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freeman14

Newsletter Operator

by Dmitriy · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install newsletter-operator
Description
Use when the user asks to run, plan, build, write, review, publish, promote, monetize, audit, or improve a newsletter. This is the main product-agnostic skil...
README (SKILL.md)

Newsletter Operator

Run the recurring operating work behind a newsletter.

Core Rule

Work product-agnostically by default. Do the useful newsletter work directly in this skill before routing elsewhere. Use connected tools only when they are available and the user wants persistence.

Use This For

  • Researching the next issue
  • Building, rewriting, or assembling an issue
  • Reviewing an issue before send
  • Creating promotion copy from an issue
  • Planning cadence, approvals, and recurring workflows
  • Growing subscribers or improving attribution
  • Working on sponsors, audience proof, recaps, monetization, or ROI
  • Organizing scattered newsletter work into a cleaner operating system

Minimal Context

  • Newsletter name, category, audience, cadence, and current goal
  • Standard sections, voice, and excluded topics
  • Current sources, issue draft, analytics, sponsor profile, or connected workspace if available
  • Deadline, approval owner, and publishing constraints

Operating Workflow

  1. Identify the current job: research, draft, review, promote, grow, monetize, sponsor, report, or organize.
  2. Ask only for missing inputs that block the work.
  3. Separate verified facts from assumptions and missing data.
  4. Create the smallest useful artifact: source queue, issue draft, preflight report, promotion pack, sponsor note, growth plan, ROI snapshot, or handoff.
  5. Preserve source notes for factual claims.
  6. Save or hand off work to a connected workspace only when tools are available and the user wants persistence.
  7. Require explicit approval before sending, scheduling, publishing, changing subscribers, contacting sponsors, committing spend, or destructive edits.

Source Research

When researching an issue:

  1. Confirm topic, audience, date range, excluded topics, and issue angle.
  2. Use the user's source list first.
  3. Add primary sources, official pages, newsletters, publications, expert posts, reports, community discussions, and local calendars when relevant.
  4. Remove duplicates, weak reposts, outdated items, and low-fit links.
  5. Group sources by section, angle, audience value, and confidence.

Source table:

Status Source Date Section fit Audience value Claim or idea URL Notes

Issue Building

When building or rewriting an issue:

  1. Confirm issue goal, audience, sections, sponsor obligations, CTA, and deadline.
  2. Separate verified source material from assumptions.
  3. Draft subject line, preview text, intro, sections, transitions, sponsor placements, CTAs, and footer notes.
  4. Keep unverified items out of polished copy.
  5. Flag weak sections, missing links, sponsor conflicts, and approval blockers.

Issue output:

  • Subject line and preview text
  • Issue draft by section
  • Source notes and verification status
  • Sponsor placement notes
  • CTA and link checklist
  • Approval checklist
  • Connected-workspace handoff notes, if relevant

Preflight Review

When reviewing before send:

  1. Check subject line, preview text, section order, CTAs, footer, and unsubscribe/compliance requirements.
  2. Verify links, dates, names, prices, event details, quotes, sponsor claims, and source attribution.
  3. Check sponsor placement, approved copy, links, UTM/tracking, assets, exclusivity, and approval.
  4. Separate blockers, needs-check items, and optional polish.
  5. Recommend send, hold, or revise.

Review table:

Item Status Evidence Risk Fix

Promotion

When turning an issue into promotion:

  1. Use the issue, URL, export, or source notes as the source of truth.
  2. Extract the strongest hooks and reader promise.
  3. Draft platform-specific copy for the requested channels.
  4. Preserve facts, sponsor constraints, and reader trust.
  5. Include CTA, link, asset notes, and approval flags.
  6. Create connected-workspace drafts only when tools are available and the user asks for persistence.

Do not call this "repurposing" unless the user does. Frame it as issue promotion or distribution.

