Dwight AI Features: Prompt Scoring, Personas & Library System (2026)
We want to give you an honest, complete picture of what Dwight actually is today — what is live, what works, and what makes it worth using. No vaporware, no roadmap padding. Just a clear walkthrough of the real features that are available right now.
Dwight is an AI-powered prompt improvement tool. You write a prompt, Dwight uses Google Gemini AI to analyze it, produce an improved version, and give you a detailed breakdown of exactly what changed and why. That core loop is fast, genuinely useful, and already packed with depth that most users have not fully explored.
Here is everything that is live and working today. If you're new to Dwight, start with our getting started guide first.
The Profile System: Dwight's Most Powerful Feature
If you have been using Dwight with the default settings, you have been leaving a lot on the table. The persona system is the most flexible and impactful feature in the product, and it deserves a proper introduction.
A Profile is a saved configuration that tells Dwight how to improve your prompts. Instead of producing generic improvements, Dwight tailors the output to match your persona, your audience, your preferred style, and your desired format — every single time.
Eight Persona Types
When you create a profile, you choose from eight distinct persona types:
- Technical Expert — Deep technical precision, assumes domain knowledge, avoids hand-holding
- Creative Writer — Narrative depth, expressive language, imaginative framing
- Educator — Clear explanations, scaffolded learning, approachable tone
- Business Analyst — Structured reasoning, outcome-focused, professional register
- Researcher — Rigorous methodology, citation-aware framing, thorough exploration
- Copywriter — Persuasive, punchy, audience-aware messaging
- Assistant — Helpful, neutral, task-oriented clarity
- Coach — Motivating, reflective, growth-oriented framing
Eight Response Styles
On top of the persona, you control the response style:
Formal, Casual, Technical, Friendly, Professional, Concise, Detailed, Persuasive
This is not just labeling — it meaningfully shifts how Dwight rewrites your prompt. A "Technical + Concise" combination produces tight, jargon-precise prompts with no filler. "Educator + Friendly" produces warm, accessible prompts designed for learners. The combinations are intentional and the outputs reflect them.
Eight Response Formats
You also choose the output format that best suits your workflow:
Markdown, Plain Text, JSON, Bullet Points, Numbered List, Structured, Conversational, Step by Step
If you are feeding improved prompts into a system that expects JSON, set your profile to JSON format. If you are writing documentation, Markdown keeps things clean. If you are building a training workflow, Step by Step gives you a consistent structure every time.
Audience Targeting
Profiles also let you specify your target audience by combining a role type (8 options, including Developer, Manager, Student, Executive, and more) with an expertise level (Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced, Expert). This shapes how technical, how assumed, and how detailed the improved prompt will be.
Selecting "Developers + Advanced" means Dwight will not explain basic concepts or add unnecessary context — it assumes technical competence. Selecting "Executives + Beginner" produces prompts that are high-level, jargon-free, and focused on outcomes.
Custom Instructions
Every profile supports up to 500 characters of custom instructions. This is your escape hatch for anything the other settings do not cover. You can tell Dwight things like: "Always frame prompts in the context of a SaaS B2B product" or "Avoid imperative commands — use collaborative phrasing instead." These instructions are applied on every improvement run while that profile is active.
PII Redaction (Pro)
On the Pro plan, profiles can enable PII Redaction — sensitive data in your prompts is masked before being sent to the AI. This is a real privacy safeguard for anyone working with customer data, internal documents, or anything that touches personally identifiable information.
Prompt Format Output
Each profile also lets you choose the output format for the improved prompt itself: Markdown, JSON, XML, or Plain Text. This is separate from the response style — it controls the literal formatting of the improved prompt string you receive.
The practical result: a profile configured as "Technical Expert + Detailed + Markdown + Developers + Advanced" will produce meaningfully different output than "Copywriter + Persuasive + Plain Text + Executives + Intermediate" — and both will be substantially better than a generic, one-size-fits-all improvement. You can create unlimited profiles on Pro, each tuned for a different use case.
AI-Powered Prompt Analysis: What the Scores Actually Mean
Every time Dwight improves a prompt, it returns a structured analysis alongside the improved version. This is not decoration — understanding these scores helps you become a better prompt writer over time.
Clarity Score (0–100)
Clarity measures how unambiguous and well-structured your prompt is. A prompt that could be interpreted multiple ways scores low. A prompt with a clear objective, defined scope, and logical flow scores high.
The score comes with a human-readable label: "Excellent clarity" (90+), "Very clear" (75–89), "Good clarity" (60–74), and so on down the scale. If your original prompt scores a 42 and the improved version scores an 88, you can see exactly how much Dwight's rewrite resolved ambiguity.
Specificity Score (0–100)
Specificity measures how precisely the prompt defines what it wants. Vague prompts score near zero. Prompts with concrete constraints, examples, formats, and success criteria score high.
The specificity score also shows the improvement percentage vs. your original — so if Dwight takes a 35 to an 82, you see "+134% improvement" right in the UI. That feedback loop is genuinely useful for calibrating how you write prompts from scratch.
Quality Score (0–100)
Quality is a weighted combination of Clarity and Specificity — the overall signal of how effective the prompt is likely to be. This is the number to watch if you want a single top-line metric.
Word Count (Before and After)
Dwight shows the word count of your original prompt and the improved version, along with the percentage change. Sometimes improvement means expanding a sparse prompt. Sometimes it means cutting verbose noise down to a crisp instruction. The before/after comparison tells you which happened and by how much.
