src-tauri/resources/skill-templates/marketing-brand-voice/SKILL.md
Legacy fallback for brand governance and style policy work. Prefer copywriting and copy-editing for operational production tasks. Use when documenting or auditing voice rules, not as the default drafting workflow.
npx skillsauth add frumu-ai/tandem marketing-brand-voiceInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Frameworks for documenting, applying, and enforcing brand voice and style guidelines across marketing content.
A complete brand voice document should cover these areas. Use this framework to help users define their brand voice or to understand an existing brand voice configuration.
Define the brand as if it were a person. What are its defining traits?
Example: "If our brand were a person, they would be a knowledgeable colleague who explains complex things simply, celebrates your wins genuinely, and never talks down to you."
Select 3-5 attributes that define how the brand communicates. Each attribute should be defined with:
How the voice adapts across contexts while remaining recognizably the same brand.
Specific grammar, formatting, and language rules. See the Style Guide Enforcement section below.
Preferred and avoided terms. See the Terminology Management section below.
When defining brand voice, it helps to position attributes on a spectrum. Here are common attribute spectrums:
| Spectrum | One End | Other End | | ---------- | ----------------------------- | ------------------------- | | Formality | Formal, institutional | Casual, conversational | | Authority | Expert, authoritative | Peer-level, collaborative | | Emotion | Warm, empathetic | Direct, matter-of-fact | | Complexity | Technical, precise | Simple, accessible | | Energy | Bold, energetic | Calm, measured | | Humor | Playful, witty | Serious, earnest | | Innovation | Cutting-edge, forward-looking | Established, proven |
For each chosen attribute, document it in this format:
[Attribute name]
Example:
Approachable
The brand voice stays consistent, but tone adapts to context. Tone is the emotional inflection applied to the voice.
| Channel | Tone Adaptation | Example | | ------------------------ | ---------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------- | | Blog | Informative, conversational, educational | "Let's walk through how this works and why it matters for your team." | | Social media (LinkedIn) | Professional, thought-provoking, concise | "Three things we learned from running 50 campaigns this quarter." | | Social media (Twitter/X) | Punchy, direct, sometimes witty | "Your landing page has 3 seconds. Make them count." | | Email marketing | Personal, helpful, action-oriented | "We put together something we think you'll find useful." | | Sales collateral | Confident, benefit-driven, specific | "Teams using our platform reduce reporting time by 40%." | | Support/Help docs | Clear, patient, step-by-step | "If you see this error, here's how to fix it." | | Press release | Formal, factual, newsworthy | "The company today announced the launch of..." | | Error messages | Empathetic, helpful, blame-free | "Something went wrong on our end. We're looking into it." |
| Situation | Tone Adaptation | | ------------------------- | -------------------------------------- | | Product launch | Excited, confident, forward-looking | | Apology/Crisis | Sincere, direct, accountable | | Celebration/Success | Genuine, appreciative, collaborative | | Educational/Instructional | Patient, clear, expert | | Sales/Direct response | Urgency-driven, benefit-focused, clear |
When reviewing content, check for consistency in these categories:
Punctuation:
Capitalization:
Formatting:
Perspective:
Words that align with brand voice and category positioning.
Words that are off-brand, overly technical, or used by competitors.
Specific terms that should never be used (e.g., "cheap", "best-in-class").
Guidelines for brand-specific names or technical terms.
development
Create detailed implementation plans before making code changes. Use this when you need to plan complex refactors, new features, or multi-file changes. The plan helps users review and approve changes before execution.
testing
Create a retention-focused YouTube video package and output it as a set of files under scripts/<slug>/ (hooks, outline, A-roll, shotlist, on-screen text, CTA, chapters, metadata, titles/thumbnails, filming checklist).
tools
Review and improve the clarity, tone, and impact of text files in your workspace.
development
Watch important pages and notify when content changes.