Install
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/content-style-guideCreate a content style guide / voice & tone guide so everyone writes consistently. Use when asked to write a content style guide, a voice and tone guide, editorial guidelines, or UX-writing standards. Produces a usable guide — voice principles with do/don't examples, tone-by-context, mechanics (grammar, capitalisation, formatting), terminology/word list, and accessibility/inclusivity rules — that a team can actually apply.
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/content-style-guideA style guide makes a brand sound like one voice no matter who's writing. The useful ones aren't 50 pages of rules — they're voice principles with examples, tone guidance by context, and a word list people reach for daily. This skill produces a guide a team will actually use, grounded in concrete do/don't examples rather than abstract adjectives.
Given "a style guide for our fintech app", produce the full guide anyway — infer voice principles and terminology from the brand and audience, and mark inferred choices for the team to confirm. Make every principle show an example. Never hand back abstract values with no examples.
Ask for these only if they aren't already provided (else infer and label):
1. Voice — who we are — 3–4 voice principles, each as "We are X, not Y" with a before/after example.
2. Tone — how we adapt — how the voice flexes by context (e.g. celebratory on success, calm and brief on errors, warm in onboarding), with a small table: situation → tone → example.
3. Mechanics — the rules that come up constantly: capitalisation (sentence vs. title case), punctuation (Oxford comma, exclamation marks), numbers/dates/currency, contractions, US/UK spelling, formatting (headings, lists, links, buttons).
4. Word list — a do/don't terminology table: preferred term, what to avoid, and why (product terms, jargon to drop, words that are on/off-brand).
5. Inclusivity & accessibility — inclusive language, reading level, plain-language rules, and accessibility (link text, alt text, no "click here", no directional-only instructions).
6. Quick reference — a one-screen cheat sheet of the most-used rules.
Mark inferred voice/terminology choices (confirm with the team).
Content design practice — example-driven voice principles, context-based tone, editorial mechanics, terminology management, and inclusive/accessible language.