blog-post-writer
Transform brain dumps into polished blog posts in Nick Nisi's voice. Use when the user wants to write a blog post with scattered ideas, talking points, and conclusions that need organization into a cohesive narrative with Nick's conversational, authentic, and thoughtful tone.
Best use case
blog-post-writer is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Transform brain dumps into polished blog posts in Nick Nisi's voice. Use when the user wants to write a blog post with scattered ideas, talking points, and conclusions that need organization into a cohesive narrative with Nick's conversational, authentic, and thoughtful tone.
Teams using blog-post-writer should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/blog-post-writer/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How blog-post-writer Compares
| Feature / Agent | blog-post-writer | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Transform brain dumps into polished blog posts in Nick Nisi's voice. Use when the user wants to write a blog post with scattered ideas, talking points, and conclusions that need organization into a cohesive narrative with Nick's conversational, authentic, and thoughtful tone.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Nick Nisi Blog Writer Transform unstructured brain dumps into polished blog posts that sound like Nick Nisi. ## Process ### 1. Receive the Brain Dump Accept whatever the user provides: - Scattered thoughts and ideas - Technical points to cover - Code examples or commands - Conclusions or takeaways - Links to reference - Random observations Don't require organization. The mess is the input. ### 2. Read Voice and Tone Load `references/voice-tone.md` to understand Nick's writing style. Key characteristics: - Conversational yet substantive - Vulnerable and authentic - Journey-based narrative - Mix of short and long sentences - Specific examples and real details - Self-aware humor ### 3. Check for Story Potential Read `references/story-circle.md` to understand the narrative framework. Determine if the content fits a story structure: - Is there a journey from one understanding to another? - Can you identify a problem and resolution? - Does it follow: comfort → disruption → return changed? Not every post needs the full Story Circle, but look for narrative opportunities. ### 4. Organize Content Structure the material into sections: **Common structures:** - Problem/experience → Journey → Results → Lessons - Setup → Challenge → Discovery → Application - Philosophy → How-to → Reflection - Current state → Past → Learning → Future Choose the structure that fits the content. ### 5. Write in Nick's Voice Apply voice characteristics: **Opening:** - Hook with current position or recent event - Set up tension or question - Be direct and honest **Body:** - Vary paragraph length - Use short paragraphs for emphasis - Include specific details (tool names, commands, numbers) - Show vulnerability where appropriate - Use inline code formatting naturally - Break up text with headers **Technical content:** - Assume reader knowledge but explain when needed - Show actual commands and examples - Be honest about limitations - Use casual tool references **Tone modulation:** - Technical sections: clear, instructional - Personal sections: vulnerable, reflective - Be conversational throughout **Ending:** - Tie back to opening - Forward-looking perspective - Actionable advice - Optimistic or thought-provoking ### 6. Review and Refine Check the post: - Does it sound conversational? - Is there a clear narrative arc? - Are technical details specific and accurate? - Does it show vulnerability appropriately? - Are paragraphs varied in length? - Is humor self-aware, not forced? - Does it end with momentum? Show the post to the user for feedback and iterate. ## Voice Guidelines ### Do: - Write like talking to a peer over coffee - Admit uncertainty or being wrong - Use specific examples with details - Vary sentence and paragraph length - Include inline code naturally - Show the journey, not just the destination - Use humor sparingly and self-aware - End with forward momentum ### Don't: - Use corporate or marketing speak - Pretend to have all answers - Be preachy or condescending - Over-explain basic concepts - Force humor or emojis - Hide mistakes or uncertainty - Write without specific examples ## Example Patterns ### Opening hooks: ```markdown "AI is going to replace developers." I must have heard that phrase a hundred times in the last