Content Creator
Writing skill, available on Zeplik
Content Creator is a ready-to-run writing skill on Zeplik. Use for channel-specific marketing content structures and frameworks -- blog post, social media, email newsletter, landing page, press release, and case study templates, SEO checklists, headline formulas, CTA patterns: 'what's the right structure for a case study'. Ask in plain language and Zeplik applies the skill's method for you inside the conversation, on whichever AI model you prefer.
The Content Creator skill loads automatically when your request matches it, or you can invoke it directly by typing /content-creation in any chat. It works with attachments, connectors, and any model that supports the task, so you get the same expert method every time without setting anything up.
What the Content Creator skill can do
- Provide channel-specific content structures for blogs, social, email, landing pages
- Supply headline and hook formulas with worked examples
- Deliver SEO checklists covering keywords, meta tags, and on-page elements
- Outline CTA patterns and best practices by marketing channel
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How the Content Creator skill works
Content Creation Skill
Guidelines and frameworks for creating effective marketing content across channels.
Content Type Templates
Blog Post Structure
- Headline — clear, benefit-driven, includes primary keyword (aim for 60 characters or less for SEO)
- Introduction (100-150 words) — hook the reader with a question, statistic, bold claim, or relatable scenario. State what the post will cover. Include primary keyword.
- Body sections (3-5 sections) — each with a descriptive subheading (H2). Use H3 for subsections. One core idea per section with supporting evidence, examples, or data.
- Conclusion (75-100 words) — summarize key takeaways, reinforce the main message, include a call to action.
- Meta description — under 160 characters, includes primary keyword, compels the click.
Social Media Post Structure
- Hook — first line grabs attention (question, bold statement, number)
- Body — 2-4 concise points or a short narrative
- CTA — what should the reader do next (comment, click, share, tag)
- Hashtags — 3-5 relevant hashtags (platform-dependent)
Email Newsletter Structure
- Subject line — under 50 characters, creates curiosity or states clear value
- Preview text — complements the subject line, does not repeat it
- Header/hero — visual anchor and one-line value statement
- Body sections — 2-3 content blocks, each scannable with a bold intro sentence
- Primary CTA — one clear action per email
- Footer — unsubscribe link, company info, social links
Landing Page Structure
- Headline — primary benefit in under 10 words
- Subheadline — elaborates on the headline with supporting context
- Hero section — headline, subheadline, primary CTA, supporting image or video
- Value propositions — 3-4 benefit-driven sections with icons or images
- Social proof — testimonials, logos, stats, case study snippets
- Objection handling — FAQ or trust signals
- Final CTA — repeat the primary call to action
Press Release Structure
- Headline — factual, newsworthy, under 80 characters
- Subheadline — optional, adds context
- Dateline — city, state, date
- Lead paragraph — who, what, when, where, why in 2-3 sentences
- Body paragraphs — supporting details, quotes, context
- Boilerplate — company description (standardized)
- Media contact — name, email, phone
Case Study Structure
- Title — "[Customer] achieves [result] with [product]"
- Snapshot — customer name, industry, company size, product used, key result (sidebar or callout box)
- Challenge — what problem the customer faced
- Solution — what was implemented and how
- Results — quantified outcomes with specific metrics
- Quote — customer testimonial
- CTA — learn more, get a demo, read more case studies
Writing Best Practices by Channel
Blog
- Write at an 8th-grade reading level for broad audiences; adjust up for technical audiences
- Use short paragraphs (2-4 sentences)
- Include subheadings every 200-300 words
- Use bullet points and numbered lists to break up text
- Include at least one data point, example, or quote per section
- Write in active voice
- Front-load key information in each section
Social Media
- LinkedIn: professional but human, paragraph breaks for readability, personal stories and lessons perform well, 1,300 characters is the sweet spot before "see more"
- Twitter/X: concise and punchy, strong opening words, threads for longer narratives, engage with replies
- Instagram: visual-first captions, storytelling hooks, line breaks for readability, hashtags in first comment or at end
- Facebook: conversational tone, questions drive comments, shorter posts (under 80 characters) get more engagement for links
