How to use this text tool
- Paste the newsletter draft.
- Choose a layout mode and target length.
- Review structure, CTA count, reading time, and score.
Turn rough newsletter copy into a cleaner, easier-to-read email draft. This tool normalizes spacing, improves bullet consistency, detects headings and CTA phrases, estimates reading time, and scores newsletter structure.
The result gives a cleaned newsletter draft and structure metrics for readability and campaign QA.
Use this before moving a newsletter into Mailchimp, ConvertKit, Substack, Beehiiv, or an email service provider.
Example: paste a rough newsletter with inconsistent bullets and section spacing. The tool cleans spacing and reports CTA and heading counts.
The formatter uses structural cues such as line breaks, headings, bullets, CTA phrases, and word count to score the draft.
It does not replace manual editing for brand voice, compliance, or legal claims.
Many newsletters perform well when the main body stays concise, often a few hundred words, with clear sections and one primary call to action.
Use short paragraphs, clear section headers, bullet lists, and enough spacing so the message is easy to scan on a phone.
Place a primary CTA after the main value section and repeat it only if the email is long enough to justify a second CTA.
Most newsletters are easier to read with three to five sections: intro, main value, proof or update, CTA, and optional footer.
Shorten paragraphs, use descriptive headings, reduce filler text, and keep bullet lists consistent.
| Module | Included |
|---|---|
| Structure | Heading and section detection |
| CTA | CTA phrase count |
| Readability | Reading time and paragraph count |
| Export | TXT, CSV, JSON |