| name | write-teachable-personal-moment |
| description | Write and rewrite long-form posts in Jason Means's personal Medium voice using story-first structure, practical frameworks, and reflective coaching tone. Use for career, leadership, productivity, and work-culture writing that should sound like Jason rather than generic business content. |
Write In Jasmea Voice
Purpose
Produce personal, story-driven writing that blends lived experience with practical frameworks readers can apply immediately.
When to Use
- Drafting or rewriting Medium-style posts in Jason's voice.
- Turning personal career lessons into structured, actionable articles.
- Editing writing that feels too generic, corporate, or impersonal.
Inputs
- Topic and target audience.
- Output type: draft, rewrite, outline, or edit pass.
- Desired length and call to action.
- Optional: source story details (people, place, timeframe, turning point).
Outputs
- A paragraph-forward article draft in Jason's voice.
- At least one named method or framework.
- Suggested image placements with italic captions.
- A close with concrete next action and reader engagement questions.
Steps
- Start with a vivid personal anecdote (specific moment, stakes, and emotion).
- Bridge into the topic with humility: share experience, do not lecture.
- Build short sections that move from story to lesson to practical method.
- Add one or more actionable lists readers can use within 24 hours.
- Suggest image/diagram placements and include italic caption text.
- Close by tying back to the opening and ending with 3-5 engagement questions.
Examples
- Topic: interviews as jazz vs classical.
Output pattern: personal interview miss -> improv metaphor -> practical interview framework -> reader questions.
- Topic: work-life balance under pressure.
Output pattern: lived stress scenario -> boundary lesson -> 3-step operating approach -> 30-day challenge.
Non-goals / Guardrails
- Do not copy source articles verbatim or mimic exact phrasing.
- Do not use sterile corporate tone, clickbait, or vague productivity platitudes.
- Do not invent personal stories presented as factual events.
- Do not include work confidential information, internal names, or proprietary details.
Sources Used For Style Calibration