Smithery Logo
MCPsSkillsDocsPricing
Login
NewFlame, an assistant that learns and improves. Available onTelegramSlack
    liqiongyu

    written-communication

    liqiongyu/written-communication
    Writing
    16

    About

    SKILL.md

    Install

    • Telegram
      Telegram
    • Slack
      Slack
    • Claude Code
      Claude Code
    • Codex
      Codex
    • OpenClaw
      OpenClaw
    • Cursor
      Cursor
    • Amp
      Amp
    • GitHub Copilot
      GitHub Copilot
    • Gemini CLI
      Gemini CLI
    • Kilo Code
      Kilo Code
    • Junie
      Junie
    • Replit
      Replit
    • Windsurf
      Windsurf
    • Cline
      Cline
    • Continue
      Continue
    • OpenCode
      OpenCode
    • OpenHands
      OpenHands
    • Roo Code
      Roo Code
    • Augment
      Augment
    • Goose
      Goose
    • Trae
      Trae
    • Zencoder
      Zencoder
    • Antigravity
      Antigravity
    • Download skill
    ├─
    ├─
    └─
    Smithery Logo

    Give agents more agency

    Resources

    DocumentationPrivacy PolicySystem Status

    Company

    PricingAboutBlog

    Connect

    © 2026 Smithery. All rights reserved.

    About

    Draft and edit high-signal written artifacts and produce a Written Communication Pack (brief, outline, draft email/memo/doc, canonical doc option, quality gate)...

    SKILL.md

    Written Communication

    Scope

    Covers

    • Turning messy notes into a clear email, memo, doc, or async update
    • Making the “how” explicit (what happens next, by whom, by when)
    • Editing for clarity at scale (scanability, definitions, single source of truth)
    • Creating/maintaining a canonical doc for an ongoing project

    When to use

    • “Draft an email to stakeholders explaining a change and what I need from them.”
    • “Turn these bullets into a 1-page memo with a recommendation and next steps.”
    • “Rewrite this doc to be clearer, shorter, and more actionable.”
    • “Create a canonical doc as the source of truth for this project.”

    When NOT to use

    • You need marketing/brand copy (landing pages, ads) more than internal/executive clarity.
    • You need a full product spec/PRD from scratch (use writing-prds or writing-specs-designs).
    • You need a presentation deck, slide outline, or talk track (use giving-presentations; this skill produces written documents, not spoken-word deliverables).
    • You need a stakeholder alignment campaign with pre-briefs and decision meetings (use stakeholder-alignment; a memo may be one artifact within that campaign).
    • You need to craft communications specifically to manage your relationship with your manager (use managing-up; different framing and tactics apply).
    • You’re writing legal/HR/regulated communications without expert review.
    • The real issue is alignment via facilitation (you may need a meeting/offsite plan, not a rewrite).

    Inputs

    Minimum required

    • Artifact type + channel (email / memo / doc / status update; where it will live)
    • Audience (roles/seniority) + what they care about
    • Goal + ask (inform/align/decide; what you want the reader to do, by when)
    • Key context (facts, constraints, timeline, links) + what must be avoided (sensitivities)
    • Source material (notes, existing draft, Slack threads, etc.)

    Missing-info strategy

    • Ask up to 5 questions from references/INTAKE.md (3–5 at a time), then proceed.
    • If critical info remains missing, make explicit assumptions and offer 2–3 options (structure/tone/ask).

    Outputs (deliverables)

    Produce a Written Communication Pack in Markdown (in-chat; or as files if requested):

    1. Message brief (audience, goal, ask, constraints)
    2. Outline (TL;DR + key points + “how/next steps”)
    3. Draft artifact (email/memo/doc/status update) in final-ready format
    4. Canonical doc skeleton (optional; when the project needs a single source of truth)
    5. Risks / Open questions / Next steps (always)

    Templates: references/TEMPLATES.md
    Expanded guidance: references/WORKFLOW.md

    Workflow (8 steps)

    1) Intake + choose the lightest artifact

    • Inputs: user request + references/INTAKE.md.
    • Actions: Clarify the channel and pick the smallest artifact that works (email vs memo vs doc vs status update vs canonical doc).
    • Outputs: Message brief (draft) + artifact selection.
    • Checks: You can answer: “Who is this for, and what should they do after reading?”

