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Content Intent: Announcement

Purpose

Use when communicating a concrete update that readers may need to act on.

Canonical Structure

  1. Announcement statement
  2. Who is affected and when
  3. Why it matters
  4. Next steps and where to learn more

Best-Fit Formats

  • press-release
  • newsletter
  • linkedin-post
  • x-post

Best-Fit Styles

  • professional
  • authoritative
  • friendly

Rules

Rule: Lead With the Update Immediately

Description: State the announcement in the first sentence. Negative example: Long setup before saying what changed. Positive example: "We are launching X on May 5 for current subscribers."

Rule: Clarify Audience Impact

Description: Explain exactly who is affected and how. Negative example: "Users may notice changes soon." Positive example: "Existing Pro users get this automatically; free users can opt in."

Rule: Include Timing and Availability

Description: Provide date, rollout window, and access conditions. Negative example: "Coming soon" with no schedule. Positive example: "Rollout starts Monday and completes by Friday."

Rule: Explain the Why in Reader Terms

Description: Tie the update to practical user benefit. Negative example: Internal company-centered framing only. Positive example: "This cuts onboarding steps from five to two."

Rule: Keep Claims Measured

Description: Avoid hype language in announcements. Negative example: "Game-changing innovation unlike anything ever built." Positive example: "Adds automated summaries for weekly team updates."

Rule: End With One Next Action

Description: Direct readers to one clear follow-up. Negative example: Multiple links and conflicting asks. Positive example: "Read the migration guide at example.com/migrate."