize Articles

Key Takeaways vs Key Quotes: Extract Both

Two outputs in one: main takeaways in your words plus the exact quotes worth saving, with clear separation.

5 min read 2 Prompts Guide 5 of 6
PR057 The Quote Extractor
To capture key quotes with context
Here’s an article: “[paste article]” Extract the most valuable quotes: – Identify 3-5 quotes worth saving (exact text) – For each quote, explain: – Why this quote matters – What it captures that a paraphrase would lose – How I might use this quote – Also give me the key takeaways that DON’T need direct quoting
PR030 The Layered Summary
When you need different summary depths
Here’s a text I want to remember: “[paste text]” Create three versions: – Tweet version (under 280 characters): The absolute core – Paragraph version: Core idea + key supporting points – Teaching version: How I would explain this to someone unfamiliar with the topic
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Takeaways vs Quotes: Why You Need Both

Most readers do one of two things: they highlight everything (creating a sea of yellow with no signal), or they paraphrase everything (losing the author’s exact words when those words matter). Neither approach serves you well.

To extract key takeaways from an article effectively, you need to separate two distinct outputs: ideas you can restate in your own words, and quotes you should preserve exactly as written. The difference isn’t about importance β€” it’s about what gets lost in translation.

Takeaways are concepts you understand well enough to explain differently. They become part of your mental model. Quotes are language so precise, memorable, or authoritative that paraphrasing would weaken them. They stay in the author’s voice because that voice adds something.

The Quote Extractor prompt (PR057) forces this separation. It asks AI to identify quotes worth saving, explain why each one matters, and separately deliver the takeaways that don’t need direct quoting. You get both outputs, clearly distinguished.

The Two-Prompt Workflow

Start with the Quote Extractor (PR057) when you suspect an article has quotable material β€” opinion pieces, thought leadership, research with memorable findings. The prompt asks for 3-5 quotes with context for each.

For each quote, you get three things: why it matters, what a paraphrase would lose, and how you might use it. This context transforms random highlighting into purposeful collection. You’re not just saving words β€” you’re building a library of evidence, examples, and language you can deploy later.

The prompt also delivers key takeaways that don’t need direct quoting. These are the ideas you should internalize and be able to explain in your own voice. They’re no less important than the quotes β€” they’re just better served by paraphrase.

If you need additional summary formats after extracting quotes, follow up with the Layered Summary (C015). Use the quotes for citation and evidence; use the summaries for comprehension and memory.

πŸ’‘ Pro Tip

Before using the Quote Extractor, ask yourself: “Will I ever need to cite this source?” If yes, extract quotes. If you’re reading purely for learning and won’t reference the text again, skip quotes and use the Layered Summary instead.

Scoring Your Output: What Makes a Good Quote

Not all quotes are equal. Here’s how to evaluate whether a quote is worth keeping:

Memorable phrasing: The author said it in a way that sticks. “Move fast and break things” is a quote; “iterate quickly and accept failures” is a paraphrase. The first one is worth saving; the second you can reconstruct anytime.

Technical precision: Definitions, formulas, or specific claims where exact wording matters. “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon” (Friedman) makes a specific claim that paraphrase would dilute.

Authorial authority: When who said it matters as much as what they said. A quote from the CEO about company strategy carries different weight than your summary of their strategy.

Evidence and data: Specific numbers, statistics, or findings you might cite. “Revenue grew 47% YoY” is worth preserving exactly; “revenue grew significantly” loses the precision.

If a quote doesn’t hit at least one of these criteria, it’s probably a takeaway in disguise. Paraphrase it and move on.

πŸ“Œ The Quote Test

Ask: “Would a paraphrase lose something important?” If yes, save the quote. If you can say it equally well in your own words, paraphrase. This simple test prevents over-quoting (cluttered notes) and under-quoting (lost gems).

Example: Quotes + Takeaways in Action

Say you read an article about remote work productivity. Here’s what the output might look like:

QUOTES WORTH SAVING:

“Productivity isn’t about hours logged β€” it’s about clarity achieved.” Why it matters: Reframes the entire productivity debate. How to use: Opening line for a presentation on async work.

“Teams that document decisions outperform teams that discuss decisions by 34%.” Why it matters: Specific, citable statistic. How to use: Evidence for documentation culture proposal.

TAKEAWAYS (no quote needed):

Remote work success depends more on communication norms than on tools. Async communication reduces interruptions but requires intentional social connection. Managers should measure outcomes, not activity.

Notice the separation: quotes carry language or data you’d lose by paraphrasing; takeaways carry ideas you can express yourself. Both matter. Both deserve their own treatment.

For building a more sophisticated note-taking system with these extractions, see Highlight Smarter (C026) or explore the full Summarize Articles pillar.

Frequently Asked Questions

Save exact quotes when the specific wording matters β€” memorable phrasing, technical precision, or when you’ll cite the source. Paraphrase when you need the idea but not the exact words. The Quote Extractor prompt helps you identify which is which, so you’re not over-quoting (cluttered notes) or under-quoting (losing powerful language).
Three to five quotes is usually optimal for a standard article (1,000-3,000 words). More than five suggests you’re highlighting too much β€” if everything is important, nothing is. Fewer than three might mean you’re missing genuinely quotable insights. The prompt asks for this range specifically to force prioritization.
A quote is worth saving when paraphrasing would lose something important: memorable phrasing that sticks, precise technical language, a surprising insight that needs the author’s exact framing, or evidence you might cite later. If you can say it equally well in your own words, paraphrase instead.
Store quotes with context: the source, why it matters, and how you might use it. The prompt provides this context automatically. For note-taking systems like Zettelkasten (C023), quotes become atomic notes with links. For research, they become evidence with citations. For writing, they become supporting material you can weave into your arguments.
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One More Summary Guide Awaits

You’ve mastered quote extraction. Next, learn to summarize for different purposes: learning, deciding, or sharing.

Summarize Articles Pillar

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