一键导入
create-produce-content
Sub-orchestrator for creative and content production requests. Routes to appropriate writing skills based on content type and quality needs.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
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Sub-orchestrator for creative and content production requests. Routes to appropriate writing skills based on content type and quality needs.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
基于 SOC 职业分类
Route any input through a branching question tree to narrow down the optimal response strategy before writing. Two stages — PERCEIVE (classify input) then ACT (select response). Covers all prompt types.
Generate exhaustive guesses about user input using ALL search methods with coverage tracking. Guessing is SEARCH through possibility space. Tracks space created vs space covered to ensure comprehensive exploration.
Systematically evaluate and select from a set of guesses, options, or possibilities. Combines ARAW analysis with prioritization to determine which guesses are strong, weak, actionable, or eliminable.
Extract hidden assumptions from any content. Surfaces what must be true for claims to hold, enabling deeper analysis.
Sub-orchestrator for analytical requests. Routes to decomposition, systems analysis, comparison, risk assessment, or synthesis based on what kind of analysis is needed.
Assume Right - Deep recursive rightness search. For every claim, assume it's right — find what must follow, then assume THOSE implications are right too. Recurse until bedrock. Track every claim found.
| name | create - Produce Content |
| description | Sub-orchestrator for creative and content production requests. Routes to appropriate writing skills based on content type and quality needs. |
| output | {"format":"prose"} |
Input: $ARGUMENTS
Before executing, identify which interpretation matches the user's input:
Interpretation 1 — Specific content type: The user wants a known deliverable (essay, email, pitch deck, story) and needs production help. Interpretation 2 — Analysis-then-creation: The user wants content that requires research or analysis before writing ("write a market analysis", "draft a strategy doc"). Interpretation 3 — Creative exploration: The user wants to explore ideas through creation ("write something about X", "help me think through this by writing it").
If ambiguous, ask: "Do you want me to produce a specific deliverable, or help you explore ideas through writing?" If clear from context, proceed with the matching interpretation.
Criteria before creation. Every piece of content has implicit standards. "Write a good email" requires knowing what "good" means for THIS email. Establish criteria first — audience, purpose, tone, constraints — then produce to those criteria.
Analysis precedes synthesis. Content that makes claims (market analysis, strategy doc, persuasive essay) needs the analysis done BEFORE writing begins. Writing without analysis produces plausible-sounding but unsupported content.
Content type determines skill. A persuasive email and an analytical report use fundamentally different structures. Route to the skill that matches the content type, not the generic "write" skill.
Revision is part of creation. First drafts are exploration. Good content comes from revision against explicit criteria. Always offer specific improvement suggestions, not just "looks good."
Creation reveals thinking. Writing something down often reveals gaps in understanding. When creation stalls, the problem is usually analytical (unclear thinking), not creative (can't find words). Route back to analysis skills when this happens.
Audience shapes everything. The same content written for different audiences is fundamentally different content. Audience is not optional context — it's the primary design constraint.
| Content type | Route to |
|---|---|
| Essay, article, blog post | → /w (criteria-based writing) |
| Persuasive piece (email, pitch, ad) | → /pw (persuasive writing) |
| Story, case study, narrative | → /stl (storytelling) |
| Grant, proposal | → /gw (grant writing) |
| Presentation | → /prd (presentation design) |
| Technical documentation | → /w with technical criteria |
| Creative/literary | → /stl with literary focus |
| Story, parable, scenario | → /story (narrative generation) |
| Writing with complex requirements | → /wre (writing requirements engineering) |
| High-quality list | → /list (rigorous list building) |
| Skill or procedure | → /cs (create skill) or /mts (make this skill) |
| General / unclear | → /w with general criteria |
Some creation tasks require research or analysis before writing:
If analysis is needed: do the analysis first, then create content based on findings.
Standard content creation: → INVOKE: /w $ARGUMENTS (or /pw, /stl, /gw, /prd based on content type)
Content requiring analysis first: → INVOKE: [appropriate analytical skill] first → Then INVOKE: /w [topic + findings from analysis]
Persuasive content: → INVOKE: /pw $ARGUMENTS
Narrative content: → INVOKE: /stl $ARGUMENTS or /story $ARGUMENTS
Content with complex requirements: → INVOKE: /wre $ARGUMENTS (derive requirements first, then draft)
Skill/procedure creation: → INVOKE: /cs or /mts $ARGUMENTS
List creation: → INVOKE: /list $ARGUMENTS
| Situation | Also invoke |
|---|---|
| Content needs to be reframed | → /iaw (in another way) |
| Content has "etc" or implied items | → /etc or /aso (expand the implicit) |
| Content scope is expanding | → /iagca (compress scope) |
| Content needs implications traced | → /sycs (so you can see) |
| Content involves differentiation | → /difr |
| Content needs debate format | → /deb |
| User wants easy/quick draft | → /ezy |
| User wants maximum quality | → /hrd |
| User wants general principles | → /genl |
| User wants specific application | → /spcf |
| Failure | Signal | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Criteria-free creation | Content produced without establishing what "good" means | Stop and establish criteria: audience, purpose, tone, constraints |
| Analysis-free claims | Content makes unsupported assertions | Route to analysis skill first, then write from findings |
| Audience blindness | Content not tailored to anyone specific | Identify audience before writing — it changes everything |
| Single-draft satisfaction | First draft accepted without revision | Always identify specific improvements; revision is part of the process |
| Type mismatch | Using generic writing for a specific format (e.g., /w for a pitch) | Route to type-specific skill (/pw, /stl, /gw) |
| Creation as avoidance | Writing about a problem instead of analyzing it | If creation stalls, the issue is analytical — route to /analyze or /diagnose |
| Depth | Scope | Output |
|---|---|---|
| 1x | Quick draft — produce content with basic criteria | One draft, basic quality check |
| 2x | Standard — establish criteria, produce, identify improvements | Criteria + draft + specific revision suggestions |
| 4x | Thorough — analysis first if needed, criteria-based writing, revision pass | Analysis + criteria + draft + revision + quality assessment |
| 8x | Deep — full analysis, detailed criteria, multiple approaches, best approach developed, revision cycle | Complete analytical foundation + multiple drafts + selection + revision + final quality check |
Report:
All writing routes should apply generation failure checks before finalizing. After any routed skill produces content, verify against these seven failures:
If any are present, revise before delivering. For high-stakes content, run /edit as a post-production verification step — it includes a dedicated generation failure scan.
After content is produced, the user may need: