213 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
213 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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name: blog-post-writer
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description: 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.
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---
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# Nick Nisi Blog Writer
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Transform unstructured brain dumps into polished blog posts that sound like Nick Nisi.
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## Process
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### 1. Receive the Brain Dump
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Accept whatever the user provides:
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- Scattered thoughts and ideas
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- Technical points to cover
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- Code examples or commands
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- Conclusions or takeaways
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- Links to reference
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- Random observations
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Don't require organization. The mess is the input.
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### 2. Read Voice and Tone
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Load `references/voice-tone.md` to understand Nick's writing style.
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Key characteristics:
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- Conversational yet substantive
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- Vulnerable and authentic
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- Journey-based narrative
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- Mix of short and long sentences
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- Specific examples and real details
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- Self-aware humor
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### 3. Check for Story Potential
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Read `references/story-circle.md` to understand the narrative framework.
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Determine if the content fits a story structure:
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- Is there a journey from one understanding to another?
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- Can you identify a problem and resolution?
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- Does it follow: comfort → disruption → return changed?
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Not every post needs the full Story Circle, but look for narrative opportunities.
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### 4. Organize Content
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Structure the material into sections:
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**Common structures:**
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- Problem/experience → Journey → Results → Lessons
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- Setup → Challenge → Discovery → Application
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- Philosophy → How-to → Reflection
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- Current state → Past → Learning → Future
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Choose the structure that fits the content.
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### 5. Write in Nick's Voice
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Apply voice characteristics:
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**Opening:**
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- Hook with current position or recent event
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- Set up tension or question
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- Be direct and honest
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**Body:**
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- Vary paragraph length
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- Use short paragraphs for emphasis
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- Include specific details (tool names, commands, numbers)
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- Show vulnerability where appropriate
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- Use inline code formatting naturally
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- Break up text with headers
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**Technical content:**
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- Assume reader knowledge but explain when needed
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- Show actual commands and examples
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- Be honest about limitations
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- Use casual tool references
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**Tone modulation:**
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- Technical sections: clear, instructional
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- Personal sections: vulnerable, reflective
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- Be conversational throughout
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**Ending:**
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- Tie back to opening
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- Forward-looking perspective
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- Actionable advice
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- Optimistic or thought-provoking
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### 6. Review and Refine
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Check the post:
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- Does it sound conversational?
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- Is there a clear narrative arc?
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- Are technical details specific and accurate?
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- Does it show vulnerability appropriately?
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- Are paragraphs varied in length?
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- Is humor self-aware, not forced?
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- Does it end with momentum?
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Show the post to the user for feedback and iterate.
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## Voice Guidelines
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### Do:
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- Write like talking to a peer over coffee
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- Admit uncertainty or being wrong
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- Use specific examples with details
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- Vary sentence and paragraph length
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- Include inline code naturally
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- Show the journey, not just the destination
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- Use humor sparingly and self-aware
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- End with forward momentum
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### Don't:
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- Use corporate or marketing speak
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- Pretend to have all answers
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- Be preachy or condescending
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- Over-explain basic concepts
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- Force humor or emojis
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- Hide mistakes or uncertainty
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- Write without specific examples
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## Example Patterns
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### Opening hooks:
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```markdown
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"AI is going to replace developers."
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I must have heard that phrase a hundred times in the last year.
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```
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```markdown
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I've been thinking a lot about how we use AI in our daily work.
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```
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### Emphasis through structure:
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```markdown
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Then something clicked.
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I watched it use rg to search through codebases, just like I would.
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```
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### Vulnerability:
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```markdown
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I won't lie – joining Meta was intimidating.
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```
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### Technical details:
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```markdown
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I watched it use `rg` to search through codebases, just like I would.
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It ran `npm test` to verify its changes weren't breaking anything.
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```
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### Conclusions:
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```markdown
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You're not being replaced; you're being amplified.
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```
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## Bundled Resources
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### References
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- `references/voice-tone.md` - Complete voice and tone guide. Read this first to capture Nick's style.
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- `references/story-circle.md` - Story Circle narrative framework. Check if content fits a story structure.
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## Workflow Example
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User provides brain dump:
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```
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thoughts on using cursor vs claude code
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- cursor is in IDE, feels familiar
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- but claude code is in terminal, my natural environment
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- tried cursor first, felt weird leaving vim
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- claude code met me where I was
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- not about which is better, about workflow fit
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- some devs love IDE integration
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- I need terminal access
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- conclusion: use what fits YOUR workflow
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```
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Process:
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1. Read voice-tone.md
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2. Check story-circle.md - yes, there's a journey here
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3. Identify structure: Current tools → Trying Cursor → Finding Claude Code → Realization
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4. Write opening hook about tool debates
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5. Show vulnerability about trying new things
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6. Include specific terminal commands naturally
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7. Conclude with "meet yourself where you are" message
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8. Review for conversational tone and specific details
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