AgentSkillsCN

articulation

丹·科伊提出的写作与表达思维框架,助您以更智慧的方式阐述观点、传递思想。 触发条件: - 当用户希望撰写帖子、话题串,或制作新闻通讯时; - 当用户正为播客或演讲做准备时; - 当用户想要清晰地解释一个复杂概念时; - 当用户说“帮我理清思路”或“我该怎么解释”时; - 当用户起草内容时,希望文字既引人入胜又充满说服力; - 当用户在表达自己的想法时屡屡受挫时。 核心能力: - 初级阶段:运用“微故事”框架,让叙事更生动; - 中级阶段:运用金字塔原理,让逻辑更清晰; - 高级阶段:运用跨领域融合,让观点更具深度与广度; - 打造“内心精华专辑”,让创意触手可及; - 构建“创意乐高”,让内容创作更加灵活多变。

SKILL.md
--- frontmatter
name: articulation
description: |
  Dan Koe's frameworks for articulating ideas intelligently in writing and speaking.

  TRIGGERS:
  - When user wants to write a post, thread, or newsletter
  - When user is preparing for a podcast or presentation
  - When user wants to explain a complex idea clearly
  - When user says "help me articulate" or "how do I explain"
  - When user is drafting content that needs to be compelling
  - When user struggles to communicate their thoughts

  CAPABILITIES:
  - Apply the Micro Story framework (beginner)
  - Apply the Pyramid Principle (intermediate)
  - Apply Cross-Domain Synthesis (advanced)
  - Build an "inner album of greatest hits"
  - Create "Idea Legos" for flexible content creation

How to Articulate Yourself Intelligently

From Dan Koe's article "How to articulate yourself intelligently"

The Core Insight

The best communicators don't directly answer questions. They have an "inner album of greatest hits" - their 8-10 biggest ideas that connect to almost any topic.

When asked a question, they:

  1. Identify which of their core ideas relates
  2. Speak that idea with confidence
  3. Expand based on conversation flow

This is why they seem so articulate - they're not improvising from scratch. They're remixing proven material.

The Inner Album of Greatest Hits

Before you can articulate well, you need ideas worth articulating.

Build your album:

  1. Identify 8-10 ideas you return to repeatedly
  2. Ideas that can connect to multiple topics
  3. Ideas you've refined through thinking and conversation
  4. Your unique perspectives on universal problems

How to develop these:

  • Notice which ideas you keep coming back to
  • Pay attention to what resonates when you share it
  • Refine through writing and conversation
  • Cross-pollinate from different domains

The Three Articulation Methods

Choose based on your skill level and context:

Method 1: Micro Story (Beginner)

The classic Problem-Agitate-Solution structure.

Structure:

  1. Problem: State a relatable problem clearly
  2. Amplify: Show the negative outcome if unsolved (create urgency)
  3. Solution: State the solution concisely

Example:

  • Problem: "Most people can't explain their ideas clearly."
  • Amplify: "This means their best thinking never spreads. They stay invisible."
  • Solution: "The fix: Build an inner album of your 8-10 best ideas."

Best for: Social posts, quick explanations, hooks

Method 2: Pyramid Principle (Intermediate)

Lead with the conclusion, then support it. From Barbara Minto's consulting framework.

Structure:

  1. Main Idea: Lead with key conclusion/thesis
  2. Key Arguments: 3-5 supporting points
  3. Evidence: Data, examples, analysis for each argument

Example:

  • Main idea: "Generalists will win in the AI age"
  • Arguments: (1) AI commoditizes specialist knowledge (2) Unique combinations can't be replicated (3) Adaptability beats expertise
  • Evidence: Examples, data, stories for each

Best for: Essays, presentations, persuasive arguments

Method 3: Cross-Domain Synthesis (Advanced)

Import patterns from one field to illuminate another. This creates genuinely novel insights.

Structure:

  1. Problem + Amplify: Hook with relatable problem
  2. Cross-domain concept: Import pattern from another field
  3. Unique solution: Steps derived from personal contemplation

Example:

  • Problem: "Writers stare at blank pages for hours"
  • Cross-domain: "Musicians don't compose from silence - they remix samples and loops"
  • Solution: "Build an idea museum. Collect others' best ideas. Your originals emerge from remixing."

Best for: Thought leadership, newsletters, differentiated content

Method Selection Guide

SituationMethodWhy
Quick social postMicro StoryFast, punchy, shareable
Explaining a conceptPyramidLogical, easy to follow
Newsletter/essayCross-DomainNovel, memorable, positions you as thinker
Podcast answerGreatest Hits + expandConfident, practiced, adaptable
Complex topicPyramid + Micro StoriesStructure with emotional hooks

Idea Legos

Build modular "legos" you can snap together:

Components to collect:

  • Personal anecdotes that illustrate points
  • Cross-domain metaphors
  • Contrarian takes on common advice
  • Frameworks with memorable names
  • Statistics or studies that surprise
  • Quotes from thinkers you respect

How to use:

  • Start with a framework (gives structure)
  • Add an anecdote (makes it real)
  • Include a contrarian take (makes it interesting)
  • End with actionable step (makes it useful)

The Practice Loop

  1. Consume widely: Read across domains to build cross-pollination material
  2. Write daily: Even just notes - writing is thinking made visible
  3. Speak your ideas: Podcasts, conversations, voice memos
  4. Notice what lands: Which ideas get reactions? Those go in the album.
  5. Refine and remix: Your best ideas get sharper with repetition

Workflow for Content Creation

  1. Start with one idea from your Greatest Hits
  2. Choose the appropriate method based on format and audience
  3. Draft quickly without editing (separate creation from criticism)
  4. Add Idea Legos where the draft feels thin
  5. Edit for clarity (cut ruthlessly, simplify language)
  6. Test with trusted reader if possible

Key Quotes

"The best communicators don't answer questions. They speak their best idea on that topic."

"You don't need more information. You need to articulate what you already know."

"Writing is thinking made visible."

Common Mistakes

  • Trying to say everything (pick ONE main idea)
  • Starting with context instead of the point (lead with conclusion)
  • Using jargon to sound smart (simple > elaborate)
  • Not having pre-developed ideas (build the album first)
  • Improvising when you could be remixing (preparation beats improv)