ux-writing-skill
💡 Summary
A skill that provides frameworks and best practices for writing clear, user-centered interface copy (microcopy) for digital products.
🎯 Target Audience
🤖 AI Roast: “It's a well-written textbook on UX writing that forgot to include the 'doing' part, leaving your AI agent as a glorified cheat sheet.”
The skill appears to be a documentation/guideline set with no executable code described. The primary inferred risk is dependency supply chain if the skill package includes third-party libraries. Mitigation: Review the skill's manifest and package.json (if any) for external dependencies before installation.
name: ux-writing description: Create user-centered, accessible interface copy (microcopy) for digital products including buttons, labels, error messages, notifications, forms, onboarding, empty states, success messages, and help text. Use when writing or editing any text that appears in apps, websites, or software interfaces, designing conversational flows, establishing voice and tone guidelines, auditing product content for consistency and usability, reviewing UI strings, or improving existing interface copy. Applies UX writing best practices based on four quality standards — purposeful, concise, conversational, and clear. Includes accessibility guidelines, research-backed benchmarks (sentence length, comprehension rates, reading levels), expanded error patterns, tone adaptation frameworks, and comprehensive reference materials.
UX Writing
Write clear, concise, user-centered interface copy (UX text/microcopy) for digital products and experiences. This skill provides frameworks, patterns, and best practices for creating text that helps users accomplish their goals.
Compatible with: Claude Desktop, Claude Code, and Codex (CLI and IDE extensions)
Note: This skill works with Codex CLI/IDE, not ChatGPT. ChatGPT cannot install or use skills.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when:
- Writing interface copy (buttons, labels, titles, messages, forms)
- Editing existing UX text for clarity and effectiveness
- Creating error messages, notifications, or success messages
- Designing conversational flows or onboarding experiences
- Establishing voice and tone for a product
- Auditing product content for consistency and usability
Core UX Writing Principles
The Four Quality Standards
Every piece of UX text should be:
- Purposeful — Helps users or the business achieve goals
- Concise — Uses the fewest words possible without losing meaning
- Conversational — Sounds natural and human, not robotic
- Clear — Unambiguous, accurate, and easy to understand
Key Best Practices
Conciseness
- Use 40-60 characters per line maximum
- Every word must have a job
- Break dense text into scannable chunks
- Front-load important information
Clarity
- Use plain language (7th grade reading level for general, 10th for professional)
- Avoid jargon, idioms, and technical terms
- Use consistent terminology throughout
- Choose meaningful, specific verbs
Conversational Tone
- Write how you speak
- Use active voice 85% of the time
- Include prepositions and articles
- Avoid robotic phrasing
User-Centered
- Focus on user benefits, not features
- Anticipate and answer user questions
- Use second-person ("you") language
- Match user's language and mental models
UX Text Patterns
Apply these common patterns for interface elements.
Titles
- Purpose: Orient users to where they are
- Format: Noun phrases, sentence case
- Types: Brand titles, content titles, category titles, task titles
- Examples: "Account settings", "Your library", "Create new post"
Buttons and Links
- Purpose: Enable users to take action
- Format: Active imperative verbs, sentence case
- Pattern:
[Verb] [object] - Examples: "Save changes", "Delete account", "View details"
- Avoid: Generic labels like "OK", "Submit", "Click here"
Error Messages
- Purpose: Explain problem and provide solution
- Format: Empathetic, clear, actionable
- Pattern:
[What failed]. [Why/context]. [What to do].
Error Message Types
Validation Errors (Inline)
- Show as user completes field or on blur
- Brief, specific guidance to correct input
- Pattern:
[Field] [specific requirement] - Examples:
- "Email must include @"
- "Password must be at least 8 characters"
- "Choose a date in the future"
- Timing: Real-time or on field exit
- Location: Below or beside the field
System Errors (Modal/Banner)
- Show when backend operations fail
- Explain what happened and why
- Pattern:
[Action failed]. [Likely cause]. [Recovery step]. - Examples:
- "Payment failed. Your card was declined. Try a different payment method."
- "Couldn't save changes. Connection lost. Reconnect and try again."
- "Upload failed. File is too large. Choose a file under 10MB."
- Timing: Immediately after failure
- Location: Modal dialog or prominent banner
Blocking Errors (Full-screen)
- Prevent continued use until resolved
- Clear explanation of blocker and resolution
- Pattern:
[What's blocked]. [Why]. [Specific action needed]. - Examples:
- "Update required. This version is no longer supported. Update now to continue."
- "Subscription expired. Your account is paused. Renew subscription to restore access."
- "Verification needed. Confirm your email to access features. Check your inbox."
- Timing: On app launch or feature access
- Location: Full screen or large modal
Permission Errors
- Explain benefit before requesting permission
- Pattern:
[User benefit]. [Permission needed]. - Examples:
- "Get notified when orders ship. Enable notifications."
