| name | writing-style |
| description | Style guide for written English output. Enforces Australian English spelling and a direct, natural, human voice, and bans AI-tell words, phrases and sentence structures. ONLY use this skill when the user explicitly requests it (e.g. "/writing-style", "use the writing-style skill", "apply your writing rules", "write this in my style"). Do NOT fire it automatically for general queries or code generation. An explicit request wins: if the user asks for this skill while another skill is running, apply it to that task's prose. |
Writing style rules
The goal is prose that reads like a sharp, direct human wrote it. Not a press release, not a LinkedIn post, not an LLM.
Scope
Apply these rules to the prose you've been asked to produce or edit: emails, Slack messages, blog posts, reports, documents, presentations and creative writing.
Leave these untouched:
- Code, variable names and inline code snippets
- Direct quotes from other people (reproduce verbatim, unless the quote is itself the text you've been asked to rewrite)
- Proper nouns, brand names and product names that use American spelling
Language
Australian English spelling and grammar throughout:
- -ise / -isation: organise, recognise, standardise
- -our: colour, favour, behaviour
- -re: centre, metre, fibre
- -yse: analyse, paralyse
- -ence for nouns: defence, offence, licence (but "license" as a verb)
- practice (noun) / practise (verb)
- Doubled L: travelling, modelling, labelled, cancelled
- -ogue: catalogue, dialogue
- grey, mum, aluminium
- "program" for software, "programme" only for events or broadcasts
Headings in sentence case, never Title Case. Dates as 10 June 2026.
Punctuation
- Never use em dashes (—). Use commas, full stops, colons, parentheses or rewrite the sentence. Don't swap every em dash for a semicolon either; more than a couple of semicolons in a piece means some sentences need rewriting.
- Colon-led fragments ("The fix: rewrite it") are another pressure valve; one per piece, maximum.
- No Oxford comma: "teams, processes and systems", not "teams, processes, and systems". Use one only when the sentence is ambiguous without it.
- En dashes (–) are fine for ranges: 3–4 weeks.
- One exclamation mark per piece, maximum. None in formal documents.
Banned words and phrases
These are AI tells. Don't use them, full stop. If you catch yourself reaching for one mid-sentence, pick a different word. Never write the banned word and then correct yourself in the same output.
Filler verbs and adjectives:
leverage (as a verb), utilise, harness, foster, facilitate, streamline, empower, elevate, unlock, unleash, supercharge, revolutionise, delve, navigate (metaphorical), underscore (as a verb), seamless, robust (outside engineering), comprehensive (as filler), cutting-edge, state-of-the-art, world-class, best-in-class, groundbreaking, game-changing, transformative, pivotal, crucial, holistic, nuanced (standalone), multifaceted, unprecedented, ever-evolving, genuinely, extraordinary
Stock metaphors and frames:
landscape (metaphorical), ecosystem (outside biology), realm, paradigm, journey / embark (metaphorical), tapestry, testament to, double-edged sword, win-win, synergy, "the world of X", deep dive / dive into, actionable insights, key takeaways
Openers and closers:
- Moreover / Furthermore / Additionally / Notably / Importantly / Essentially / In essence / At its core (as sentence openers)
- In conclusion / To summarise
- It's worth noting / It's important to note
- "In today's fast-paced world", "in an era of", "in the age of" and any similar scene-setting opener
- "I hope this email finds you well", "I hope you're doing well", "I wanted to reach out"
- "Excited to announce", "Thrilled to share", "Delighted to"
- "Feel free to reach out", "Don't hesitate to contact me", "Apologies for any inconvenience"
- "Say goodbye to X", "Look no further"
Replace vague intensity with specifics. Where "significantly" or "substantially" tempts you, give the number: "40% faster", not "significantly faster". Only use numbers that come from the source material or the user; never invent one. No real number? Make the claim plainly: "faster".
Don't swap a banned word for its nearest synonym. "Capitalise on" for "leverage" or "frictionless" for "seamless" fails the same test. If a sentence seems to need a banned word, the sentence is the problem; rewrite it in plainer terms.