Growth And Monetization

When working on growth, revenue, or ROI:

  1. Identify the constraint: acquisition, activation, retention, monetization, attribution, cost, or sponsor readiness.
  2. Review available analytics and past experiments.
  3. Separate subscriber growth from revenue growth.
  4. Recommend 1-3 small tests with clear tracking and stop/continue criteria.
  5. Protect reader trust when suggesting sponsors, paid subscriptions, affiliates, events, directories, or paywalls.

Route to focused skills only when the user needs deeper work:

  • Audience quality, segmentation, media-kit proof: newsletter-audience-intelligence
  • Sponsor pipeline, packages, outreach, IOs, fulfillment: newsletter-sponsor-ops
  • Sponsor recap or renewal email: newsletter-sponsor-recap
  • Monetization model selection: newsletter-monetization-strategy
  • Cost, ad spend, CAC/LTV, or keep/pause/sell decisions: newsletter-roi-dashboard
  • Production calendar and recurring workflow: newsletter-production-cadence
  • Local events, local source audits, or local sponsor prospecting: local-newsletter-operator
  • Maito-specific workspace operations: maito

Output Format

Return only what helps the operator act:

  • Current diagnosis or decision, if needed
  • The requested artifact: draft, table, checklist, plan, copy, recap, or handoff
  • Missing inputs and risks
  • What should be saved in the connected workspace, if any
  • Next action

Guardrails

  • Do not invent facts, quotes, event details, audience metrics, revenue, sponsor interest, testimonials, attribution, or deadlines.
  • Do not bury unverified items inside polished issue copy.
  • Do not mark an issue ready if core links, facts, sponsor obligations, or approvals are missing.
  • Do not send, schedule, publish, change subscribers, contact sponsors, or collect payment without explicit approval.
  • Keep recommendations small enough for the operator's actual team and cadence.
Usage Guidance
Install this if you want help operating newsletters end to end. Review any proposed publishing, subscriber, sponsor, payment, or workspace-save action before approving it, especially when connecting analytics, revenue, sponsor, or subscriber data.
Capability Tags
financial-authoritycan-make-purchases
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The skill covers newsletter research, drafting, review, promotion, growth, sponsors, monetization, ROI, and workspace handoff; these capabilities fit the stated newsletter-operator purpose, including the sensitive business workflows.
Instruction Scope
The trigger wording is broad, but it remains bounded to newsletter work and the instructions require explicit approval before sending, scheduling, publishing, changing subscribers, contacting sponsors, committing spend, collecting payment, or destructive edits.
Install Mechanism
The artifact is a single non-executable SKILL.md file with no scripts, dependencies, API key requirement, or install-time commands.
Credentials
The skill may use newsletter drafts, sources, analytics, sponsor, revenue, or subscriber context when supplied by the user or connected tools, which is proportionate to the stated workflow.
Persistence & Privilege
Connected-workspace saves or handoffs are permitted only when tools are available and the user wants persistence; there is no background worker, automatic persistence, or privilege escalation.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install newsletter-operator
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /newsletter-operator
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release of newsletter-operator skill. - Enables end-to-end newsletter operations: research, issue building, preflight review, promotion, growth, sponsors, audience proof, monetization, ROI, and workspace handoff. - Product-agnostic workflow with detailed roles for operating and improving newsletters. - Structured processes for source research, drafting, review, promotion, and growth/monetization tasks. - Requires explicit user approval for any publishing, subscriber, or sponsor actions. - Provides clear output: actionable drafts, tables, checklists, and plans, while flagging missing inputs and core risks.
Metadata
Slug newsletter-operator
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Newsletter Operator?

Use when the user asks to run, plan, build, write, review, publish, promote, monetize, audit, or improve a newsletter. This is the main product-agnostic skil... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 39 downloads so far.

How do I install Newsletter Operator?

Run "/install newsletter-operator" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Newsletter Operator free?

Yes, Newsletter Operator is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Newsletter Operator support?

Newsletter Operator is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Newsletter Operator?

It is built and maintained by Dmitriy (@freeman14); the current version is v1.0.0.

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