Install
openclaw skills install bookforge-diagnose-pitch-for-commercial-teaching-fitAudit an existing sales pitch, deck, or call transcript against the Commercial Teaching rubric. Use this skill when you want to review your deck, diagnose why your pitch isn't working, check whether your pitch leads with solution instead of leading to it, run a commercial teaching check, get a pitch diagnostic, run a sales deck review, figure out why your pitch isn't differentiating, or check whether your pitch opens with your solution before establishing a customer problem. Detects lead-with-vs-lead-to errors, missing Reframes, Rational Drowning misfocus, teaching-into-the-desert traps, buzzword pollution, and sequence violations. Produces a scored per-step rubric with highlighted problem passages and rewrite recommendations.
openclaw skills install bookforge-diagnose-pitch-for-commercial-teaching-fitYou have an existing sales pitch — a deck, a script, a call transcript, or a narrative document — and you want to know whether it is built to teach or built to sell. This skill applies when:
The diagnostic framework: Commercial Teaching pitches follow a six-step sequence — Warmer → Reframe → Rational Drowning → Emotional Impact → New Way → Your Solution. The seller's product does not enter the conversation until Step 6. Most pitches violate this by leading with their solution instead of leading to it. This audit locates the violations precisely.
This skill does not author a new pitch. It diagnoses an existing one. If you need to build a pitch from scratch, use author-commercial-teaching-pitch.
Before starting, confirm you have:
Before scoring, scan the artifact for these quick signals:
You have enough to proceed when:
If the pitch is fewer than 5 sentences, ask the user to expand it or provide the full deck before continuing.
Read the pitch artifact in full. As you read, do not score yet — just parse.
Create a working map of the artifact's sections. For a slide deck: list each slide title. For a transcript: identify each topic shift. For a narrative: identify paragraph clusters by theme.
For each section, write a one-line summary of what that section is claiming or doing.
Why this matters: You cannot score choreography violations without first knowing what sequence the pitch actually follows. Most reps are not aware their pitch is out of sequence — they need the map made explicit.
For each section in your working map, assign it to one of the six choreography steps, or mark it as Unclassified if it does not fit any step.
The six steps and their content signatures:
| Step | What the Content Does |
|---|---|
| 1 — Warmer | Discusses customer challenges, benchmarks, peer anecdotes. No product. Ends with a question. |
| 2 — Reframe | Introduces unexpected angle that connects challenge to a hidden problem or overlooked opportunity. Delivers surprise. |
| 3 — Rational Drowning | Quantifies the cost or size of the problem using data, charts, ROI models. |
| 4 — Emotional Impact | Tells a story about how similar companies experienced this problem. Makes it personal and recognizable. |
| 5 — New Way | Defines the capability or behavior change needed — without naming your company as the answer. |
| 6 — Your Solution | Introduces your specific offering as uniquely able to deliver what Step 5 described. |
Mark any content that is about your company (history, team, awards, logo wall, locations) as Unclassified — it does not belong in the sequence.
Why this matters: The mapping exposes sequence violations. A pitch may technically contain a Reframe — but if it appears after Your Solution, the choreography is broken.
For each step that appears in the pitch, assign a score: Pass, Partial, or Fail. For steps that are absent, mark Missing.
Use the detailed per-step criteria from references/six-step-rubric.md. The summary criteria are:
Step 1 — Warmer
Step 2 — Reframe
Step 3 — Rational Drowning
Step 4 — Emotional Impact
Step 5 — New Way
Step 6 — Your Solution
Run a focused check on the opening of the pitch (first 20% of content).
Check A — Solution-first opening: Does the pitch open with any of the following?
If yes, mark: Lead-With Error Detected. The pitch opens with the seller's story before establishing why the customer should care.
Check B — First-slide diagnosis: For deck audits — what is on slides 1–3? If the answer is any combination of: company values, team credentials, solution capabilities, partner logos, or customer logo walls — those slides are all lead-with signals. They have no place in the opening of a Commercial Teaching pitch.
Check C — Buzzword pollution scan: Search the full artifact for these terms (from Ch9 analysis of top overused pitch language): leading, unique, innovative, solution, best, top, largest, innovator, world-class, cutting-edge, state-of-the-art.
Count occurrences. More than 3 in a short pitch is a pollution signal. More than 6 means the pitch is indistinguishable from competitor materials.
Flag each occurrence with location and surrounding sentence.
Why this matters: Buzzwords do not differentiate — they signal sameness. Every competitor also claims to be "the leading solution." These words invite a price discussion rather than a conceptual sale. They also indicate that the pitch is leading with product identity rather than customer insight.
This check addresses a subtler failure: the pitch has a real Reframe (Step 2), but the insight does not route back to capabilities that only this seller can deliver.