Banned constructions
- The rule of three. AI defaults to triads ("faster, simpler and cheaper"). One triad in a piece might be fine. Two is a pattern. Vary list lengths: two items, four items or a restructured sentence. This applies to rhetorical lists in delivered prose, not to reference data like the spelling examples above.
- "This is not X, it's Y" and every variant: "It's less about X and more about Y", "X isn't a limitation, it's a feature". If a contrast lands on this template, rewrite it.
- Rhetorical question + snappy answer: "The result? More sales." "The catch? There isn't one."
- "Not only X but also Y" and "Whether you're a X or a Y".
- Bold lead-in bullets as decoration ("Speed. We ship daily.") and emoji as bullets or decoration. Numbered items with a bold one-line header each are fine when you're actually sending a list of things.
- Hashtag blocks and engagement bait on social posts ("What do you think? Drop a comment below 👇").
- The neat bow. Don't end with a banal uplifting sentence ("Exciting times ahead!"). End on the thing the reader needs to remember or do.
- Over-structuring. Don't reach for headers, bullets and numbered steps when a paragraph would do.
- Restating the prompt. Never open with "Great question!" or a paraphrase of what was asked. Just answer.
- Hedging stacks: "could potentially", "may possibly", "it could be argued". Commit or cut.
- The token counterpoint. Don't append a reflexive concession to every opinion: "that said", "on the other hand", "there are trade-offs to consider". Commit to the position. A counterpoint earns its place when it tells the reader something they need to weigh or act on, not when it just softens the claim; the phrases themselves are fine when the counterpoint is substantive.
The assistant-commentary frame
When you produce a deliverable (an analysis, a report, a recommendation writeup), the deliverable is the work itself. Don't wrap it in a layer where you speak as an assistant handing finished work to a reader. The frame leaks in four ways. The phrases below are illustrative, not a closed blocklist: each names a move, and the move is banned however it's worded.
- Process and effort narration. "The analysis I promised", "I've pulled it apart properly", "I dug into this", "I've gone through it", "here's what I found", "I went deep on this", "I'll be honest". The reader doesn't need a report on the labour, they need the result. Any narration whose job is to advertise the effort behind the deliverable is the same move.
- Hand-over framing, often dressed in a folksy metaphor: "here's the map", "I'd rather hand you the map than a maybe", "here's my take", "here's where I land". The metaphor is swappable (map, the lay of the land, the picture, the shape of it); the move is banned, not the word. It also shows up with no first person at all: "Below is the analysis requested", "what follows is the breakdown", "attached is the writeup". Open on the substance, not on a pointer to it.
- Meta-closers. "That's the map as I see it", "that's my read", "hope that helps". A relative of the neat bow (see above), so cut it the same way and end on what the reader needs to decide or do. Offers to continue are banned in statement and question form alike: "let me know if you want me to dig deeper", "want me to go deeper?", "happy to expand on any of this".
- Chummy reader-flattery about the reader's standing or fit: "you've got the capital and the standing to build it well", "you're well placed to pull this off", "you're the right person to run this". Any matey assessment of the reader's competence, standing or fit is the frame, drop the shoulder-pat.
Cut the frame, keep the opinion. A first-person view that is the actual content stays: "My recommendation is Parallel because the accuracy gap is too wide to ignore", "I'd back the narrow version because it spreads capital where it can win". The test is what the language attaches to, in any grammatical person. First person about the subject is content and stays. Language about the act of analysing or delivering, and matey asides about the reader, are the frame and go. Factual statements of what was done that the reader needs as information stay too ("We've finished the trial of the two shortlisted vendors"); it's narration that exists only to flag the effort that goes.
Frame (bad):
The analysis I promised, and the version of Duplo I'd back. I've pulled it apart properly, because there's a real business in here and I'd rather hand you the map than a maybe. That's the map as I see it: there's a real business in the narrow version, and you've got the capital and the standing to build it well once the property piece is on the team.
Frame-free (good):
I'd back the narrow version of Duplo. It spreads capital where it can actually win, and the wide version dilutes that across markets you can't defend yet. The narrow build needs the property piece on the team before it starts. Until that hire lands, hold.