- Write subject lines that create urgency, curiosity, or state clear value
- Personalize where possible (name, company, behavior)
- One primary CTA per email — make it visually distinct
- Keep body copy scannable: bold key phrases, short paragraphs, bullet points
- Test everything: subject lines, send times, CTA copy, layout
- Mobile-first: most email is read on mobile
Web (Landing Pages, Product Pages)
- Lead with benefits, not features
- Use "you" language — speak to the reader directly
- Minimize jargon unless the audience expects it
- Every section should answer "so what?" from the reader's perspective
- Reduce friction: fewer form fields, clear next steps, trust signals near CTAs
SEO Fundamentals for Content
Keyword Strategy
- Identify one primary keyword and 2-3 secondary keywords per piece
- Use the primary keyword in: headline, first paragraph, one subheading, meta description, URL slug
- Use secondary keywords naturally in body copy and subheadings
- Do not keyword-stuff — write for humans first
On-Page SEO Checklist
- Title tag: under 60 characters, includes primary keyword
- Meta description: under 160 characters, includes primary keyword, compels click
- URL slug: short, descriptive, includes primary keyword
- H1: one per page, matches or closely reflects the title tag
- H2/H3: descriptive, include secondary keywords where natural
- Image alt text: descriptive, includes keyword where relevant
- Internal links: 2-3 links to related content on your site
- External links: 1-2 links to authoritative sources
Content-SEO Integration
- Aim for comprehensive coverage of the topic (search engines reward depth)
- Answer related questions (check "People Also Ask" for ideas)
- Update and refresh high-performing content regularly
- Structure content for featured snippets: definition paragraphs, numbered lists, tables
Headline and Hook Formulas
Headline Formulas
- How to [achieve result] [without common obstacle] — "How to Double Your Email Open Rates Without Sending More Emails"
- [Number] [adjective] ways to [achieve result] — "7 Proven Ways to Reduce Customer Churn"
- Why [common belief] is wrong (and what to do instead) — "Why More Content Is Not the Answer (And What to Do Instead)"
- The [adjective] guide to [topic] — "The Complete Guide to B2B Content Marketing"
- [Do this], not [that] — "Build a Community, Not Just an Audience"
- What [impressive result] taught us about [topic] — "What 10,000 A/B Tests Taught Us About Email Subject Lines"
- [topic]: what [audience] needs to know in [year] — "SEO: What Marketers Need to Know in 2025"
Hook Formulas (Opening Lines)
- Surprising statistic: "73% of marketers say their biggest challenge is not budget — it is focus."
- Contrarian statement: "The best marketing campaigns start with saying no to most channels."
- Question: "When was the last time a marketing email actually changed what you bought?"
- Scenario: "Imagine launching a campaign and knowing, before it goes live, which messages will land."
- Bold claim: "Most landing pages lose half their visitors in the first three seconds."
- Story opening: "Last quarter, our team was spending 20 hours a week on reporting. Here is what we did about it."
Call-to-Action Best Practices
CTA Principles
- Use action verbs: "Get", "Start", "Download", "Join", "Try", "See"
- Be specific about what happens next: "Start your free trial" is better than "Submit"
- Create urgency when genuine: "Join 500 teams already using this" or "Limited spots available"
- Reduce risk: "No credit card required", "Cancel anytime", "Free for 14 days"
- One primary CTA per page or email — too many choices reduce conversions
CTA Examples by Context
- Blog post: "Read our complete guide to [topic]" / "Subscribe for weekly insights"
- Landing page: "Start free trial" / "Get a demo" / "See pricing"
- Email: "Read the full story" / "Claim your spot" / "Reply and tell us"
- Social media: "Drop a comment if you agree" / "Save this for later" / "Link in bio"
- Case study: "See how [product] can work for your team" / "Talk to our team"
CTA Placement
- Above the fold on landing pages (do not make users scroll to act)
- After establishing value in emails (not in the first sentence)
- At the end of blog posts (after you have earned the reader's trust)
- In-line within content when contextually relevant (e.g., a related guide mention)
- Repeat the primary CTA at the bottom of long-form pages
Zeplik output presentation
Present the final deliverable as a single polished artifact: clear headings, tables where the content is tabular, fenced code where it is code. Lead with the deliverable itself; keep process commentary to a single short line. If the skill produced multiple files or sections, end with a compact list of them with one-line purposes.
