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content-writing by guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills
npx skills add https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills --skill content-writing运用安·汉德利的“人人皆可写作”方法论,创作出令人惊叹的优质内容——这是一种实用、以读者为中心的写作方式,旨在服务你的受众并达成你的目标。
当你需要以下情况时,请使用此技能:
此技能对以下人群尤其有价值:
来源: 安·汉德利 - 《人人皆可写作:创作令人惊叹的优质内容实用指南》(2014年,2022年第2版)
核心原则: 写作不是天赋——它是一种技能。写好文章一部分是习惯,一部分是对基本规则的了解,还有一部分是真心关心你的读者。
“从来没有人会抱怨你把事情解释得太简单易懂。”
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触达数万 AI 开发者,精准高效
| Claude 负责 | 你决定 |
|---|
| 构建生产工作流程 | 最终的创意方向 |
| 建议技术方法 | 设备和工具选择 |
| 创建模板和清单 | 质量标准 |
| 识别最佳实践 | 品牌/声音决策 |
| 生成脚本大纲 | 最终脚本批准 |
当调用此技能时,我将引导你运用“人人皆可写作”的方法论:
提供关于你内容创作挑战的信息:
示例提示:
有助于提供的信息:
每一篇内容都必须回答两个问题:
如果你无法回答这两个问题,你的内容就还没准备好。
培养“病态同理心”:
| 问自己 | 为什么重要 |
|---|---|
| 我的读者已经知道什么? | 避免让他们感到无聊 |
| 他们需要知道什么? | 填补知识空白 |
| 他们想要什么? | 与他们的愿望保持一致 |
| 他们害怕什么? | 解决反对意见 |
| 我如何能帮助他们? | 聚焦于价值 |
1. 写作没有唯一正确的方法 找到你自己的流程。对某个作家有效的方法不一定对另一个作家有效。
2. 我们的文字是我们的使者 你的写作代表了你。每一篇文章都是建立或破坏信任的机会。
3. 好的写作是强力工具 它不是可选的——它是必不可少的。将其视为一项专业技能。
4. 提高写作水平的关键是多写 练习是必须的。定期写作,而不仅仅是在你“有感觉”的时候。
5. 写好文章 = 习惯 + 知识 + 用心 了解规则。坚持练习。真心关心你的读者。
6. 没有人会抱怨写作太简单 简洁是一种馈赠。永远不要害怕表达得太清楚。
7. 假设读者无知,而非愚蠢 解释时不要居高临下。你的读者很聪明,但可能缺乏背景知识。
8. 行话是写作的化学添加剂 它是人造的且难以消化。请使用通俗易懂的语言。
9. 丑陋初稿是必要的 不要跳过混乱的第一次尝试。这是通往好文章的必经之路。
10. 好的作家也是出色的编辑 魔法发生在修改阶段,而不是初稿。
11. 编辑关乎清晰度,而不仅仅是语法 删去不必要的内容。锐化本质内容。
12. 你不能等待灵感降临 等待缪斯降临的艺术只会坐在沙发上看 Netflix。
13. 截止日期是写作的 WD-40 它们让事情保持推进。设定截止日期,即使是自我设定的。
将此框架用于任何重要的内容创作:
步骤 1:目标 目的是什么?读者应该采取什么行动?
GOAL TEMPLATE:
阅读本文后,读者将 [理解/做/感受到] ___________
主要的行动号召是:___________
成功看起来像:___________
步骤 2:重构 将读者置于情境中。为什么他们要在乎?
| 你的视角 | 读者的视角 |
|---|---|
| “我们发布了一个新功能” | “你现在可以更快地做 X” |
| “我们公司获奖了” | “我们致力于为你提供高质量服务” |
| “阅读我们的最新研究” | “以下是解决 [问题] 的方法” |
步骤 3:寻找数据 寻找事实、统计数据、例子、引语、故事来支持你的观点。
步骤 4:组织 创建粗略的结构:
步骤 5:撰写丑陋初稿
“关起门来写作。”
撰写丑陋初稿的规则:
步骤 6:走开 让它沉淀一下。至少一小时,如果可能的话放一晚。距离产生视角。
步骤 7:重写 关注大局问题:
步骤 8:为清晰度编辑 无情地删减。对于每个句子:
杀死你的得意之作。 你喜欢的那个巧妙短语?如果它不能服务读者,就删掉它。
步骤 9:为语法和风格编辑 现在才担心:
步骤 10:大声朗读 你的耳朵能捕捉到眼睛忽略的东西:
步骤 11:征求第二意见 新的视角能看到你看不到的东西。请人阅读并关注:
步骤 12:最终审视 最后一次打磨,然后发布。不要让完美成为完成的敌人。
原则:
公式选项:
| 公式 | 示例 |
|---|---|
| 如何 [达成结果] | “如何撰写能转化的标题” |
| [数字] 种 [获益] 的方法 | “提高邮件打开率的7种方法” |
| [形容词] 的 [主题] 指南 | “内容策略完整指南” |
| [你的受众会问的问题] | “为什么你的内容不转化?” |
| 在 [时间段] 内 [达成结果] | “30分钟内写出更好的博客文章” |
有效的类型:
避免:
最佳实践:
公式:
| 类型 | 示例 |
|---|---|
| 好奇心 | “这永远改变了我写作的方式” |
| 直接 | “你的每周内容技巧” |
| 问题 | “为标题而苦恼?” |
| 操作指南 | “如何更快地写作(且不牺牲质量)” |
| 紧迫感 | “最后一天:内容研讨会注册” |
原则:
长文格式(LinkedIn):
[钩子:挑衅性陈述或问题]
[空行]
[背景:为什么这很重要]
[关键见解或故事]
[要点或教训]
[行动号召或互动问题]
发布前使用此清单:
大局观:
清晰度:
读者焦点:
打磨:
原始草稿(修改前):
“在当今快节奏的数字环境中,企业越来越认识到利用内容营销策略来提升品牌知名度并与目标受众建立有意义的互动的重要性。我们的团队一直在努力开发创新的方法,以帮助企业在这个复杂的领域中航行。”
分析:
重写后(修改后):
“你的博客月访问量卡在500次已经六个月了。你一直在持续发布。你在社交媒体上推广。但毫无起色。
当我们分析了47个突破这个瓶颈的博客后,发现了以下情况——以及你本周就可以做出的具体改变。”
改变了什么:
任务: 撰写一封介绍电子邮件营销新指南的通讯。
运用写作GPS:
目标: 让读者下载指南 读者重构: 他们在电子邮件方面遇到困难——打开率低、点击率低、没有效果
邮件内容:
Subject: 你的邮件不是问题所在
嘿 [姓名],
上个月我和23位营销人员聊了关于电子邮件的事。
每次都是同样的挫败感:“我们写的邮件不错。为什么没人互动?”
我意识到的是:邮件本身通常不是问题。
问题在于邮件发送之前发生了什么:
- 发送给了错误的细分群体
- 在错误的时间发送
- 发送时没有明确的理由让读者在乎
我们刚刚发布了一份指南,详细介绍了将我们自己的打开率提高一倍的前置邮件清单。
共12页。没有废话。阅读需要10分钟。
→ 在此获取:[LINK]
如果你从中实施了哪怕一件事,请告诉我有什么变化。
— Ann
附言:第7页包含了对我们影响最大的框架。
为何有效:
CONTENT BRIEF
标题/主题:_______________
格式:博客 / 邮件 / 社交媒体 / 其他
目标受众:_______________
目标(读者行动):_______________
需要回答的关键问题:
1. 这解决了读者的什么问题?
2. 阅读后他们会知道/做什么?
3. 这与现有内容有何不同?
