Skip to main content
A report is a written deliverable Julius pulls together from your conversation: a long-form document with sections, findings, and recommendations. Use a report when the output is meant to be read, like an executive summary, a research memo, or a write-up of what your analysis found.

Creating a report

Run your analysis first, then ask Julius to write it up:
Write up these findings as a report for my stakeholders
Summarize this analysis into an executive report with recommendations
Create a research memo covering the methodology and the results
Julius drafts the report, and you can keep refining it in the chat.

Editing a report

Reports are easy to revise without regenerating everything. Ask for changes section by section:
Add a methodology section after the summary
Replace the recommendations with three concrete next steps
Make the executive summary shorter and more direct

Prompting tips

Tell Julius who’s reading and how to structure it:
For execs: an executive summary, key findings, and recommended actions
Keep the report grounded in your actual results:
Reference the specific figures from the revenue and retention tables
A one-page brief and a detailed memo are different asks:
Keep it to one page, confident and plain-spoken

Ideas to try

  • Analysis write-ups: turn an exploration into a clear narrative
  • Research memos: methodology, results, and conclusions in one doc
  • Weekly or monthly summaries: recurring updates from fresh data
  • Stakeholder updates: findings framed for a specific audience

Publishing and sharing

Click Publish to share a report as a public link (always the latest version), or download it to send elsewhere. See Publishing and sharing.
Reports pair well with Slides: write the detailed report, then ask Julius to turn its key points into a deck.