brand-voice

Generate marketing copy, landing pages, email sequences, and social media posts with consistent brand voice. Use when asked to "write copy", "draft a landing page", "email sequence", "tagline", "headline", "social post", "marketing content", or "A/B test variants". Supports multiple brands with per-brand reference files.

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Install skill "brand-voice" with this command: npx skills add ngmeyer/brand-voice-frameworks

Brand Voice

Marketing copy generation with framework-driven consistency. User-first, transformation-focused, always with a clear CTA.

Instructions

Step 1: Identify the Brand

Determine which brand this is for, then load its reference file from references/.

Each brand file should contain: identity, tagline, ICP (ideal customer profile), customer psychology, tone, key messages, and anti-patterns.

See references/cyberdyne-systems.md for an example brand file.

Step 2: Pick the Right Framework

Match the copy framework to what you're writing:

Content TypeFrameworkWhen to Use
Landing page heroPAS (Problem → Agitate → Solve)When the audience feels the pain already
Email sequenceAIDA (Attention → Interest → Desire → Action)Nurturing cold leads to conversion
Social postsHook → Value → CTAShort-form engagement
Feature announcementFABE (Feature → Advantage → Benefit → Evidence)When you have proof/numbers
Comparison/competitiveBAB (Before → After → Bridge)Showing transformation
Testimonial pageSocial proof cascadeWhen you have customer stories

Step 3: Apply Copy Principles

  1. User-first voice: "You can..." not "Acme allows..."
  2. Specificity sells: "200 attendees" beats "large events"
  3. Transformation > features: What does their life look like after?
  4. Social proof: Real humans, real results
  5. Clear next step: Every piece has one CTA
  6. Hook first: Reason to care in the first second

Step 4: Customer Psychology

Always ask before writing:

  • "Who is this actually for?" — no "generic user"
  • "What's the transformation?" — features → life after
  • "What's the hook?" — find it before writing

Step 5: Deliver with Variants

Every deliverable includes:

  1. Headline (2-3 A/B variants)
  2. Subheadline (supports the hook)
  3. Body copy (transformation-focused)
  4. CTA (single, clear action)
  5. Hypothesis — why this version should work

Step 6: Platform Adaptation

Adapt the same message for different platforms:

PlatformConstraintsStyle
Landing pageNo length limitFull narrative, multiple sections
EmailSubject line < 50 charsPersonal, conversational, one CTA
X/Twitter280 charsPunchy, hook-first, link in bio
LinkedIn3000 charsProfessional, story-led, insight-driven
DiscordNo markdown tablesBold + bullets, casual tone

"This / Not That" — Universal Rules

✅ This❌ Not That
"You'll have a site live in 10 minutes""Our platform enables rapid deployment"
"200 parents signed up in one weekend""Our solution drives high adoption rates"
Specific numbers and namesVague superlatives ("best", "powerful", "revolutionary")
Customer languageProduct language
One CTA per pieceMultiple competing CTAs
Earned confidenceHype or desperation

Adding New Brands

Create a new file in references/ following this structure:

# [Brand Name] Brand Guide

## Identity
- **Domain:** example.com
- **Tagline:** "Your tagline here"
- **ICP:** Who is the ideal customer?
- **Market:** Geographic or demographic focus

## Customer Psychology
- **Primary driver:** What motivates the purchase?
- **Fear:** What are they afraid of?
- **Aspiration:** What do they want to become?

## Voice & Tone
- **Personality:** [e.g., confident but approachable]
- **Register:** [e.g., casual professional]
- **Unique phrases:** [brand-specific language]

## Key Messages
1. [Primary value prop]
2. [Secondary value prop]
3. [Social proof angle]

## Anti-Patterns (Never Do This)
- [Brand-specific mistakes to avoid]

Gotchas

  • Generic copy is worse than no copy — If you can swap in any competitor's name and it still works, the copy is too generic. Rewrite with product-specific details.
  • Framework mismatch kills conversion — PAS on a feature announcement feels manipulative. FABE on a cold email feels robotic. Match the framework to the content type.
  • Don't mix brand voices — Each brand has its own personality. Writing Brand A copy in Brand B's voice confuses both audiences.
  • CTA competition — Two CTAs on one page split attention and reduce conversion. Pick the one that matters most.
  • Load the brand reference every time — Don't rely on memory. Brand details drift. Read the file.

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