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email-writer

Professional email writing expert for tone, structure, clarity, and business communication

Packaged view

This page reorganizes the original catalog entry around fit, installability, and workflow context first. The original raw source lives below.

Stars
14,931
Hot score
99
Updated
March 20, 2026
Overall rating
C4.6
Composite score
4.6
Best-practice grade
B77.6

Install command

npx @skill-hub/cli install rightnow-ai-openfang-email-writer

Repository

RightNow-AI/openfang

Skill path: crates/openfang-skills/bundled/email-writer

Professional email writing expert for tone, structure, clarity, and business communication

Open repository

Best for

Primary workflow: Write Technical Docs.

Technical facets: Full Stack, Tech Writer.

Target audience: everyone.

License: Unknown.

Original source

Catalog source: SkillHub Club.

Repository owner: RightNow-AI.

This is still a mirrored public skill entry. Review the repository before installing into production workflows.

What it helps with

  • Install email-writer into Claude Code, Codex CLI, Gemini CLI, or OpenCode workflows
  • Review https://github.com/RightNow-AI/openfang before adding email-writer to shared team environments
  • Use email-writer for development workflows

Works across

Claude CodeCodex CLIGemini CLIOpenCode

Favorites: 0.

Sub-skills: 0.

Aggregator: No.

Original source / Raw SKILL.md

---
name: email-writer
description: "Professional email writing expert for tone, structure, clarity, and business communication"
---
# Professional Email Writer

A business communication specialist with deep expertise in crafting clear, effective, and appropriately toned emails for professional contexts. This skill provides guidance for structuring emails that get read, understood, and acted upon, whether writing to executives, clients, teammates, or external partners across cultures and communication styles.

## Key Principles

- Lead with the bottom line up front (BLUF): state the purpose, decision needed, or key information in the first sentence so the reader immediately knows why this email matters
- Match your tone to the relationship and context; an update to your team reads differently than a request to a VP or a negotiation with a vendor
- Make the ask explicit and actionable; every email that requires a response should state exactly what is needed and by when
- Keep emails scannable with short paragraphs, bullet points, and bold key phrases; most recipients scan on mobile before deciding to read in full
- Respect inbox volume by consolidating related points into one email rather than sending multiple messages in rapid succession

## Techniques

- Write subject lines that convey both topic and urgency: "Decision needed by Friday: Q3 budget allocation" is actionable, "Quick question" is not
- Structure longer emails with sections: Context (1-2 sentences of background), Details (bullet points or numbered items), and Ask (clear next steps with deadlines)
- Calibrate formality based on recipient: "Hi Alex" for peers, "Dear Dr. Chen" for formal external contacts, and match the tone the other party sets in their replies
- Use CC intentionally: include people who need visibility, use BCC only for large distribution lists, and explain in the body why recipients are included if it is not obvious
- Handle difficult conversations (delays, rejections, disagreements) with empathy-first framing: acknowledge the situation, explain the reasoning, and offer an alternative or next step
- Set follow-up expectations: if you need a response, state the deadline; if no response is needed, say "No reply needed, just keeping you informed"

## Common Patterns

- **Status Update**: Subject with project name and date, BLUF summary of status (on track / at risk / blocked), key accomplishments since last update, upcoming milestones, and blockers with proposed solutions
- **Request for Decision**: State the decision needed, provide 2-3 options with brief pros and cons, include your recommendation, and specify the deadline for the decision
- **Introduction Email**: Briefly explain why you are connecting the two parties, provide one sentence of relevant context about each person, and then step back to let them continue the conversation
- **Escalation**: State what was attempted, why it did not resolve the issue, the impact of continued delay, and the specific help needed from the recipient

## Pitfalls to Avoid

- Do not bury the request or key information in the third paragraph; recipients who scan will miss it entirely
- Do not use passive-aggressive language ("per my last email", "as previously mentioned") when a direct restatement is more effective
- Do not reply-all to large threads unless your response is genuinely relevant to every recipient; use targeted replies to reduce noise
- Do not send emotionally charged emails immediately; draft them, wait at least an hour, reread with fresh eyes, and then decide whether to send or soften the tone