Install
openclaw skills install brw-voice-extractorExtract and document someone's authentic writing voice from samples. Use when someone needs a "voice guide," wants to capture their writing DNA, or needs to train AI to write in their style. Also useful for ghostwriting, brand voice documentation, or onboarding writers.
openclaw skills install brw-voice-extractorHere's the thing about AI-generated content: it all sounds the same.
Generic. Safe. Forgettable.
The fix isn't better prompts. It's teaching the AI how YOU actually communicate.
That's what this skill does. You give it writing samples, it gives you back a Voice Guide — your communication DNA, documented and ready to use.
Why this matters: Once you have a Voice Guide, every piece of AI output sounds like you. Not like ChatGPT. Not like every other founder on LinkedIn. You.
Get me 3-5 writing samples. More is better. Could be:
The messier and more authentic, the better. Transcripts of you talking are gold — that's where your real voice lives.
Also tell me:
Every person has a natural communication mode. I'm looking for:
What role do you naturally play?
What's your default energy?
What do you actually care about? I'll look for themes that repeat across your samples. The stuff you can't help but talk about.
This is where it gets specific. I'm hunting for:
Your transition phrases — How do you shift topics?
Your emphasis phrases — How do you land a point?
Your closers — How do you wrap up?
These become the cheat codes for anyone (or any AI) writing as you.
Not every topic deserves the same energy. I'll figure out:
Where you're an expert (write with full authority):
Where you're experienced but not the expert (write with earned opinion):
Where you're actively learning (write with curiosity):
This calibration is what makes the voice feel real, not like a one-note character.
Just as important as what you DO say is what you'd NEVER say.
I'll identify:
Example from my own voice guide:
A complete Voice Guide document:
# [Name]'s Voice Guide
## Who You Are
- Core energy: [cheerleader/challenger/teacher/etc.]
- Natural role: [how you show up]
- Authority zones: [where you're the expert]
## Your Signature Phrases
### Transitions
[The phrases you use to shift topics]
### Emphasis
[The phrases you use to land points]
### Closers
[How you wrap things up]
## Confidence Calibration
### Full authority (no hedging):
[Topics where you're the expert]
### Earned perspective:
[Topics where you have experience]
### Active exploration:
[Topics where you're learning]
## What You Never Do
[Words, phrases, tones to avoid]
## Quick Examples
### This sounds like you:
[Example in your voice]
### This doesn't:
[Same content, wrong voice]
For AI training: Paste the Voice Guide into your system prompt. Every output gets filtered through your style.
For ghostwriters: Hand it over on day one. Cuts revision cycles in half.
For your team: Now everyone knows what "on brand" actually sounds like.
For yourself: When you're stuck, read it. It reminds you how you actually communicate when you're not overthinking it.
Short on time? I can do a quick extraction:
That's a minimum viable voice guide. Better than nothing by a mile.
The best voice guides come from messy, authentic content. Not your polished website copy — the email you fired off at 11pm. Not the edited article — the podcast where you riffed for an hour.
Give me the real stuff. I'll find the patterns.
Want a custom voice guide built for your business? → Book a strategy call
Skill by Brian Wagner | AI Marketing Architect | brianrwagner.com