Turn any answer into a PDF, deck, or sheet
Ask, then export. Mark turns a conversation into a downloadable PDF, a slide deck, or a spreadsheet — real files you can share, not just text on a screen.
You ask a great question, you get a great answer — and then it's stuck in a chat window. To do anything real with it you copy, paste, reformat, fix the spacing that broke on the way over, and rebuild it as the file you actually needed. The thinking was the easy part; turning it into something you can send is the chore.
So Mark just hands you the file. Ask for a PDF, a slide deck, or a spreadsheet, and it produces a real, downloadable document built from your conversation — not a screenshot, not a wall of text you have to reassemble somewhere else.
Real files, not screenshots
These come out as proper documents in the formats you already work in, so they drop straight into whatever you do next:
- PDF — a clean, shareable writeup, ready to send or print.
- Word — an editable document you can keep working on in your own tools.
- Excel — a real spreadsheet with rows and columns you can sort, filter, and build on.
- PowerPoint — a slide deck you can present, then tweak to taste.
Closing the loop between asking and doing
Most of the time, an answer isn't the finish line — it's the input to something else. You needed a summary to send a colleague, a table to drop into a report, a few slides to walk a team through an idea. Document generation removes the gap between understanding something and having a thing you can actually use.
It fits the rest of Saanora, too. Mark shows you an idea instead of burying it in prose; this just extends that past the chat window. Work it out with Mark, then walk away with a file — without the copy-paste tax in the middle.
From conversation to deliverable
Picture researching a topic with citations, then exporting the writeup as a PDF to circulate. Or working through a comparison and pulling it out as a spreadsheet you can keep extending. Or talking through a pitch and turning it into a deck you present that afternoon. The same conversation can leave as whichever format the next step needs.
Because the export is built from the actual conversation, the structure usually comes along for the ride — headings stay headings, a table stays a table, a list of points becomes a list of slides. You start from something shaped, not a blank page, which is the slowest part of making any of these by hand.
Ask, then export
An answer you can't take anywhere is only half useful. By turning conversations into real documents, Mark closes the loop between asking a question and actually getting something done with the answer.
Next time you land on something worth keeping, don't copy-paste it into another app — just ask Mark to export it, and leave with a file you can share.