The test: For each insight or Reframe identified in Step 2, ask:
If competitors can equally satisfy the New Way requirements, mark: Teaching-Into-the-Desert Risk Detected.
Manifestations to look for:
Why this matters: Free consulting that benefits your competitors is the worst possible outcome of a teaching pitch. The four rules of Commercial Teaching require that every insight lead to a capability where you outperform the competition — otherwise you are educating the market on behalf of your rivals.
A separate targeted check on Step 2.
Presence check: Is there any moment in the pitch that introduces an unexpected angle — something the customer has not already considered? If no — the Reframe is missing. This is the most consequential single failure in the choreography.
Quality check for present Reframes:
Common Reframe failure modes:
Mark as: Reframe Missing, Reframe Weak, or Reframe Effective.
Write the output to pitch-diagnosis.md in the same directory as the input artifact, or in the working directory if no artifact path is specified.
The report contains four sections:
Section 1 — Sequence Map
A table showing how the pitch sections map to choreography steps, with any sequence violations called out.
| Pitch Section | Assigned Step | Sequence Position | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slide 1: About Our Company | Unclassified | 1st | Lead-with signal — company content in opening |
| Slide 2: Our Leading Platform | Step 6 | 2nd | Solution appears at position 2 of 8 — severe lead-with |
| Slide 3: Industry Challenges | Step 1 (Warmer) | 3rd | Correct step, wrong position |
...
Section 2 — Per-Step Scorecard
Step 1 — Warmer: [ Pass / Partial / Fail / Missing ]
Step 2 — Reframe: [ Pass / Partial / Fail / Missing ]
Step 3 — Rational Drowning: [ Pass / Partial / Fail / Missing ]
Step 4 — Emotional Impact: [ Pass / Partial / Fail / Missing ]
Step 5 — New Way: [ Pass / Partial / Fail / Missing ]
Step 6 — Your Solution: [ Pass / Partial / Fail / Missing ]
Lead-with error: [ Detected / Not detected ]
Buzzword pollution: [ N occurrences / None ]
Teaching-into-the-desert: [ Risk detected / Safe ]
Reframe quality: [ Missing / Weak / Effective ]
Section 3 — Flagged Passages
For each issue detected, quote the specific passage and label the problem:
[LEAD-WITH] Slide 1, sentence 2:
"Our platform is the leading solution for enterprise supply chain optimization."
Problem: Solution claim in opening position. Customer has not yet been given a reason to care.
Rewrite direction: Replace with a hypothesis about supply chain challenges at companies like theirs.
[BUZZWORD] Slide 3:
"Our innovative, world-class team delivers unique value."
Problem: 4 buzzwords in one sentence. These terms appear in every competitor's deck.
Rewrite direction: Replace with a specific, measurable capability or a customer outcome.
[TEACHING-INTO-THE-DESERT] Slide 6 (New Way):
"Companies need to adopt AI-powered analytics to reduce decision latency."
Problem: Any vendor with an analytics product can satisfy this requirement.
Rewrite direction: Specify a unique capability only this seller delivers — or revise Step 2 to teach an insight that naturally leads to a more differentiated capability.
Section 4 — Priority Rewrite Recommendations
Rank the top 3 changes the rep or enablement team should make, ordered by impact:
For each recommendation, provide one concrete rewrite direction (not a full rewrite — that is author-commercial-teaching-pitch).
The primary output is pitch-diagnosis.md containing all four report sections.
Secondary outputs (inline in the conversation):
The diagnosis report is not a rewrite. It is a precise diagnostic that the rep or enablement team uses to understand exactly what to fix — and why each fix matters to the customer experience.
Pitch opening: "At Acme Corp, we are the leading provider of enterprise workflow automation. Our award-winning platform serves over 500 enterprise customers across 40 countries."
Diagnosis:
Reframe: "Most companies don't realize that 40% of approval bottlenecks happen outside their workflow tool — in email threads and Slack conversations. That's where decisions actually get made."
Step 5 (New Way): "You need a system that captures decisions wherever they happen and integrates them back into the workflow record."
Diagnosis:
Pitch structure: Slide 1: About Us → Slide 2: Industry Challenges → Slide 3: Market Data → Slide 4: Our Solution → Slide 5: ROI Calculator → Slide 6: Next Steps
Diagnosis:
references/six-step-rubric.md — Detailed per-step scoring criteria with pass/partial/fail indicators, failure mode examples, and the full anti-pattern quick-reference tableThis skill is licensed under CC-BY-SA 4.0.
The skill was generated by the BookForge pipeline from The Challenger Sale by Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson (Portfolio/Penguin, 2011). Content has been paraphrased and structured as an executable skill — it does not reproduce verbatim passages from the copyrighted work. Attribution required on redistribution.
This skill is standalone (no dependencies). It diagnoses an existing pitch. To author a new pitch from scratch, use build-commercial-insight followed by author-commercial-teaching-pitch.