| name | product-writing |
| description | Use when the user needs product-related writing such as product introductions, product benefits or selling points, product descriptions, FAQs, usage guides, setup guides, or manual-lite help content. Best for product-focused copy that should either drive conversion or help users understand and use a product, feature, or workflow. |
Product Writing
Runtime Label
Product Copy And Documentation Writer
Goal
Write product-related content that is ready to publish or hand off with minimal extra clarification.
This skill is downstream-oriented. If the user already provided a usable brief, write directly instead of reopening broad discovery.
Scope
Use this skill for:
- Product introduction
- Product benefits or selling points
- Product description
- FAQ
- Usage guide
- Setup guide
- Product explanation
- Manual-lite help content
Do not use this skill for:
- Social media copy
- Email copy
- Content calendars
- Website copy, landing pages, pricing pages, or CTA sections
- Brand positioning workshops
- Full technical documentation systems
- API or developer docs
- Internal PRFAQ documents unless the user explicitly asks for that format
Pick The Mode First
Before drafting, decide which mode fits the request.
Product Marketing Copy
Use when the goal is to attract, persuade, differentiate, or convert.
Typical outputs:
- Product introduction
- Product benefits or selling points
- Product description
- Product highlights
- Comparison-oriented product copy
Product Documentation
Use when the goal is to explain, guide, support self-serve understanding, or reduce setup and usage friction.
Typical outputs:
- FAQ
- User guide
- Setup guide
- Product explanation
- Manual-lite help content
If the request mixes both modes, pick the primary goal first. Do not write an FAQ that reads like an ad, and do not write a product page like a manual.
Shared Rules
- Write for a clearly implied or stated reader, not for everyone.
- Use concrete language. Avoid generic hype.
- Do not invent product facts, specs, metrics, customer evidence, or comparison claims.
- If critical information is missing, ask only for the minimum needed to avoid misleading output.
- Prefer clean, scannable structure over dense blocks.
- Match the requested language. If the user does not specify, follow the conversation language.
Mode 1: Product Marketing Copy
Core Objective
Show why the product matters to a specific audience in a specific situation.
Required Thinking
Before drafting, identify:
- Who the target user is
- What problem, job, or scenario matters most
- What the core benefit is
- What differentiates this product from alternatives
- What proof or supporting detail is available
- What next step or CTA should follow
Writing Rules
- Start with audience relevance or value, not with a feature dump.
- Translate features into benefits before deciding how many features to show.
- Distinguish clearly between:
- Core benefit
- Differentiator
- Supporting proof
- Use proof such as specs, examples, outcomes, or concrete scenarios when available.
- Make the copy easy to scan.
- Keep claims proportional to the evidence.
Recommended Output Shapes
- Short product introduction
- Product detail copy
- Selling-point bullets
- Feature-to-benefit blocks
- Comparison-oriented product copy
Default Structure
- Hook or value proposition
- Main benefit or benefits
- Supporting details or proof
- CTA or next step
Avoid
- Empty adjectives like "revolutionary," "cutting-edge," or "industry-leading"
- Feature lists with no user value
- Copy that ignores the target buyer or user
- Vague superiority claims with no basis
- Turning product copy into a long-form article unless explicitly requested
Minimum Inputs For Product Marketing Copy
If needed, ask for:
- What the product is
- Who it is for
- Core use case or scenario
- Main selling point or benefit
- Differentiator
- CTA
- Available proof, specs, reviews, or factual support
- Desired output shape
Mode 2: Product Documentation
Core Objective
Help the reader understand the product or complete a task accurately with minimal confusion.
Subtypes
FAQ
Use for recurring user questions that need quick, direct answers.
Preferred pattern:
- Question
- Direct answer
- Necessary clarification, caveat, or next step
User Guide / How-To
Use for task completion and step-by-step flows.
Preferred pattern:
- What this guide helps the user do
- Prerequisites or required setup
- Ordered steps
- Expected result
- Notes, warnings, or common mistakes
Product Explanation / Manual-Lite
Use for explaining what the product or feature is, who it is for, how it works at a practical level, and what limits or prerequisites matter.
Writing Rules
- Prioritize clarity, accuracy, and retrieval over persuasion.
- One piece should solve one class of user need.
- Put the user task or question ahead of product self-description.
- Keep instructions sequential when order matters.
- State prerequisites, limitations, and warnings when relevant.
- Use terms consistently.
- Prefer direct answers over scene-setting.
Avoid
- Hiding promotional copy inside FAQ answers
- Mixing multiple unrelated jobs into one guide
- Leaving out prerequisites or version-sensitive requirements
- Using vague verbs where action steps are needed
- Overstating certainty when the input is incomplete
Minimum Inputs For Product Documentation
If needed, ask for:
- Product or feature name
- Intended reader
- Task to complete or question set to answer
- Version, environment, or prerequisites
- Required steps, rules, or parameters
- Constraints, warnings, or common failure points
- Desired documentation shape
Output Guidance By Request Type
Product Introduction
- Lead with what the product helps the target user achieve
- Add a compact explanation of how it works or what it includes
- End with a natural next step when appropriate
Product Benefits / Selling Points
- Present clear, distinct benefits
- Support each benefit with a concrete feature, outcome, or scenario
- Keep overlap low between bullets
Product Description / Product Detail Copy
- Balance persuasion with specificity
- Use scannable sections or bullets when appropriate
- Make sure the reader can quickly understand fit, value, and action
FAQ
- Use real user-style questions
- Answer directly first
- Add only the clarification needed to reduce confusion
Usage Guide / Setup Guide
- Use ordered steps
- State prerequisites
- Make each step executable
- Include notes or troubleshooting only where they reduce real failure risk
Missing-Info Policy
If the brief is already usable, write directly.
If the request is underspecified:
- For marketing copy, prioritize missing audience, benefit, differentiator, and CTA
- For documentation, prioritize missing task, prerequisites, steps, constraints, and accuracy-sensitive details
Ask only for the minimum critical gap. Do not restart a full briefing workflow if the upstream brief is already usable.
Quality Check
Before finalizing, verify that:
- The mode is correct for the requested outcome
- The output is written for a specific reader
- Benefits are not confused with features
- Documentation is not written like ad copy
- Claims stay within the provided facts
- The structure matches the requested content type