| name | brand-voice |
| description | Builds a usable voice profile from real writing samples — do and don't rules each backed by an example, register tiers for different formats, a banned-words list, and before/after calibration rewrites — then saves it so every writer and agent sounds like the brand. Use when copy sounds different in every channel or new writers need more than "keep it punchy". |
| argument-hint | [paste 5-10 samples that sound like you + 2-3 that don't] |
Brand Voice — a profile someone else could actually write from
Most voice guides are three adjectives on a slide — "confident, human, bold" — which describe every brand and help no writer. A usable voice profile is built from evidence: real samples, patterns extracted, every rule paired with an example, and rewrites that show the voice in motion. The test is simple: could a stranger write a passable post from the profile alone?
Inputs
- 5–10 writing samples that sound most like the brand (best posts, founder emails, call transcripts) and 2–3 that sound wrong: $ARGUMENTS
- From
marketing-brief.md if present: the existing Voice section to sharpen, the language bank (the customer's register calibrates yours), and any banned phrases already collected.
Do this
- Audit the samples. Fewer than five good ones? Build the profile anyway, mark it provisional, and name what would firm it up — usually the founder's sent-mail folder or call transcripts, the two places people write and speak like themselves.
- Extract the patterns across the good samples:
- Rhythm — sentence length, punctuation habits, how paragraphs breathe.
- Register — plain or technical, warm or dry, how direct it is willing to be.
- Moves — how pieces open, how they close, signature turns of phrase.
- Absences — the words and moves that never appear. Absences define a voice as much as habits do.
- Write the do/don't rules — eight to twelve of them, every rule paired with a real line from the samples. A rule without an example is an opinion, and writers cannot calibrate to opinions.
- Define the register tiers: how the voice flexes by format — social at its loosest, email in the middle, sales pages at full pressure — and name what never flexes, the core that makes it the same brand everywhere.
- Build the banned-words list from the "sounds wrong" pile, plus category clichés and hype words the audience has learned to scroll past.
- Write three calibration rewrites: an off-voice sentence, the on-voice version, and one line on what changed. These teach faster than any rule.
- Save the full profile as
brand-voice.md in the project root and update the Voice section of marketing-brief.md with the rules, tiers, banned words, and a link to the full profile.
Output
The voice profile — do/don't rules with examples, register tiers, banned words, three calibration rewrites — saved to brand-voice.md and summarised into marketing-brief.md under Voice.
Rules
- Derive the voice from evidence, not aspiration. Document the voice the best samples already have; changing it is a separate, deliberate decision.
- Every rule carries an example from a real sample. No orphan rules.
- Voice is constant, register flexes. If the tiers disagree on fundamentals, the profile has captured two brands.
- Run the stranger test before saving: if the profile alone could not produce a passable post, tighten it until it could.