主要观点:
1. _______________
2. _______________
3. _______________
需要的数据/示例:
- _______________
- _______________
行动号召:_______________
成功指标:_______________
卡住时,快速回答以下问题,不要编辑:
然后不间断地写15分钟。
第一轮:结构
第二轮:清晰度
第三轮:读者焦点
第四轮:打磨
主要来源:
额外资源:
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Create ridiculously good content using Ann Handley's "Everybody Writes" methodology—practical, reader-focused writing that serves your audience and achieves your goals.
Use this skill when you need to:
This skill is particularly valuable for:
Source: Ann Handley - Everybody Writes: Your Go-To Guide to Creating Ridiculously Good Content (2014, 2nd edition 2022)
Core Principle: Writing isn't a gift—it's a skill. Writing well is part habit, part knowledge of fundamental rules, and part giving a damn about your reader.
"No one will ever complain that you've made things too simple to understand."
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures production workflow | Final creative direction |
| Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices |
| Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards |
| Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions |
| Generates script outlines | Final script approval |
When invoked, I will guide you through the Everybody Writes methodology:
Provide information about your content writing challenge:
Example prompts:
Information that helps:
Every piece of content must answer two questions:
If you can't answer both, your content isn't ready.
Develop "Pathological Empathy":
| Ask Yourself | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| What does my reader already know? | Avoid boring them |
| What do they need to know? | Fill knowledge gaps |
| What do they want? | Align with desires |
| What do they fear? | Address objections |
| How can I help them? | Focus on value |
1. There is no one way to write Find your process. What works for one writer won't work for another.
2. Our words are our emissaries Your writing represents you. Every piece is a chance to build or break trust.
3. Good writing is a power tool It's not optional—it's essential. Treat it as a professional skill.
4. The key to better writing is more writing Practice is non-negotiable. Write regularly, not just when you "feel like it."
5. Writing well is habit + knowledge + caring Know the rules. Practice consistently. Give a damn about your reader.
6. No one complains about too-simple writing Simplicity is a gift. Never fear being too clear.
7. Assume ignorance, not stupidity Explain without condescension. Your reader is smart but may not have context.
8. Jargon is the chemical additives of writing It's artificial and hard to digest. Use plain language instead.
9. The Ugly First Draft is necessary Don't skip the messy first attempt. It's how you get to good.
10. Good writers are great editors The magic happens in revision, not the first draft.
11. Editing is about clarity, not just grammar Cut what's unnecessary. Sharpen what's essential.
12. You can't wait for inspiration Art that waits for the muse sits on the couch watching Netflix.
13. Deadlines are the WD-40 of writing They keep things moving. Set them, even if self-imposed.
Use this framework for any significant piece of content:
Step 1: Goal What's the purpose? What action should readers take?
