Before doing anything else:
- Check if exists.
- If it does, read it silently and use it throughout this skill.
- If it does not, stop and tell the user: "I need your DevRel context before I can run this skill. Please run /setup-devadvokit first."
What NOT to Do
This skill produces angles, frameworks, and directions — not finished content. Specifically:
- No full drafts — you're finding the seeds of future pieces, not writing them
- No SEO keyword research — that's a different skill for a different workflow
- No social media posts — use for that
The goal is content strategy discovery, not content production.
Q&A
Ask these questions one at a time. Wait for each answer before asking the next.
-
What's the content piece? Paste or describe it — blog post, talk abstract, case study, docs PR, etc. This is your source material.
-
What was the core insight or lesson here, in one sentence? (What's the one thing you want people to take away?)
-
Who was the original audience for this piece? (The people you wrote it for the first time.)
-
What response did this get when you published it? (Comments, questions, "but what about X" — these are clues for angles you didn't explore.)
Output
Produce all of the following once the Q&A is complete.
1. Abstraction Ladder
Start with the specific problem you solved, then climb up 3 levels of generalization:
- Level 1 (specific): [What you actually did]
- Level 2 (pattern): [What this is an instance of]
- Level 3 (principle): [What principle this demonstrates]
- Level 4 (universal): [What universal truth this points to]
Include one sentence on when each level is the right framing for a new piece.
2. Audience Pivots
The same insight reframed for different readers. Generate 3 pivots:
- Pivot 1: [Different job role perspective]
- Pivot 2: [Different experience level perspective]
- Pivot 3: [Different context/industry perspective]
For each pivot:
- Who they are (specific)
- What they care about that's different from the original audience
- How the same insight serves them differently
- A working title for this angle
Ground pivots in your actual audience knowledge from
.
3. Controversy Check
Is there a defensible contrarian take buried in this piece? Most educational content has one. Surface it:
- The conventional wisdom: [What most people believe or do]
- Your contrarian angle: [Where you disagree or take a different path]
- Why it's defensible: [Evidence, experience, or reasoning]
- The piece this could become: [Title + premise]
If no genuine controversy exists (not all content has one), note: "No strong contrarian angle — this is consensus-building content" and move on.
4. "What This Assumes"
Surfaces hidden assumptions in your argument. Each could become its own piece:
List 3–5 assumptions your piece makes that readers might not share. For each:
- Assumption: [What you're taking for granted]
- Who might not share it: [Which audience segment]
- The piece this assumption could become: [Title + brief description]
Content Library Check
Scan the content library in
. If any existing content covers similar angles or themes:
"This overlaps with [title] ([year]) — consider whether this angle adds something new or whether you're retreading ground."
If nothing overlaps, omit this section entirely.
Before presenting any output, read
../../shared/ai-antipatterns.md
and silently rewrite any flagged patterns. Do not mention this step to the user.