| name | speech-writing |
| description | Use when the user needs spoken-first content for a speech, keynote, remarks, opening remarks, closing remarks, host script, emcee script, or spoken presentation script. Best for formal spoken content that must sound natural aloud, fit a live setting, and work with audience, time, and event constraints. |
Speech Writing
Runtime Label
Speech And Spoken Remarks Writer
Goal
Write spoken-first content that sounds natural aloud, fits the event context, and is ready to deliver or rehearse with minimal extra clarification.
This is a downstream writing skill. If the user already provided a usable brief, write directly instead of reopening broad discovery.
Scope
Use this skill for:
- Speech
- Keynote
- Conference talk
- Remarks
- Opening remarks
- Closing remarks
- Welcome address
- Thank-you remarks
- Host script
- Emcee script
- Spoken presentation script
Do not use this skill for:
- Short-form video scripts
- Social video voiceovers
- Livestream script systems
- Ad voiceovers
- Product FAQ or user guides
- Written-only articles, essays, or press releases
- Slide-by-slide speaker notes unless the user explicitly asks for them
Pick The Mode First
Before drafting, decide which mode fits the request.
Speech / Keynote
Use for:
- Keynote
- Conference talk
- External presentation
- Persuasive or inspiring speech
Primary goal:
- Land one clear central message
- Move an audience through a spoken arc
- Create memorable opening and closing moments
Remarks / Formal Address
Use for:
- Opening remarks
- Closing remarks
- Welcome speech
- Thank-you speech
- Leadership remarks
- Ceremony or meeting address
Primary goal:
- Deliver a clear formal message with the right tone and level of restraint
Host Script
Use for:
- Event hosting
- Segment transitions
- Guest introductions
- Opening, transition, and closing lines
Primary goal:
- Keep the event flowing smoothly and naturally in real time
If the request could fit multiple modes, choose the primary live-use case first. Do not write remarks like a keynote, and do not write a host script like a long speech.
Shared Rules
- Write for the ear, not just for the eye.
- Prefer short spoken units that are easy to breathe through.
- Advance one idea at a time.
- Build around a clear opening, body, and closing.
- Use repetition deliberately when it strengthens recall.
- Keep wording natural enough to say aloud without rewriting.
- Avoid dense data dumps, long lists, and heavy subordinate clauses unless the user explicitly needs them.
- Do not invent stories, data, accomplishments, quotes, or organizational details.
- Match the requested language. If unspecified, follow the conversation language.
Output Modes
Support two default output shapes:
Full Script
Use when the user explicitly asks for:
- speech script
- keynote script
- full speech
Rules:
- Keep paragraphs short.
- Break lines at natural pauses when helpful.
- Let key lines stand alone when they should land with emphasis.
- Avoid dense prose blocks.
Speaking Outline
Use when:
- The user asks for an outline
- The event is longer and the input is still coarse
- A speaker likely needs structure and key lines more than a strict word-for-word draft
Include:
- Section flow
- Key message per section
- Key lines or phrases
- Transition lines where useful
Mode 1: Speech / Keynote
Core Writing Rules
- Anchor the speech around one central idea.
- Open with a line, observation, story beat, or contrast that earns attention quickly.
- Keep the body organized into a few memorable beats, not too many points.
- Use examples, contrast, repetition, and callbacks to increase recall.
- End with a line or image that feels finishable and memorable.
- Respect the requested or implied time limit.
Minimum Inputs
If needed, ask for:
- Occasion or event
- Audience
- Purpose
- Core message
- Time limit
- Tone
- Any must-include story, example, or fact
- Any taboo, political, or sensitive boundary
Mode 2: Remarks / Formal Address
Core Writing Rules
- Keep the purpose explicit: welcome, thank, announce, inspire, summarize, or close.
- Match the formality of the event.
- Be concise and stable in tone.
- Include required acknowledgements without making the piece read like a list.
- Avoid turning formal remarks into a motivational keynote unless requested.
Minimum Inputs
If needed, ask for:
- Event or setting
- Speaker identity
- Audience
- Purpose
- Time limit
- Required acknowledgements, names, or mentions
- Tone and formality level
Mode 3: Host Script
Core Writing Rules
- Write for flow, transitions, and real-time usability.
- Keep lines shorter and easier to retrieve on stage.
- Organize by event segment.
- Introduce guests clearly and respectfully.
- Make transitions feel smooth, not mechanical.
- Prefer modular output when the run-of-show has multiple segments.
Default Structure
- Opening
- Segment transitions
- Guest introduction blocks
- Closing
Minimum Inputs
If needed, ask for:
- Event type
- Run-of-show or agenda
- Audience
- Segment list
- Guest names and titles
- Desired energy level
- Whether modular script or full script is needed
Missing-Info Policy
If the brief is already usable, write directly.
If key information is missing:
- For speeches and keynotes, prioritize audience, purpose, core message, and time limit
- For remarks, prioritize event context, speaker identity, and exact purpose
- For host scripts, prioritize agenda, segments, and guest details
Ask only for the minimum critical gap. Do not restart a full briefing workflow if upstream already produced a usable handoff prompt.
Quality Check
Before finalizing, verify that:
- The selected mode matches the live-use case
- The wording sounds natural aloud
- The structure can be delivered within the time constraint
- The opening and closing are distinct and intentional
- Host scripts are organized by segment
- Remarks stay concise and formal where needed
- The content does not drift into article-style prose