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'galvanizing effect' is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It is used to describe something that is energizing and inspiring. For example, the company's new, bold strategy had a galvanizing effect on the employees, inspiring them to work harder and more efficiently.
Exact(51)
That had a galvanizing effect.
The very act of wholesale transformation seems to have a galvanizing effect on schools.
The attacks on Mr. Obama clearly had a galvanizing effect, local officials said.
The program has had a galvanizing effect on British public opinion.
Mr. Nystrom praises the galvanizing effect Art Basel has had on the city's creative mind-set.
"A surgical incision has a galvanizing effect even on an anesthetized patient," she explains.
In performance Mr. Joshi was said to have a galvanizing effect on his audiences.
Similar(4)
But the drastic entitlement cuts weren't considered essential by the movement's early proponents, who optimistically believed that deficits would be taken care of by the galvanizing effects of huge tax cuts.
Thatcherism was a galvanizing force.
When the lone rider turns up at a camp of cowboys on a cattle drive and identifies himself as Wyatt Earp, it's a grand and delightful shock, as if he had revealed himself rather to be Moses — and the galvanizing moral effect is of a similar sort.
But the show of disdain had the opposite effect, galvanizing a furious populace to take to the streets.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com