# Writing Styles Guide Define, extract, and apply consistent writing voices across content. ## Style Dimensions Framework Every writing style can be mapped across these dimensions: | Dimension | Spectrum | Description | |-----------|----------|-------------| | Tone | Formal ↔ Casual | How official or relaxed | | Pace | Fast ↔ Measured | Sentence length, rhythm | | Vocabulary | Simple ↔ Technical | Word complexity level | | Emotion | Reserved ↔ Expressive | Emotional intensity | | Humor | Serious ↔ Playful | Use of wit, jokes | | Perspective | Third-person ↔ First-person | Pronoun usage | | Authority | Peer ↔ Expert | Positioning relative to reader | ## Pre-Built Style Definitions ### Casual Conversational **Best for:** Indie hackers, startups, personal brands **Dimensions:** - Tone: Casual - Pace: Fast - Vocabulary: Simple - Emotion: Expressive - Humor: Playful - Perspective: First-person **Characteristics:** - Contractions ("you're", "isn't") - Short sentences, fragments OK - Personal pronouns ("I", "you") - Informal transitions ("So here's the thing...") - Emoji usage acceptable **Example:** > "Look, I get it. Marketing feels overwhelming. But here's what I learned after burning through $10k on ads that didn't work—it doesn't have to be complicated." --- ### Professional Authoritative **Best for:** Enterprise SaaS, B2B, consulting **Dimensions:** - Tone: Formal - Pace: Measured - Vocabulary: Technical - Emotion: Reserved - Humor: Serious - Perspective: Third-person / We **Characteristics:** - Complete sentences - Industry terminology - Data-driven claims - Formal transitions - No emoji **Example:** > "Organizations that implement structured content strategies outperform competitors by 3.5x in lead generation. This comprehensive guide examines the frameworks that drive measurable results." --- ### Edgy Provocative **Best for:** Disruptor brands, hot takes, thought leadership **Dimensions:** - Tone: Casual-to-Formal (varies) - Pace: Fast - Vocabulary: Simple with punchy terms - Emotion: Expressive - Humor: Playful but sharp - Perspective: First-person **Characteristics:** - Bold claims - Contrarian positions - Short, punchy sentences - Pattern interrupts - Strategic use of questions **Example:** > "Everything you know about content marketing is wrong. Seriously. The 'best practices' everyone follows? They're why you're invisible. Let me show you what actually works." --- ### Luxe Minimalist **Best for:** Premium products, luxury brands, high-end services **Dimensions:** - Tone: Formal - Pace: Measured, spacious - Vocabulary: Elegant, selective - Emotion: Reserved but refined - Humor: Subtle or absent - Perspective: Second-person **Characteristics:** - Fewer words, more impact - White space between ideas - Refined vocabulary - Understated confidence - No hard sell **Example:** > "Exceptional results require exceptional attention. We work with founders who understand that true growth cannot be rushed. By invitation only." --- ### Warm Supportive **Best for:** Wellness, coaching, education, community **Dimensions:** - Tone: Casual - Pace: Measured - Vocabulary: Simple - Emotion: Expressive - Humor: Gentle - Perspective: First-person plural ("we") **Characteristics:** - Empathetic language - Inclusive pronouns - Encouraging tone - Validation before advice - Gentle CTAs **Example:** > "It's okay if you're feeling stuck. We've all been there. The journey isn't always linear, and that's completely normal. Let's explore some gentle ways to move forward together." --- ### Technical Educator **Best for:** Developer content, technical tutorials, documentation **Dimensions:** - Tone: Neutral-to-Casual - Pace: Measured - Vocabulary: Technical but explained - Emotion: Reserved - Humor: Dry/nerdy - Perspective: Second-person **Characteristics:** - Code examples - Step-by-step structure - Precise terminology - Assumes competence - Occasional dry humor **Example:** > "Here's the thing about async/await—it's not magic, it's just syntactic sugar over Promises. Let's break down what's actually happening under the hood, and why your code isn't working the way you expect." ## Style Extraction Prompt Use this prompt to analyze existing content and extract its style: ``` Analyze this content and extract the writing style: [PASTE CONTENT] Provide: 1. Tone (formal ↔ casual): 2. Pace (fast ↔ measured): 3. Vocabulary (simple ↔ technical): 4. Emotion (reserved ↔ expressive): 5. Humor (serious ↔ playful): 6. Perspective (pronoun usage): 7. Sentence structure patterns: 8. Signature phrases/patterns: 9. What to DO in this style: 10. What to AVOID in this style: ``` ## Style Application Prompt Use this prompt to write in a specific style: ``` Write [CONTENT TYPE] in the following style: **Tone:** [casual/formal] **Pace:** [fast/measured] **Vocabulary:** [simple/technical] **Emotion:** [reserved/expressive] **Perspective:** [first/second/third person] **DO:** - [specific patterns to use] **DON'T:** - [patterns to avoid] Topic: [TOPIC] ``` ## Writing Style File Format Store custom styles in `assets/writing-styles/`: ```yaml # assets/writing-styles/indie-hacker.yaml name: Indie Hacker description: Authentic, scrappy, behind-the-scenes vibe dimensions: tone: casual pace: fast vocabulary: simple emotion: expressive humor: self-deprecating perspective: first-person patterns: - Short sentences - Fragments for emphasis - Numbers and specifics - "Here's what I learned" - Behind-the-scenes honesty avoid: - Corporate speak - Passive voice - Vague claims - Salesy language examples: - "Shipped v1 in 48 hours. It was broken. People loved it anyway." - "Revenue last month: $4,293. Not life-changing, but real." ``` ## Integration Use with: - `brand-guidelines` skill - Align with brand voice - video-to-article workflow - Apply extracted style to long-form output - `ck:copywriting` skill workflows - Style-aware content generation