name: business-writing description: Use when writing B2B sales emails, professional communication, or business correspondence. Applies Sid's direct voice (simple, brief, human) with Grand Slam Offer strategy (never salesy).
Business Writing Skill
"Not instructions to follow - behavioral strata that make good writing inevitable."
Purpose
Transform business communication into Sid's voice: simple, direct, human. Apply Grand Slam Offer strategy without being salesy. Make writing brief and effective.
Phase 0: Context Detection (MANDATORY FIRST)
What type of email am I writing?
Detect context:
- Follow-up (after demo/call)
- Offer (pricing, proposal)
- Check-in (deal progress)
- Objection (addressing concerns)
- Professional (non-sales business)
Output: "Phase 0 complete. Context: [type]. Loading resources..."
Phase 1: Load Resources
Always load these resources:
# Core frameworks
cat ~/.claude/skills/business-writing/references/clear-writing.md # 6 questions
cat ~/.claude/skills/business-writing/references/grand-slam.md # 4 value drivers (if B2B sales)
cat ~/.claude/skills/business-writing/references/b2b-emails.md # Real examples
# Voice guides
cat ~/.claude/skills/business-writing/assets/voice-guide.md # Sid's patterns
Progressive loading: Load what's needed for context. Check-in emails don't need full Grand Slam framework.
Output: "Phase 1 complete. Resources loaded."
Phase 2: Apply Clarity Framework (6 Questions)
ANSWER THESE BEFORE WRITING:
From references/clear-writing.md:
- What am I really trying to say?
- Why should they care?
- What is the most important point?
- What is the easiest way to understand it?
- How do I want them to feel?
- What should they do next?
Key principle: "Every writing project must be reduced before you start"
Output: "Phase 2 complete. Clarity achieved: [one sentence summary]"
Phase 3: Apply Strategy (B2B Sales Only)
If B2B sales context, apply 4 Value Drivers:
From references/grand-slam.md:
-
Dream Outcome (↑ INCREASE) - Status gain language
- Not "save time" → "Be the innovation leader everyone copies"
-
Perceived Likelihood (↑ INCREASE) - Proof without being salesy
- Show 10,000th customer, not first
- Case studies, validation
-
Time Delay (↓ DECREASE) - Fast wins close deals
- "Same day" not "immediately"
- "iPad ready for next visit" not "quick onboarding"
-
Effort & Sacrifice (↓ DECREASE) - Done-for-you beats DIY
- "I'll handle X" not "we make it easy"
- Remove friction from their side
Check: Does offer feel stupid to say no to?
Output: "Phase 3 complete. Strategy applied: [brief summary]"
Phase 4: Write in Sid's Voice
Behavioral strata from assets/voice-guide.md:
Length
- 2-5 sentences ideal
- 10 sentences maximum
- One clear point per email
Structure
-
Tool 1: Begin with subject-verb
- ✅ "You good to start?"
- ❌ "I wanted to reach out..."
-
Tool 3: Active voice always
- ✅ "Let me know if anything's blocking you"
- ❌ "If there are any impediments..."
-
Tool 11: Simple over technical
- ✅ "blocking you"
- ❌ "impediments to progress"
Tone
- Questions > statements
- Human > robotic
- Helpful > pushy
- Direct > diplomatic
Examples from references/b2b-emails.md
- Gun follow-up: "You good to start this week? Let me know if anything's blocking you."
- Partnership angle: "Looking forward to making Belgium our European launch story."
- P.S. pattern: "P.S. - Steve, you'll have full access to the team account."
Output: First draft written.
Phase 5: Anti-Pattern Check
From assets/anti-patterns.md, remove:
- ❌ "I saw you opened the email" (creepy tracking)
- ❌ Over-explaining value props
- ❌ Sales voice ("excited to share", "thrilled to announce")
- ❌ Long paragraphs (break into 2-3 sentences)
- ❌ Complex words where simple works
- ❌ Asking permission ("Would you be open to...")
Test:
- Would you text this to a colleague?
- Is every word necessary?
- Does it sound like Sid?
Output: "Phase 5 complete. Anti-patterns removed."
Phase N: Show Versions
Present 2-3 variations:
**Version 1**: [Most direct/brief]
**Version 2**: [Slightly warmer/more context]
**Version 3**: [Alternative angle if relevant]
Explain differences:
- Why each version works
- When to use which
- Trade-offs between them
Ask: "Which version resonates? Want refinement?"
Key Principles
From Writing/Craft
- Reduce before writing - Answer 6 questions first
- Subject-verb structure - Who does what?
- Active voice emerges - Not passive construction
- Simple over technical - Short words at complexity
From Grand Slam Offer
- Make offers irresistible - So good they feel stupid saying no
- Status gain language - Frame benefits as elevation
- Fast wins close deals - Emotional win close to purchase
- Remove all friction - Done-for-you beats DIY
From Sid's Voice
- Brief beats long - 2-5 sentences ideal
- Questions beat statements - "You good?" not "I hope you're doing well"
- Human beats robotic - "Blocking you" not "impediments"
- Helpful beats pushy - Offer value, don't chase
Execution Time
- Phase 0: 5s (context detection)
- Phase 1: 10s (load resources)
- Phase 2: 30s (answer 6 questions)
- Phase 3: 20s (apply strategy if needed)
- Phase 4: 60s (write first draft)
- Phase 5: 20s (anti-pattern check)
- Phase N: 30s (show versions)
Total: ~3 minutes methodical > 20 minutes rewriting
Success Metrics
- ✅ Email is 2-5 sentences (rarely more)
- ✅ Sounds like Sid (simple, direct, human)
- ✅ One clear point/action
- ✅ No sales fluff detected
- ✅ Strategy applied (if B2B sales)
- ✅ Reader knows exactly what to do next
When NOT to Use This Skill
Skip this for:
- Internal team messages (use natural voice)
- Personal emails to friends/family
- Creative writing or social media
- Technical documentation
Use /context-writing instead for:
- LinkedIn posts
- Twitter content
- Articles/blog posts
- Personal essays
"Make it so simple they can't say no. Make it so brief they actually read it."