Install
openclaw skills install @zepoldani/youtube-launch-kitTurn a video topic, rough notes, or transcript into a complete YouTube launch package. Outputs two title variants, a keyword-optimized description with timestamped chapters, 10 tags, a pinned comment, a discussion seed (also known as first comment prompt or first pinned comment), an optional thumbnail prompt, and an optional 3-tweet promo set. Use when a creator pastes a video topic, outline, notes, or transcript and asks for a title, description, tags, launch copy, pinned comment, first comment prompt, discussion seed, thumbnail idea, or promo tweets for YouTube.
openclaw skills install @zepoldani/youtube-launch-kitTurn a video concept or recording into a complete launch package — titles, description, chapters, tags, pinned comment, discussion seed, and optional promo assets. One paste in, full launch out.
Trigger this skill when the user:
Do NOT trigger for:
Determine which of three input states the user is in. Do not ask clarifying questions beyond what's listed below.
User has a concept and rough structure but hasn't recorded yet.
Required:
Optional (use if provided, don't ask twice): 3. Target audience (e.g., "beginners," "freelance designers," "new parents") 4. Channel niche or name 5. Tone — educational, entertaining, motivational, tutorial-focused (default: educational/tutorial)
If notes are missing and only a topic is provided, proceed as State C and note the limitation.
User has already recorded and has a transcript from auto-captions, Whisper, or another source.
Required: The transcript text (full or partial — work with what's provided)
Optional: Target audience, channel niche, tone
From the transcript: extract real chapter structure, pull exact phrases for keyword-dense copy, and use the creator's own language in the description and pinned comment.
User has a topic but no notes and no transcript.
Proceed with title variants, tags, description intro paragraph, and a structural chapter scaffold. State explicitly once: "Chapter timestamps are structural placeholders — fill in the actual times after recording." Do not repeat this caveat.
Deliver all core deliverables in a single response, clearly labeled with H2 headers. Never skip a core deliverable. Offer optional deliverables at the end.
Produce exactly two variants. Label them by intent, not by letter/number.
Curiosity-framed: Withhold one key detail or tease the outcome. Front-load the most compelling word or phrase. Drives browse traffic (suggested videos, homepage feed).
Clarity-framed: Direct, keyword-forward, searchable. Lead with the primary keyword. Drives search traffic.
Rules:
Structure in this exact order:
Opening paragraph (first 150–200 characters): Keyword-dense, hooks the viewer and states the video's premise. This is what appears above-the-fold in search results and what YouTube's algorithm indexes most heavily. Must contain the primary keyword naturally — do not stuff.
Body (2–3 sentences): Expand on what the viewer will get. Written in the creator's voice. Specific, not generic ("You'll learn the exact 3-step process I use" > "This video covers a lot of useful tips").
Timestamped chapters:
Minimum 4 chapters. First chapter must be at 0:00. Labels must be content-specific — never use "Intro," "Part 1," "Outro," or "Conclusion" as standalone labels.
0:00 / XX:XX placeholder format. The creator fills in actual times post-recording.CTA section:
One subscribe prompt + one resource link placeholder [LINK]. Keep brief — two lines maximum.
Apply the tag formula exactly:
productivity, YouTube)notion for beginners, youtube growth tips)how to organize your notion workspace, youtube tags for small channels)First tag must exactly match or closely mirror the chosen title — this is YouTube's strongest tag-to-title relevance signal.
Present tags as a comma-separated list, ready to paste into the YouTube tag field.
50–80 words. Written in the creator's voice, intended to be pinned to the top of the comments.
Purpose: sticky reference — chapters, key resources, corrections, or links mentioned in the video. Not an engagement play; that's the discussion seed.
Format: lead with a chapter list or the most valuable resource, then link placeholders. Example structure:
⏱ Chapters are in the description — jump to whatever's most useful. 🔗 [Resource name]: [LINK] 🔗 [Resource name]: [LINK]
20–40 words. A question the creator posts as their first comment to seed early replies.
Rules:
After delivering the five core outputs above, offer both of the following once. Generate whichever ones the user requests (or both if they asked upfront):
Thumbnail Prompt (optional) A Midjourney or DALL-E compatible image prompt for the video thumbnail. Format:
Promo Tweet Set (optional) 3 tweets, each ≤280 characters. Sequence:
[YOUTUBE_LINK]Do not auto-generate optional deliverables unless asked. Offer them at the end of the core package.
These signals are derived from known YouTube algorithm behavior — apply them without exception:
Keyword selection and semantic variation draw on training knowledge of what searches well in a given niche. This works reliably for evergreen topics across most creator categories.
Honest ceiling — state this once in every session, do not repeat:
"Keyword recommendations reflect training knowledge, not live search data. For trending topics or highly competitive niches, validate tags with TubeBuddy or VidIQ after running this skill."
No external API key is required and none should be suggested as mandatory. TubeBuddy/VidIQ are validation tools, not prerequisites.
After delivering the package, offer once:
Do not auto-regenerate unless asked.