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Credia Custom Rules

Personalise AI-generated content in Re-Leased with Credia Custom Rules. Define instructions and examples to control the tone, style, and format of AI-generated text for different content types.

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Credia Custom Rules let you personalise how AI-generated content is written in Re-Leased. Define instructions and examples so that AI output matches your preferred style, tone, and format for different types of generated copy.


How to Access Custom Rules

  1. Navigate to Settings.

  2. Scroll to the Credia section.

  3. Click Custom Rules.

Settings screen showing the Credia section with the Custom Rules option



How to Create a Custom Rule

  1. Click + Add a new rule.

Custom Rules page showing the Add a new rule button

  1. Fill in the required fields:

New Custom Rule form showing Name, Type, Prompt, and example fields

Rule Settings

  • Name — enter a descriptive name (e.g. Professional Email Style).

  • Type — select the content type this rule applies to from the dropdown.

  • Prompt — write clear instructions for how you want AI to generate content. Specify tone and style, length, formatting, and what to avoid.

Custom Rule type dropdown showing available content type options


Adding Examples (Recommended)

Click Add example to include 1–2 sample outputs that demonstrate your desired style. Examples significantly improve AI output quality.

  1. Click Save new rule to activate it. Your rule will appear in the Custom Rules list with Enabled status.



Managing Existing Rules

  • Use the search bar to find specific rules quickly.

  • Click the three-dot menu (⋮) next to any rule to edit, disable/enable, or delete it.

Custom Rules list showing the three-dot menu with Edit, Disable, and Delete options



Best Practices

  • Be specific — clear, detailed prompts produce better results.

  • Use examples — they significantly improve output quality.

  • Test and refine — create rules incrementally and adjust based on results.

  • Keep it simple — focus on one main instruction per rule.

  • Use descriptive names — make it easy to identify what each rule does.

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