A Living Style Guide for Consistent AI Rewrites

Without a memory, every AI rewrite starts from zero. It doesn’t know your brand voice, your preferred terms, the things you always do and never do — so the results drift: a little formal here, a little generic there, your product name spelled three ways across a week. A living style guide fixes that by giving the editor persistent rules and voice that get applied to every edit, automatically. This page explains how that memory works, why it matters more than any single prompt, and how to build one.

Why one-off rewrites drift

Each isolated rewrite is a fresh request with no history. The model does a reasonable job in that moment, but “reasonable” varies, and across many edits the variation compounds:

You can fix each rewrite by hand or by stuffing a long instruction into every prompt — but that’s exactly the friction inline editing was supposed to remove. The scalable fix is to say it once and have it applied every time.

What a living style guide is

A living style guide is a stored set of voice rules and facts that the editor injects into every rewrite as context, so the model edits with your standards already in hand. It typically holds:

“Living” because it’s not a one-time setup — you refine it as you notice the AI getting something wrong, and the correction sticks for all future edits. Over time it converges on your voice.

Style guide vs. context-awareness

These two work together but solve different problems:

Context makes a rewrite fit the paragraph; the style guide makes every rewrite sound like you. The best output uses both: your durable voice, adapted to the local document.

How a style guide relates to presets

A living style guide and custom prompt presets layer cleanly. Presets define the job (“make professional,” “summarize”); the style guide defines the voice every job is performed in. So your “make professional” preset doesn’t just produce a professional version — it produces your professional version, with your terms and rules, every time. You write the voice once; it flavors every preset and every ad-hoc edit thereafter.

Building one that works

A living style guide in EditSnappy

EditSnappy can carry a persistent style guide — your voice, terms, and rules — and apply it to every rewrite, so edits sound like you instead of generic AI, without re-typing your standards into a prompt each time. It works hand in hand with EditSnappy’s context-awareness (which fits the edit to the current document) and your custom presets (which define each job), all running through the same safe inline loop: the change streams into place, shows as a diff before it commits (Tab to accept, Esc to keep your original), preserves your formatting, and is undoable with one key. Same behavior on Mac and Windows.

[[MISSING: confirm the exact shape of the style-guide / persona-memory feature with Ken — master-sales-copy §5 lists it as a reach goal from the white space, so verify scope before stating specifics in marketing.]]

Say your voice once. Get it on every edit. See how it works on the homepage →

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