Rapport is best used as a middle step in a workflow. Users prepare the source material, define the expected output, run the AI-assisted task, and review the result before using it in a real project.
What it helps with
Core uses
- Create, convert, summarize, edit, analyze, or organize task-specific material.
- Produce editable drafts, structured outputs, media assets, code suggestions, or operational notes.
- Test small samples first so quality, cost, timing, and review effort are clear.
The main value of Rapport is that it gives users a focused workspace for a specific AI task. It can reduce repetitive preparation work, but it should not replace human judgment for factual accuracy, legal rights, clinical notes, security decisions, financial information, or public publishing.
Before using it
Prepare the original files or prompts, the intended audience, the required format, and the checks that will decide whether the output is usable. Teams should also define who may upload data, who reviews the result, and which materials are too sensitive for automated processing.
Suitable users and limits
Who it fits
Rapport is useful for creators, operators, developers, marketers, educators, researchers, or product teams that already know the task they want to complete. It is especially helpful for drafts, internal materials, prototypes, short-form assets, documentation, and pre-production review.
Important limits
Any result that affects customers, patients, security fixes, financial records, legal communication, or public distribution still needs human review. Users should check source rights, privacy rules, factual accuracy, brand fit, and platform policies before using the output.
Common questions
What is Rapport mainly used for?
It is mainly used to handle a focused AI workflow such as generating, converting, summarizing, editing, analyzing, or preparing material for later review.
What should users prepare before using Rapport?
Users should prepare the source material, the desired output format, the intended use case, and a review standard. Teams should also decide which data may be uploaded and who approves the final result.
Can Rapport replace human review?
No. It is better treated as an assistant for intermediate work. Final publishing, delivery, compliance checks, medical notes, security fixes, or business decisions should still be confirmed by a responsible person.