GOAL TEMPLATE:
After reading this, readers will [understand/do/feel] ___________
The primary CTA is: ___________
Success looks like: ___________
Step 2: Reframe Put readers into the picture. Why do THEY care?
| Your Perspective | Reader's Perspective |
|---|---|
| "We launched a new feature" | "You can now do X faster" |
| "Our company won an award" | "We're committed to quality for you" |
| "Read our latest research" | "Here's how to solve [problem]" |
Step 3: Seek Data Find facts, stats, examples, quotes, stories to support your point.
Step 4: Organize Create a rough structure:
Step 5: Write the Ugly First Draft (TUFD)
"Write with the door closed."
Rules for TUFD:
Step 6: Walk Away Let it rest. An hour minimum, overnight if possible. Distance creates perspective.
Step 7: Rewrite Focus on big-picture issues:
Step 8: Edit for Clarity Cut ruthlessly. For every sentence:
Kill your darlings. That clever phrase you love? If it doesn't serve the reader, cut it.
Step 9: Edit for Grammar and Style Now worry about:
Step 10: Read Aloud Your ear catches what your eye misses:
Step 11: Get a Second Opinion Fresh eyes see what you can't. Ask someone to read for:
Step 12: Final Look One last polish, then PUBLISH. Don't let perfect be the enemy of done.
Principles:
Formula Options:
| Formula | Example |
|---|---|
| How to [achieve result] | "How to Write Headlines That Convert" |
| [Number] Ways to [benefit] | "7 Ways to Improve Your Email Open Rates" |
| The [adjective] Guide to [topic] | "The Complete Guide to Content Strategy" |
| [Question your audience asks] | "Why Isn't Your Content Converting?" |
| [Result] in [timeframe] | "Better Blog Posts in 30 Minutes" |
Types that Work:
Avoid:
Best Practices:
Formulas:
| Type | Example |
|---|---|
| Curiosity | "This changed how I write forever" |
| Direct | "Your weekly content tips" |
| Question | "Struggling with headlines?" |
| How-to | "How to write faster (without sacrificing quality)" |
| Urgency | "Last day: Content workshop registration" |
Principles:
Format for Long-Form (LinkedIn):
[Hook: provocative statement or question]
[Space]
[Context: why this matters]
[Key insight or story]
[Takeaway or lesson]
[CTA or question for engagement]
Use this checklist before publishing:
Big Picture:
Clarity:
Reader Focus:
Polish:
Original Draft (Before):
"In today's fast-paced digital landscape, businesses are increasingly recognizing the importance of leveraging content marketing strategies to enhance their brand visibility and drive meaningful engagement with their target audiences. Our team has been working diligently to develop innovative approaches that can help companies navigate this complex terrain."
Analysis:
Rewritten (After):
"Your blog has been stuck at 500 monthly visitors for six months. You've published consistently. You've promoted on social. Nothing's working.
Here's what we found when we analyzed 47 blogs that broke through that plateau—and the specific changes you can make this week."
What Changed:
Assignment: Write a newsletter introducing a new guide on email marketing.
Using the Writing GPS:
Goal: Get readers to download the guide Reader reframe: They struggle with email—low open rates, low clicks, no results
The Email:
Subject: Your emails aren't the problem
Hey [Name],
I talked to 23 marketers last month about email.
Same frustration every time: "We write good emails. Why doesn't anyone engage?"
Here's what I've realized: the email itself usually isn't the problem.
The problem is what happens BEFORE the email:
- Sending to the wrong segment
- Sending at the wrong time
- Sending without a clear reason readers should care
We just published a guide that walks through the pre-email checklist
that doubled our own open rates.
It's 12 pages. No fluff. Takes 10 minutes to read.
→ Grab it here: [LINK]
If you implement even one thing from it, let me know what changes.
— Ann
P.S. Page 7 has the framework that made the biggest difference for us.
Why It Works:
CONTENT BRIEF
Title/Topic: _______________
Format: Blog / Email / Social / Other
Target audience: _______________
Goal (reader action): _______________
KEY QUESTIONS TO ANSWER:
1. What problem does this solve for the reader?
2. What will they know/do after reading?
3. What makes this different from existing content?
MAIN POINTS:
1. _______________
2. _______________
3. _______________
DATA/EXAMPLES NEEDED:
- _______________
- _______________
CTA: _______________
SUCCESS METRICS: _______________
When stuck, answer these questions quickly without editing:
Then write for 15 minutes without stopping.
Pass 1: Structure
Pass 2: Clarity
Pass 3: Reader Focus
Pass 4: Polish
Primary Source:
Additional Resources:
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