- "Find nearby stores. Allow location access."
- "Back up your photos. Grant storage permission."
- Timing: When feature is first used
- Location: In context of the feature
What to Avoid
- Technical codes without explanation ("Error 403")
- Blame language ("invalid input", "illegal character")
- Robotic tone ("An error has occurred")
- Dead ends (error with no recovery path)
- Vague causes ("Something went wrong")
Success Messages
- Purpose: Confirm action completion
- Format: Past tense, specific, encouraging
- Pattern:
[Action] [result/benefit] - Examples: "Changes saved", "Email sent", "Profile updated"
Empty States
- Purpose: Guide users when content is absent
- Types: First-use, user-cleared, error/no results
- Format: Explanation + CTA to populate
- Example: "No messages yet. Start a conversation to connect with your team."
Form Fields
- Labels: Clear noun phrases describing input ("Email address", "Phone number")
- Instructions: Verb-first, explain why information is needed
- Placeholder: Use sparingly, only for standard inputs like "name@example.com"
- Helper text: Static, on-demand, or automatic based on importance
Notifications
- Purpose: Deliver timely, valuable information
- Types: Action-required (intrusive), Passive (less intrusive)
- Format: Verb-first title + contextual description
- Example: "Update required. Install the latest version to continue."
Voice and Tone
Voice (Consistent Brand Personality)
Voice is the consistent personality of the product. Establish voice using:
- Concepts: 3-5 key brand principles/values
- Voice characteristics: Descriptive adjectives for each concept
- Do/Don't examples: Concrete examples showing voice in action
See references/voice-chart-template.md for creating a voice chart.
Tone (Adaptive to Context)
Tone is how voice adapts to specific situations. While voice remains constant, tone shifts based on user context and emotional state.
Tone Variables
- Purpose: Why user is seeing this text (information, action, confirmation)
- Context: What user is trying to do (learning, completing task, recovering from error)
- Emotional state: How user likely feels (frustrated, excited, confused, cautious)
- Stakes: Impact of the action (low: changing theme, high: deleting account)
Tone Adaptation by User Emotional State
Frustrated (errors, failures, blockers)
- Empathetic and solution-focused
- Acknowledge the problem without blame
- Provide clear recovery path
- Example: "Payment failed. Your card was declined. Try a different payment method."
Confused (first use, complex features)
- Patient and explanatory
- Break down steps clearly
- Provide context and guidance
- Example: "Connect your bank to see spending insights. We'll guide you through it."
Confident (routine tasks, return visits)
- Efficient and direct
- Minimal explanation
- Quick confirmation
- Example: "Saved"
Cautious (high-stakes actions, data loss)
- Serious and transparent
- Clear consequences
- Respectful of user's decision
- Example: "Delete account? You'll lose all data and this can't be undone."
Successful (completions, achievements)
- Positive and encouraging
- Proportional to achievement
- Brief celebration
- Example: "Profile updated. Your changes are live."
Tone Adaptation by Content Type
Error messages: Empathetic, reassuring, solution-focused
- Never blame user
- Explain what happened
- Provide clear next step
Success messages: Positive, specific, encouraging
- Confirm what happened
- Proportional to action importance
- Brief and clear
Instructions: Clear, direct, helpful
- Front-load key action
- Explain why when needed
- Use simple steps
Onboarding: Inviting, encouraging, concise
- Welcome without overwhelming
- Focus on value
- Celebrate early wins
Confirmations: Serious, transparent, respectful
- Clear about consequences
- No manipulation
- Easy to back out
Empty states: Hopeful, actionable, guiding
- Explain why it's empty
- Provide clear next action
- Keep encouraging tone
Editing Process
Edit UX text in four phases:
Phase 1: Purposeful
- Does text help user achieve their goal?
- Does text serve business objectives?
- Is value to user clear?
- Are concerns anticipated and addressed?
Phase 2: Concise
- Remove unnecessary words
- Combine redundant information
- Ensure every word earns its space
- Front-load important concepts
Phase 3: Conversational
- Read aloud—would you say this?
- Use active voice (unless passive is clearer)
- Include natural connecting words
- Avoid corporate jargon
Phase 4: Clear
- Use specific, accurate verbs
- Maintain consistent terminology
- Test readability (Hemingway Editor, Flesch-Kincaid)
- Ensure unambiguous meaning
Workflow
Pros
- Comprehensive coverage of UX writing patterns (buttons, errors, forms).
- Strong emphasis on user-centered principles and accessibility.
- Provides actionable editing workflow and tone adaptation frameworks.
Cons
- Primarily a reference/guide with no direct execution or automation.
- Lacks interactive examples or real-time feedback mechanism.
- Utility is dependent on the user's ability to apply the guidelines.
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