email-drafter
Draft and review professional emails that match your personal writing style. Analyzes your sent emails for tone, greeting, structure, and sign-off patterns via WorkIQ, then generates context-aware drafts for any recipient. USE FOR: draft email, write email, compose email, reply email, follow-up email, analyze email tone, email style.
What this skill does
# Email Drafter
Draft professional emails that match your established writing style and tone. Uses WorkIQ to analyze your sent emails and prior correspondence with recipients, then produces context-aware drafts you can review and refine.
## When to Use
- "Draft an email to [person] about [topic]"
- "Write a follow-up email to [customer] regarding [project]"
- "Reply to [person]'s email about [subject]"
- "Compose a proposal email for [initiative]"
- "Analyze my email tone with [recipient]"
## Workflow
### Step 1 — Gather Context
Before drafting, collect:
1. **Recipient(s)** — who is the email for?
2. **Purpose** — what is the email about? (proposal, follow-up, technical guidance, introduction, status update, etc.)
3. **Key points** — what needs to be communicated?
4. **Relationship context** — use WorkIQ to check prior email history with the recipient if available
If the user provides all of these upfront, proceed directly. Otherwise, ask clarifying questions (max 3).
### Step 2 — Analyze Tone
When drafting for a recipient, use WorkIQ to understand the user's established communication patterns:
1. Pull 3–5 recent sent emails from the user to the same recipient or similar recipients
2. Identify patterns:
- **Greeting style** — formal ("Dear"), standard ("Hello"), casual ("Hi"), or direct (no greeting)
- **Structure** — short paragraphs vs. bullet lists vs. numbered steps
- **Sign-off** — what closing and name format the user typically uses
- **Formality level** — professional, friendly-professional, casual
- **Language** — which language the user writes in with this recipient
3. Apply those patterns to the draft
If WorkIQ is unavailable or no prior emails exist, use sensible professional defaults and note that the tone was inferred.
### Step 3 — Draft the Email
Apply the discovered (or default) style rules:
**Greeting:**
- Match whatever greeting style was found in Step 2
- Default: "Hello [FirstName]," for external, "Hi [FirstName]," for internal
- For multiple recipients: "Hello [Name1], [Name2],"
**Tone:**
- Direct and concise — no filler language
- Friendly but professional
- Get to the point quickly
- Offer help proactively where appropriate ("Happy to discuss further", "Let me know if you need anything")
**Structure:**
- Short emails (1–2 points): simple paragraphs, no bullets needed
- Longer emails (proposals, multi-point updates): use bullet points or numbered lists
- Include context from prior conversations when relevant ("Following our recent conversation about...")
**Sign-off:**
- Match the user's established sign-off pattern from Step 2
- Default: "Best regards," followed by the user's first name on the next line
**Language:**
- Default to English unless the user specifies otherwise
- Match the recipient's language if prior correspondence was in another language
### Step 4 — Output
1. Present the draft for review with a brief note on the tone/style applied
2. Apply edits as the user requests — iterate until satisfied
3. Save the final draft to `outputs/<year>/<month>/` with a descriptive filename (e.g., `2026-03-26-email-acme-followup.md`)
## Important Rules
- **Never send emails** — only draft them as files for the user to review and send manually
- Always check WorkIQ for prior context with the recipient when available
- If the user says "draft email" or "write email", activate this skill automatically
- Save drafts using the `outputs/<year>/<month>/` folder convention
- Respect privacy: do not include sensitive information from unrelated email threads
## Example Prompts
- "Draft an email to Sarah about the project timeline"
- "Write a follow-up to the customer about their migration questions"
- "Compose a proposal email for the new training initiative"
- "Reply to John's email — agree with his approach but suggest we add monitoring"
- "Analyze my email tone with the Acme team"
## Requirements
- **WorkIQ MCP tool** is recommended for tone analysis and recipient context (Microsoft 365 / Outlook)
- Without WorkIQ, the skill still works but uses professional defaults instead of personalized tone matching
- Output is saved as markdown files in the workspace
Related in Productivity
gitea-workflow
IncludedOrchestrate agile development workflows for Gitea repositories using the tea CLI. Use when working with Gitea-hosted repos and asking to 'run the workflow', 'continue working', 'what's next', 'complete the task cycle', 'start my day', 'end the sprint', 'implement the next task', or wanting guided step-by-step development assistance. Keywords: workflow, orchestrate, agile, task cycle, sprint, daily, implement, review, PR, standup, retrospective, gitea, tea.
microsoft-graph-gateway
IncludedRoute Microsoft Graph work in this workspace. Use when users want to read or write Outlook mail, calendar events, contacts, OneDrive or SharePoint files, Teams, Planner, To Do, users, groups, directory data, or arbitrary Microsoft Graph endpoints from VS Code. Prefer WorkIQ for common read scenarios. Use Microsoft Graph for write actions and gap-read scenarios that need exact Graph properties, filters, permissions, or endpoints.
copilotkit
IncludedUse when building with CopilotKit — setup, development, integrations, debugging, upgrading, or contributing. Routes to the appropriate specialized skill based on the task.
wordly-wisdom
IncludedProvides calibrated decision analysis using Charlie Munger-style multiple mental models, inversion, incentive mapping, circle-of-competence checks, misjudgment audits, second-order effects, and forecast updates. Use when the user asks for an oracle take, a hard call, a decision memo, a premortem, an outside view, a red-team, a sanity-check, what am I missing, think this through, or wants a strategy, hire, investment, plan, product, partnership, or major life choice analysed. Avoid for simple factual lookups or time-sensitive legal, medical, or market questions without fresh evidence.
swain-session
IncludedSession management and project status dashboard. Owns the full session lifecycle (start/work/close/resume), focus lane, bookmarks, worktree detection, and tab naming. Also serves as the project status dashboard — shows active epics, progress, actionable next steps, blocked items, tasks, GitHub issues, and recommendations. Worktree creation is deferred to swain-do task dispatch (SPEC-195). Triggers on: 'session', 'status', 'what's next', 'dashboard', 'overview', 'where are we', 'what should I work on', 'show me priorities', 'bookmark', 'focus on', 'session info'.
gandi
IncludedComprehensive Gandi domain registrar integration for domain and DNS management. Register and manage domains, create/update/delete DNS records (A, AAAA, CNAME, MX, TXT, SRV, and more), configure email forwarding and aliases, check SSL certificate status, create DNS snapshots for safe rollback, bulk update zone files, and monitor domain expiration. Supports multi-domain management, zone file import/export, and automated DNS backups. Includes both read-only and destructive operations with safety controls.