4.3 KiB
4.3 KiB
name, description
| name | description |
|---|---|
| ck-copywriting | Writes, edits, and refines marketing copy, documentation, and content for any medium. Activate when user says 'write copy for', 'improve this text', 'make this more compelling', 'write a landing page', 'product description', or 'help me write this email'. Accepts drafts, briefs, target audience descriptions, and tone guidelines. |
Overview
Produces high-quality written content across formats: landing pages, emails, product descriptions, blog posts, UX microcopy, and technical documentation. Adapts tone and style to audience and medium.
When to Use
- Writing or improving marketing copy for landing pages, ads, or emails
- Crafting product descriptions, feature announcements, or release notes
- Editing existing text for clarity, tone, or persuasiveness
- Writing UX microcopy (button labels, error messages, empty states, tooltips)
- Creating onboarding sequences or drip email campaigns
- Technical writing for developer docs or API references
Don't Use When
- Task requires domain-specific legal or medical accuracy (verify with a professional)
- User needs SEO keyword research (use a dedicated SEO tool)
- Content needs real-time data or news (model knowledge has a cutoff)
Steps / Instructions
1. Clarify the Brief
Before writing, confirm:
- Goal: What action should the reader take?
- Audience: Who are they? Technical? Executive? Consumer?
- Tone: Professional, casual, witty, authoritative, empathetic?
- Format: Email, headline, paragraph, bullet list, full page?
- Constraints: Word count, brand voice guide, banned phrases?
2. Apply Copywriting Frameworks
AIDA (Awareness → Interest → Desire → Action):
Headline: Grabs attention, states core benefit
Subheadline: Builds interest, elaborates on promise
Body: Creates desire through benefits, social proof, specifics
CTA: Single, clear action with urgency or value
PAS (Problem → Agitate → Solution):
Problem: Name the pain the reader feels
Agitate: Amplify why it matters / consequences of inaction
Solution: Present your product/feature as the relief
Feature → Benefit → Proof:
Feature: "Real-time collaboration"
Benefit: "Your whole team stays in sync without meetings"
Proof: "Teams using it cut status meetings by 60%"
3. Headlines and Subject Lines
Strong headline formulas:
How to [achieve result] without [common pain]
The [number] [things/ways/secrets] to [desired outcome]
[Do X] like [aspirational reference]
Stop [doing painful thing]. Start [doing better thing].
[Outcome] in [timeframe]: [Brief credibility hook]
Email subject line principles:
- Under 50 characters for mobile preview
- Personalization token where natural: "{{first_name}}, your dashboard is ready"
- Curiosity gap or clear value, not both at once
- Avoid spam triggers: ALL CAPS, excessive punctuation, "FREE!!!"
4. UX Microcopy
Error messages:
Bad: "Error 403: Forbidden"
Good: "You don't have permission to view this. Contact your admin to request access."
Empty states:
Bad: "No data found."
Good: "Nothing here yet. Add your first project to get started. [+ New Project]"
Button labels — use verb + object:
Bad: "Submit" / "OK" / "Click here"
Good: "Save Changes" / "Send Message" / "Start Free Trial"
5. Editing Pass
Run through these checks:
- Clarity: Could a 12-year-old understand the core message?
- Specificity: Replace vague claims ("great", "amazing") with evidence
- Active voice: "We built X" not "X was built by us"
- Cut ruthlessly: Remove every word that doesn't add meaning
- Read aloud: Awkward rhythm means awkward reading
- Single CTA: Multiple asks dilute conversion
6. Tone Calibration
| Audience | Tone Markers |
|---|---|
| Developer | Direct, technical, no fluff, code examples welcome |
| Executive | Outcome-focused, metrics, business impact |
| Consumer | Warm, benefit-led, relatable, social proof |
| Enterprise buyer | Professional, risk-aware, ROI-focused |
Notes
- Always match tone to the existing brand voice if one is established
- First draft is for structure; second draft is for words; third is for cuts
- Read competitor copy to understand category conventions before breaking them
- Concrete numbers always outperform vague claims: "saves 3 hours/week" beats "saves time"