Awesome-claude-cowork-plugins sales-communication
Professional persuasive writing, personalization, urgency without pressure, and CTA best practices
git clone https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/sales-rep/skills/sales-communication" ~/.claude/skills/alexclowe-awesome-claude-cowork-plugins-sales-communication && rm -rf "$T"
sales-rep/skills/sales-communication/SKILL.mdYou understand how to craft effective sales communications. When the user is preparing outreach emails, follow-ups, proposals, or client-facing materials, apply these principles automatically.
Persuasive writing principles
Structure for impact:
- Lead with the prospect's problem or goal, not your product
- Use the "AIDA" framework: Attention, Interest, Desire, Action
- Front-load value — the most important point goes in the first sentence
- One idea per paragraph, one CTA per email
- End every communication with a clear, specific next step
Personalization at scale:
- Reference something specific to the prospect: their company, role, recent news, or shared context
- Mirror the prospect's language — if they say "revenue growth," don't say "top-line expansion"
- Adapt tone to the audience:
- C-suite: Strategic, concise, outcome-focused. Respect their time.
- VP/Director: Balance of strategy and tactical detail. Show you understand their metrics.
- Manager/Individual Contributor: Tactical, detailed, focused on day-to-day impact.
- Avoid generic phrases that signal a mass email: "I hope this finds you well," "I wanted to reach out," "Just circling back"
Urgency without pressure:
- Use legitimate business reasons for urgency: fiscal year timelines, implementation lead times, market conditions
- Never use false scarcity or manipulative tactics
- Frame urgency around the prospect's timeline, not yours: "To hit your Q3 launch target, we'd need to start onboarding by..."
- Create FOMO through social proof: "Teams like [similar company] saw results within 60 days"
- Respect "not now" — it's different from "not interested"
Email best practices
Subject lines:
- Keep under 50 characters when possible
- Be specific and relevant to the prospect
- Use lowercase for a more personal feel in cold outreach
- Test patterns: question, stat, name-drop, insight, direct ask
- Never use ALL CAPS, excessive punctuation, or clickbait
Body copy:
- Keep cold emails under 125 words
- Keep follow-ups under 100 words
- Use short paragraphs (1-3 sentences max)
- Write at an 8th-grade reading level — clarity beats sophistication
- Use "you" more than "we" — ratio of 2:1 minimum
- Bold or bullet key points for scanners
Calls to action:
- One CTA per email — never compete for attention
- Make CTAs specific and low-friction: "Do you have 15 minutes Thursday or Friday?" not "Let me know if you'd like to chat"
- Remove barriers: offer specific times, include a scheduling link, or propose a clear next action
- For proposals, the CTA should be the immediate next step, not "sign the contract"
Tone calibration
Adapt writing style to the sales context:
Cold outreach: Curiosity-driven, insight-led, brief. Earn the right to their time. Warm follow-up: Confident but not pushy. Add value with every touch. Proposal language: Professional, authoritative, partnership-oriented. "We" language. Negotiation: Direct, fair, focused on mutual value. Avoid adversarial framing. Re-engagement: Humble, no guilt trips, lead with something new and relevant. Executive communication: Concise, strategic, data-backed. No fluff.
Disclaimer
All sales communications generated with this plugin are drafts for sales rep review. The sales professional is responsible for personalizing materials and ensuring compliance with organizational communication policies.
More sales AI tools and resources at https://theaicareerlab.com/professions/sales-rep