Complexity Tier
Every improvement run includes a Complexity Tier assessment: LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH, or VERY HIGH. This is not just a label — it comes with AI-generated reasoning explaining why the prompt falls into that tier.
A LOW complexity prompt might be a simple instruction that needs minimal unpacking. A VERY HIGH complexity prompt involves multi-step reasoning, domain-specific constraints, or ambiguous requirements that require significant restructuring. The tier and its justification help you understand what kind of cognitive load your prompt places on the AI — and whether the improved version successfully reduces it.
Library System: Save, Organize, and Find Your Best Prompts
After improving a prompt, the natural next step is keeping it. The library system is how Dwight handles that.
Creating Libraries
You can create named libraries — think of them as folders — to group related prompts. A developer might have libraries for "Code Review Prompts", "Architecture Discussions", and "Documentation". A marketer might have "Email Campaigns", "Social Copy", and "Ad Briefs". Libraries reflect however you think about your work.
Plan limits apply: Free accounts get 1 library, Pro gets unlimited.
Saving Prompts with AI-Suggested Metadata
When you save an improved prompt to a library, Dwight automatically suggests a title and description for the saved prompt, based on the content. You can accept the suggestion or write your own — but having a starting point means you are far more likely to actually save things rather than skipping it because it feels like busywork.
Saved prompt limits: 5 on Free, unlimited on Pro.
Search and Filter
Saved prompts are searchable by title and filterable by library. You can sort by date saved or alphabetically by title. When you need a prompt you saved three weeks ago, you can find it in a few seconds rather than re-writing it from memory.
History: Every Improvement, Always Available
Dwight automatically tracks every prompt improvement you run. No manual saving required — the history is there by default.
Before and After, Side by Side
The history view shows your original prompt and the improved version side by side. This is useful for reviewing what changed, for going back to a version you preferred, or for understanding patterns in how your own writing gets improved over time.
Plan-Based Retention
History retention varies by plan:
- Free: 7 days
- Pro: Unlimited
Deleting History Items
You can delete individual history items. If you ran a test or improved something you would rather not keep, it is easy to clean up.
Subscription Plans: Honest Breakdown
Dwight has two plans. Here is what each one actually gets you:
| Plan | Price | Improvements | Personas | Libraries | Saved Prompts | History | |------|-------|-------------|----------|-----------|---------------|---------| | Free | $0 | 7/week | 1 | 1 | 5 | 7 days | | Pro | $8.99/mo | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
Rate limits apply to all plans: 10 requests per minute, 50 per hour, 250 per day, 1,250 per week. These are generous limits for typical individual use.
The Free plan is a real way to try the core feature — 7 improvements a week is enough to get a genuine sense of what Dwight does. Pro unlocks unlimited everything, which is where the depth of the product really opens up — unlimited improvements, personas, libraries, saved prompts, and history.
Authentication and Account Management
Dwight supports a full set of account options:
Sign-up methods: Email/password (with email verification) plus OAuth via Google, Microsoft, and LinkedIn. Pick whatever fits your existing workflow.
Session management: You can view all active sessions across your devices and revoke any of them individually. If you ever log in on a shared computer and forget to log out, you can fix that remotely.
Account changes: Change your email address, change your password, or delete your account entirely. Deletion requires email confirmation as a safeguard.
Chrome Extension
Dwight has a Chrome extension that brings the prompt improvement workflow directly into your browser. Rather than switching tabs to use the web app, you can improve prompts in context — wherever you are on the web. It works on all Chromium-based browsers, including Chrome, Edge, Brave, and Arc.
Install the Dwight Chrome Extension from the Chrome Web Store.
Keyboard Shortcut
The one keyboard shortcut worth knowing: Ctrl+Enter (or Cmd+Enter on Mac) triggers prompt improvement from the input field. Once you know it, you will use it constantly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Dwight AI free?
Yes. Dwight offers a Free plan with 7 prompt improvements per week — no credit card required. The Pro plan ($8.99/mo) unlocks unlimited improvements and all advanced features. View all plans on the pricing page.What AI model powers Dwight?
Dwight is powered by Google Gemini, which analyzes your prompts and generates improved versions along with Clarity, Specificity, and Quality scores.Does Dwight have a Chrome extension?
Yes. The Dwight Chrome extension lets you improve prompts directly within your browser without switching tabs. Install it from the Chrome Web Store.What is prompt quality scoring?
Dwight scores every prompt across three dimensions: Clarity (how clear the prompt is), Specificity (how precisely it defines the task), and Quality (overall effectiveness). Each score runs from 0–100.How many persona profiles can I use?
The Free plan includes 1 persona. The Pro plan unlocks unlimited personas plus additional customization including custom instructions (up to 500 characters) and PII redaction.Why This Matters
The depth here is real. A profile set up with the right persona, style, format, and audience targeting will produce improvements that are noticeably more relevant than the default. The scoring system gives you concrete feedback that improves your own prompt-writing instincts over time. The library system means you are not re-inventing the wheel every time you need a common prompt type.
None of this requires advanced technical knowledge. The system is built to be useful immediately, and to get more valuable the more you use it.
If you have questions or feedback, reach out to us at feedback@dwightprompt.com. We read everything.
Ready to try everything that shipped? Start free on Dwight — 7 improvements per week, no credit card required.