How to use the Content Creator skill
Sign in to Zeplik
Create a free Zeplik account or sign in. New accounts start with free credits, so you can try the Content Creator skill right away.
Describe your writing task
Ask in plain language, or type /content-creation to invoke the skill directly. Zeplik recognizes the Content Creator skill and applies its method.
Review and refine the result
Zeplik returns a clear, structured answer. Ask follow-ups in the same chat to refine it or take the next step.
Source and credit
- Author
- Anthropic
- License
- Apache-2.0
Adapted from the open-source anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins project and tuned to run natively on Zeplik. View source on GitHub.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the Content Creator skill?
- Content Creator is a ready-to-run writing skill on Zeplik. Use for channel-specific marketing content structures and frameworks -- blog post, social media, email newsletter, landing page, press release, and case study templates, SEO checklists, headline formulas, CTA patterns: 'what's the right structure for a case study'. Ask in plain language and Zeplik applies the skill's method for you inside the conversation, on whichever AI model you prefer.
- How do I use Content Creator on Zeplik?
- Sign in to Zeplik and ask in plain language, or type /content-creation in any chat to invoke it directly. The skill applies its method and returns a result you can refine in the same conversation.
- Which AI model does the Content Creator skill use?
- Any model you choose. Zeplik works across every model in one chat, so the Content Creator skill runs on your preferred model for the task.
- Where does the Content Creator skill come from?
- The Content Creator skill is adapted from the open-source anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins project (Apache-2.0) and tuned to run natively on Zeplik. The original source is linked on this page.
- How much does the Content Creator skill cost?
- Using the skill is free to start. You only spend Zeplik credits when the assistant runs, and new accounts begin with free credits.
Related writing skills
- AI Text HumanizerRewrite text to strip recognizable AI-writing patterns (inflated significance, formulaic transitions, stock vocabulary, generic endings) while preserving full content and the author's voice. Use for 'humanize this', 'make it sound less like AI', 'natural voice'. Not for marketing-copy quality sweeps (use copy-editing).
- Brand Voice DiscoveryUse when the user wants to find or audit brand materials across their platforms -- 'find our style guide', 'what brand docs do we have', 'discover brand voice', 'audit brand content' -- searching Notion, Drive, Slack, Confluence, Figma, etc. Not for applying an existing voice to content (use brand-voice-enforcement).
- Brand Voice GuardianUse when content must match the company's brand voice -- 'make this sound like us', 'rewrite this in our tone', 'is this on-brand', or any email/post/deck request where brand guidelines apply. Loads existing guidelines and enforces voice constants and tone flexes. Not for finding brand docs (use discover-brand).
- Brand Voice GuidelinesProduces a structured, enforceable brand voice guideline with a We Are/We Are Not table, tone matrix, confidence scores, and open questions from docs, transcripts, or user input.
- Content DrafterUse when the user asks to draft a specific piece of marketing content -- 'write a LinkedIn post about our launch', 'draft a blog post on X', 'write a press release' -- gathering content type, topic, audience, and brand voice first. For structure reference use content-creation; for drip flows use email-sequence.
- Content Pipeline NavigatorUse to chain content production across skills -- brand voice, strategy, drafting, editing, humanizing. Not for a single draft (use draft-content) or a one-off edit pass (use copy-editing).
More on Zeplik
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