OpenClaw ยท Skill

Brand Voice Profile

Store your writing style so AI-generated content sounds like you, not a robot.

Marketing & Sales
v1.0.0
VirusTotal: Suspicious

Install

Start with the primary install command. Alternate entrypoints are included below for ClawHub and OpenClaw CLI users.

Primary command

clawhub install dimitripantzos/brand-voice-profile

ClawHub installer

npx clawhub@latest install dimitripantzos/brand-voice-profile

OpenClaw CLI

openclaw skills install dimitripantzos/brand-voice-profile

Direct OpenClaw install

openclaw install dimitripantzos/brand-voice-profile

What this skill does

Store your writing style so AI-generated content sounds like you, not a robot.

Why it matters

Storing a structured profile means you describe your style once and every future content request inherits it automatically, rather than re-prompting tone and vocabulary each time.

Typical use cases

  • Writing a Twitter thread that sounds like your past posts
  • Onboarding a new content workflow without re-explaining your style
  • Generating a week of LinkedIn posts with consistent tone
  • Telling an agent to avoid corporate jargon across all outputs
  • Managing separate voice profiles for personal brand vs client work

Source instructions

Brand Voice

Store your writing style so AI-generated content sounds like you, not a robot.

Quick Start

Create Your Voice Profile

Talk to your agent naturally:

"Let's set up my brand voice. I write casually, use short sentences, and like to make technical topics accessible. I never use corporate jargon. My audience is indie developers and solopreneurs."

The agent should then:

  1. Ask follow-up questions to understand your style
  2. Create a profile at brand-voice/profile.json
  3. Use it when generating content for you

Profile Structure

{
  "name": "Your Brand",
  "created": "2026-02-22",
  "updated": "2026-02-22",
  
  "voice": {
    "tone": "casual, direct, slightly irreverent",
    "personality": ["helpful", "opinionated", "no-BS"],
    "formality": "informal",
    "humor": "dry wit, occasional sarcasm"
  },
  
  "writing": {
    "sentenceLength": "short to medium, punchy",
    "paragraphLength": "2-3 sentences max",
    "structure": "lead with the point, then explain",
    "formatting": ["use headers", "bullet points over paragraphs", "bold key phrases"]
  },
  
  "vocabulary": {
    "use": ["ship", "build", "hack", "vibe", "solid"],
    "avoid": ["utilize", "leverage", "synergy", "best practices", "learnings"],
    "jargon": "minimal, explain when used",
    "contractions": true
  },
  
  "audience": {
    "who": "indie developers, solopreneurs, tech-curious founders",
    "assumes": "basic technical literacy",
    "explains": "complex concepts simply"
  },
  
  "content": {
    "topics": ["AI", "automation", "building in public", "productivity"],
    "avoid": ["politics", "controversial takes without data"],
    "cta_style": "soft, value-first",
    "hashtags": "minimal, 1-3 max"
  },
  
  "platforms": {
    "twitter": {
      "maxLength": 280,
      "style": "punchy, hook-first",
      "threads": "use for longer ideas, 3-7 tweets"
    },
    "linkedin": {
      "style": "slightly more professional but still human",
      "formatting": "line breaks for readability"
    },
    "blog": {
      "style": "conversational, like talking to a friend",
      "length": "800-1500 words typical"
    }
  },
  
  "examples": {
    "good": [
      "Shipped a thing. It's rough but it works. Feedback welcome.",
      "Hot take: most 'AI strategies' are just ChatGPT with extra steps.",
      "Here's what I learned building X for 6 months..."
    ],
    "bad": [
      "We are pleased to announce the launch of our innovative solution.",
      "Leveraging cutting-edge AI to drive synergies across the value chain.",
      "๐Ÿš€๐Ÿ”ฅ๐Ÿ’ฏ HUGE NEWS!!! ๐Ÿ”ฅ๐Ÿš€๐Ÿ’ฏ"
    ]
  }
}

Usage

When Generating Content

Reference the voice profile before writing:

Before generating:
1. Read brand-voice/profile.json
2. Match tone, vocabulary, and style
3. Check examples for calibration
4. Adapt for specific platform if specified

Voice Check Prompt

After generating content, self-check:

  • Does this sound like the examples in "good"?
  • Does this avoid the patterns in "bad"?
  • Does this match the tone and vocabulary rules?
  • Would this fit on the specified platform?

Multi-Brand Support

For agencies or multiple projects:

brand-voice/
  profiles/
    personal.json
    company.json
    client-a.json

Reference by name: "Use the client-a voice profile for this post."

Building Your Profile

The Interview

Ask the user these questions (conversationally, not as a checklist):

  1. Tone: How would you describe your writing style in 3 words?
  2. Audience: Who are you writing for? What do they already know?
  3. Formality: LinkedIn-formal or Twitter-casual? Somewhere in between?
  4. Humor: Serious? Playful? Sarcastic? None?
  5. Words you love: Any phrases or words that feel very "you"?
  6. Words you hate: Corporate speak? Emoji overload? What to avoid?
  7. Examples: Share 2-3 things you've written that feel authentic.
  8. Anti-examples: Share something that feels "off" or too corporate.

Analyze Existing Content

If they have existing content, analyze it:

Read their last 10 posts/articles. Look for:
- Sentence length patterns
- Opening hook style
- Common phrases
- Vocabulary choices
- Formatting preferences
- CTA patterns

Iterate

The profile isn't static. Update it when:

  • User says "that doesn't sound like me"
  • New topics or platforms are added
  • Writing style evolves

Integration with Other Skills

With RSS Reader

1. Check RSS for trending topics
2. Pick an angle
3. Generate post using brand voice
4. Review and schedule

With Content Schedulers (Metricool, etc.)

1. Load voice profile
2. Generate week of content
3. Apply platform-specific formatting
4. Queue for posting

With Image Generation

Voice profile can include visual style:
{
  "visual": {
    "aesthetic": "clean, minimal, lots of whitespace",
    "colors": ["#1a1a1a", "#f5f5f5", "#0066cc"],
    "avoid": ["stock photo vibes", "corporate clip art"]
  }
}

Tips

  1. Start simple โ€” you can always add detail later
  2. Use real examples โ€” they calibrate better than descriptions
  3. Platform-specific rules โ€” what works on Twitter fails on LinkedIn
  4. Update regularly โ€” voices evolve
  5. Test with the user โ€” generate, show, iterate

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