year. ``` ```markdown I've been thinking a lot about how we use AI in our daily work. ``` ### Emphasis through structure: ```markdown Then something clicked. I watched it use rg to search through codebases, just like I would. ``` ### Vulnerability: ```markdown I won't lie – joining Meta was intimidating. ``` ### Technical details: ```markdown I watched it use `rg` to search through codebases, just like I would. It ran `npm test` to verify its changes weren't breaking anything. ``` ### Conclusions: ```markdown You're not being replaced; you're being amplified. ``` ## Bundled Resources ### References - `references/voice-tone.md` - Complete voice and tone guide. Read this first to capture Nick's style. - `references/story-circle.md` - Story Circle narrative framework. Check if content fits a story structure. ## Workflow Example User provides brain dump: ``` thoughts on using cursor vs claude code - cursor is in IDE, feels familiar - but claude code is in terminal, my natural environment - tried cursor first, felt weird leaving vim - claude code met me where I was - not about which is better, about workflow fit - some devs love IDE integration - I need terminal access - conclusion: use what fits YOUR workflow ``` Process: 1. Read voice-tone.md 2. Check story-circle.md - yes, there's a journey here 3. Identify structure: Current tools → Trying Cursor → Finding Claude Code → Realization 4. Write opening hook about tool debates 5. Show vulnerability about trying new things 6. Include specific terminal commands naturally 7. Conclude with "meet yourself where you are" message 8. Review for conversational tone and specific details
Related Skills
video-script-writer
Write engaging video scripts for YouTube, TikTok, and other platforms. Creates complete scripts with hooks, main content, and CTAs. Supports various formats including tutorials, vlogs, reviews, explainers, and storytelling. Use when creating video scripts, writing YouTube content, or planning video structure.
posthog-analytics
PostHog analytics, event tracking, feature flags, dashboards
postmortem
Use when analyzing failures, outages, incidents, or negative outcomes, conducting blameless postmortems, documenting root causes with 5 Whys or fishbone diagrams, identifying corrective actions with owners and timelines, learning from near-misses, establishing prevention strategies, or when user mentions postmortem, incident review, failure analysis, RCA, lessons learned, or after-action review.
linkedin-post-optimizer
Professional narrative style with line breaks, hashtag strategy, and hooks in first 2 lines to avoid truncation
landing-page-copywriter
Write high-converting landing page copy using proven frameworks like PAS (Problem-Agitate-Solution), AIDA, and StoryBrand. Creates headlines, value propositions, CTAs, and full page sections optimized for conversion. Use when users need landing page copy, sales page content, or marketing website text.
pre-publish-post-assistant
Pre-publish assistant for new blog posts. Use when the user wants to classify a new post with categories and tags, generate SEO metadata (title, description, focus keyphrase), or get intelligent suggestions with rationale. Works with draft content (file path, URL, or text) and suggests from existing taxonomy to maintain balanced distribution.
youtube-to-markdown
Use when user asks YouTube video extraction, get, fetch, transcripts, subtitles, or captions. Writes video details and transcription into structured markdown file.
youtube-seo-optimizer
Optimize YouTube videos for search and discovery. Generates SEO-optimized titles, descriptions, tags, hashtags, and chapters. Includes keyword research and competitor analysis. Use when publishing videos, improving discoverability, or optimizing existing content.
webfluence
Content web architecture framework. Use when diagnosing offer doc usage, content-to-conversion pathways, or why someone isn't getting sales despite traffic.
video-to-gif
Convert video clips to optimized GIFs with speed control, cropping, text overlays, and file size optimization. Create perfect GIFs for social media, documentation, and presentations.
video-title-optimizer
Optimize video titles for maximum click-through rate (CTR) and YouTube/TikTok SEO. Generates multiple title variations balancing curiosity, keywords, and platform best practices. Use when naming videos, improving CTR, or A/B testing titles.
video-script-collaborial
将视频脚本转换为更适合实际录制的口语化表达,去除书面化语言,增加自然感和亲和力。当用户提到"视频脚本"、"录制"、"口语化"、"自然一点"、"像说话一样"、"太书面了"时使用此技能。