    2) Lock the reader outcome + ask (one sentence)

    • Inputs: brief.
    • Actions: Write one sentence: “After reading, the audience will ____.” Make the ask explicit (decision/options, approval, feedback, or FYI) and include a deadline if relevant.
    • Outputs: Outcome/ask line + decision/feedback request.
    • Checks: The ask is unambiguous and doesn’t require a meeting to interpret.

    3) Convert “what/why” into “how” (actionable next steps)

    • Inputs: source material + outcome/ask.
    • Actions: Identify the 3–7 concrete steps, responsibilities, and dependencies. If proposing a change, include what changes, what stays the same, and what happens next.
    • Outputs: “How / Next steps” bullets (owner + date where possible).
    • Checks: A reader could execute without asking “so what do you want me to do?”

    4) Structure for skim (clarity at scale)

    • Inputs: brief + next steps.
    • Actions: Create a TL;DR, then headings in the order readers scan: Ask → Context → Details → Next steps. Use bullets, short paragraphs, and explicit labels.
    • Outputs: Outline with headings.
    • Checks: A skim-reader can capture the point in < 60 seconds.

    5) Draft the artifact (write to be forwarded)

    • Inputs: outline + templates.
    • Actions: Draft in plain language; avoid jargon; put key numbers and decisions in writing. If this is ongoing work, link to (or create) the canonical doc.
    • Outputs: Draft email/memo/doc/status update.
    • Checks: The draft is safe to forward; it stands alone without verbal context.

    6) “Letter to yourself” clarity pass (then rewrite for the audience)

    • Inputs: draft.
    • Actions: If the content is fuzzy, write a quick internal version (“what am I actually saying?”), then rewrite in the audience’s language and incentives.
    • Outputs: Clarified rewrite with cleaner logic.
    • Checks: The message has a single through-line; no contradictions or buried ledes.

    7) Canonical doc check (single source of truth)

    • Inputs: draft + project context.
    • Actions: If readers will keep asking “where is the latest?”, create/update a canonical doc (links, owners, last updated, decisions, next update cadence).
    • Outputs: Canonical doc skeleton or link section.
    • Checks: There is one obvious place to find the current state and decisions.

    8) Quality gate + finalize

    • Inputs: full pack.
    • Actions: Run references/CHECKLISTS.md and score with references/RUBRIC.md. Add Risks/Open questions/Next steps.
    • Outputs: Final Written Communication Pack.
    • Checks: Clarity, actionability, and ownership meet the bar (≥ 3 on each rubric dimension).

    Quality gate (required)

    • Use references/CHECKLISTS.md and references/RUBRIC.md.
    • Always include: Risks, Open questions, Next steps.

    Examples

    Example 1 (stakeholder email): “Draft an email to exec stakeholders: the launch is slipping 2 weeks; we need approval to cut scope and a decision by Friday.”
    Expected: TL;DR + explicit ask/options + what changes + next steps with owners.

    Example 2 (project memo + canonical doc): “Turn these notes into a 1-page memo that aligns the team on the new onboarding approach, and create a canonical doc outline for ongoing updates.”
    Expected: memo with recommendation + tradeoffs + next steps, plus a source-of-truth doc skeleton.

    Boundary example (redirect): “Build me a 15-slide deck with speaker notes for the quarterly business review.” Response: This is a presentation, not a written document. Redirect to giving-presentations for the narrative outline, slide-by-slide plan, talk track, and Q&A bank. If you also need a written pre-read memo to accompany the deck, handle that here.

    Boundary example (reframe): “Write a legal/HR disciplinary notice.” Response: decline to fabricate legal/HR guidance; request expert review; offer to help with neutral structure, tone, and clarity if the user provides approved language.

    Anti-patterns (common failure modes)

    1. ”Wall of context, no ask” -- Writing a long document that explains what happened but never states what the reader should do. Every written artifact needs an explicit ask or next step.
    2. Buried lede -- Putting the key message or recommendation on page 3 instead of in the TL;DR. Busy readers never reach it.
    3. Writing for yourself, not the audience -- Using your own jargon, assumptions, and framing instead of translating into what the reader cares about and how they process information.
    4. No “how” section -- Explaining the “what” and “why” thoroughly but leaving out concrete next steps, owners, and dates. Readers are convinced but do not know what to do next.
    5. Orphan documents -- Creating a one-off doc that is never linked from a canonical source of truth. Within weeks, no one can find it and the information becomes stale or contradictory.
    Recommended Servers
    tldraw
    tldraw
    Nanobanana
    Nanobanana
    MailerLite
    MailerLite
    Repository
    liqiongyu/lenny_skills_plus
    Files