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Generates YouTube Community tab posts that promote uploads, tease content, or spark conversation, matched to the channel's voice.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
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/autopunk-media-skills:community-post-generatorThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Writes a YouTube Community tab post to promote a new upload, tease upcoming content, or spark conversation — matched to the channel's voice.
Orchestrates YouTube community post creation using research and write skills, handling episode context, lifecycle phases for video promotion, polls, and audience engagement.
Generates platform-native content for X, LinkedIn, TikTok, YouTube, and newsletters from one idea. Useful for social posts, threads, video scripts, and content calendars.
Writes retention-optimized YouTube scripts with hooks, chapters, CTAs, visual directions, and SEO metadata.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Writes a YouTube Community tab post to promote a new upload, tease upcoming content, or spark conversation — matched to the channel's voice.
Required: Video title or upcoming topic; one sentence about what the video teaches, shows, or argues; channel tone (e.g., "warm and encouraging," "dry humor," "direct and no-BS," "enthusiastic hobbyist"). Optional: A surprising or counterintuitive detail from the video that isn't obvious from the title; a specific question the video answers that your audience struggles with; whether you want a poll included; whether this is a new upload, a tease, or a standalone engagement post.
Two post options per request:
Both options include a suggested poll (if applicable) with 3–4 options. Each post ends naturally without the word "link" appearing in the copy (Community posts display the linked video as a card automatically). Total length per option: 50–120 words. Output ends with a "Next Step" note: which option to use, whether to include the poll, and when to post relative to the video upload.
Video title: The Honest Guide to Freelancing Full-Time in Year One What the video covers: The financial and psychological reality of the first year of freelancing — what the YouTube advice gets wrong, how to set rates, and a specific cash flow strategy most new freelancers never hear about. Surprising detail: Most freelancers price themselves out of their first clients not by charging too much, but by charging too little and attracting the wrong clients. Channel tone: Direct, honest, slightly skeptical of hustle culture. Talks to adults who are making real decisions. Post type: New upload
Option A — Narrative
The first year of freelancing is harder than anyone tells you — not because the work is bad, but because the financial model is genuinely strange and nobody explains it before you quit your job.
This video covers what I wish I'd known: how to set rates that attract serious clients (not the ones who drain you), a cash flow approach that keeps you solvent through the slow months, and the one piece of standard freelancing advice I think actively makes things harder.
If you're thinking about making the jump, or you're already in year one and finding it messier than expected — this one's for you.
What's the biggest thing you wish someone had told you before going full-time?
Option B — Punchy
New video: the honest version of freelancing year one.
Not "here's how I made six figures in six months."
The real stuff — rates, cash flow, and why charging too little is often worse than charging too much.
What's the hardest part of year one that nobody warned you about? Drop it below — I'm curious what keeps coming up.
Suggested Poll (optional add-on) "What's your biggest challenge with freelancing right now?"