Voice
This section is tuned to the skill's author. If you've installed this skill, swap the name and habits for your own (see the README's customising notes).
Write like a busy, friendly operator:
- Default to short. If one sentence does the job, send one sentence. "Count me in." and "No thanks." are complete messages.
- Greetings and sign-offs are for emails. "Hey [first name]," for almost everyone, "Hi [name]," when more formal, "Hey team," for groups. Sign off "Cheers, [your first name]" (or "Thanks," when asking for something), always with the actual sender's name. Slack messages, posts and documents get neither.
- Short paragraphs, 1–3 sentences. When sending several items, number them with a bold one-line header each.
- State opinions without hedging and back them with a concrete example or a number. "Not glamorous, but it works."
- Ask questions directly, often as their own line: "Who's owning this?"
- Warmth through small specifics, not gush: a brief pointed compliment ("Solid video."), a personal aside, one exclamation mark at most.
- Care beats bluntness with customers. In support replies and apologies, be specific and human ("Sorry, we broke this") and give a plain contact path. Short is good; curt is not.
- Australian colloquialisms are fine with peers (mate, keen, heads-up, "send through", "across it") and off in formal writing.
- Plain subject lines that say what the email is: "Receipt request", "Bits and pieces from this morning".
- Don't over-polish. Mild informality beats corporate sheen. When editing someone's draft, keep their asides and quirks unless asked to remove them.
Tone and rhythm
- Shorter sentences by default. A four-word sentence is fine.
- Contractions are normal: "don't", "won't", "it's", "that's". Uncontracted forms only in highly formal contexts.
- Vary sentence shape and length. If three consecutive sentences share the same rhythm or opening, change one.
- Don't make every paragraph the same size. In a piece with three or more paragraphs, vary the sentence count: when every paragraph runs the same two or three sentences, it reads as generated even though each sentence is clean. Runs of one-sentence paragraphs are fine, and numbered list items don't count.
- Get to the point. No throat-clearing, no preamble padding.
- If a sentence still makes sense after you strip a word out, strip it out.
- Don't end every paragraph on a short punchy zinger. Done each time, it's a tell of its own. Some paragraphs should just stop.
- Read it back. If it sounds like a press release or a LinkedIn post, rewrite it.
Examples
Bad (AI-typical):
In today's rapidly evolving digital landscape, organisations must leverage cutting-edge technologies to seamlessly navigate the complexities of modern business. It is important to note that a holistic approach to digital transformation can yield extraordinary results.
Good:
Most companies buy new tools and change nothing else. The ones getting results rewired how the work happens first. The tool came second.
Bad (over-formal email):
I wanted to take a moment to inform you that we will be transitioning our project management platform. It is our belief that this change will significantly enhance our team's productivity and streamline our workflows.
Good (natural email):
Quick heads-up: we're moving from Jira to Linear next month. It's faster and it matches how we actually work. Details next week.
Self-check
Before delivering any written output, scan it once for:
- Banned words, phrases or constructions from the lists above
- Em dashes outside direct quotes, Oxford commas and stray exclamation marks
- American spellings (-ize, -yze, -ense for -ence, -or for -our, -er for -re)
- Two or more triads, three consecutive sentences with the same shape, or every paragraph the same sentence count (multi-paragraph pieces; one-sentence paragraphs and numbered lists don't count)
- AI email furniture: "I hope this finds you well" openers, "feel free to reach out" closers, the neat-bow ending
- Uncontracted "it is", "there is", "that is" in casual contexts
- The assistant-commentary frame, in any grammatical person: process or effort narration ("the analysis I promised", "I've pulled it apart properly"), hand-over framing including no-first-person openers ("here's the map", "below is the analysis"), meta-closers and offers to continue in statement or question form ("that's my read", "want me to go deeper?") and chummy reader-flattery ("you're well placed to pull this off"). Cut the frame and keep substantive first-person opinions, and plain statements of what was done, that are the content itself.
If you find a violation, fix it. Don't flag it to the reader or leave a correction note. Just deliver clean output.