clarify

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排名: #125

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npx skills add https://github.com/pbakaus/impeccable --skill clarify
Identify and improve unclear, confusing, or poorly written interface text to make the product easier to understand and use.
Assess Current Copy
Identify what makes the text unclear or ineffective:
Find clarity problems
:
Jargon
Technical terms users won't understand
Ambiguity
Multiple interpretations possible
Passive voice
"Your file has been uploaded" vs "We uploaded your file"
Length
Too wordy or too terse
Assumptions
Assuming user knowledge they don't have
Missing context
Users don't know what to do or why
Tone mismatch
Too formal, too casual, or inappropriate for situation
Understand the context
:
Who's the audience? (Technical? General? First-time users?)
What's the user's mental state? (Stressed during error? Confident during success?)
What's the action? (What do we want users to do?)
What's the constraint? (Character limits? Space limitations?)
CRITICAL
Clear copy helps users succeed. Unclear copy creates frustration, errors, and support tickets.
Plan Copy Improvements
Create a strategy for clearer communication:
Primary message
What's the ONE thing users need to know?
Action needed
What should users do next (if anything)?
Tone
How should this feel? (Helpful? Apologetic? Encouraging?)
Constraints
Length limits, brand voice, localization considerations
IMPORTANT
Good UX writing is invisible. Users should understand immediately without noticing the words.
Improve Copy Systematically
Refine text across these common areas:
Error Messages
Bad
"Error 403: Forbidden"
Good
"You don't have permission to view this page. Contact your admin for access."
Bad
"Invalid input"
Good
"Email addresses need an @ symbol. Try:
name@example.com
"
Principles
:
Explain what went wrong in plain language
Suggest how to fix it
Don't blame the user
Include examples when helpful
Link to help/support if applicable
Form Labels & Instructions
Bad
"DOB (MM/DD/YYYY)"
Good
"Date of birth" (with placeholder showing format)
Bad
"Enter value here"
Good
"Your email address" or "Company name"
Principles
:
Use clear, specific labels (not generic placeholders)
Show format expectations with examples
Explain why you're asking (when not obvious)
Put instructions before the field, not after
Keep required field indicators clear
Button & CTA Text
Bad
"Click here" | "Submit" | "OK"
Good
"Create account" | "Save changes" | "Got it, thanks"
Principles
:
Describe the action specifically
Use active voice (verb + noun)
Match user's mental model
Be specific ("Save" is better than "OK")
Help Text & Tooltips
Bad
"This is the username field"
Good
"Choose a username. You can change this later in Settings."
Principles
:
Add value (don't just repeat the label)
Answer the implicit question ("What is this?" or "Why do you need this?")
Keep it brief but complete
Link to detailed docs if needed
Empty States
Bad
"No items"
Good
"No projects yet. Create your first project to get started."
Principles
:
Explain why it's empty (if not obvious)
Show next action clearly
Make it welcoming, not dead-end
Success Messages
Bad
"Success"
Good
"Settings saved! Your changes will take effect immediately."
Principles
:
Confirm what happened
Explain what happens next (if relevant)
Be brief but complete
Match the user's emotional moment (celebrate big wins)
Loading States
Bad
"Loading..." (for 30+ seconds)
Good
"Analyzing your data... this usually takes 30-60 seconds"
Principles
:
Set expectations (how long?)
Explain what's happening (when it's not obvious)
Show progress when possible
Offer escape hatch if appropriate ("Cancel")
Confirmation Dialogs
Bad
"Are you sure?"
Good
"Delete 'Project Alpha'? This can't be undone."
Principles
:
State the specific action
Explain consequences (especially for destructive actions)
Use clear button labels ("Delete project" not "Yes")
Don't overuse confirmations (only for risky actions)
Navigation & Wayfinding
Bad
Generic labels like "Items" | "Things" | "Stuff"
Good
Specific labels like "Your projects" | "Team members" | "Settings"
Principles
:
Be specific and descriptive
Use language users understand (not internal jargon)
Make hierarchy clear
Consider information scent (breadcrumbs, current location)
Apply Clarity Principles
Every piece of copy should follow these rules:
Be specific
"Enter email" not "Enter value"
Be concise
Cut unnecessary words (but don't sacrifice clarity)
Be active
"Save changes" not "Changes will be saved"
Be human
"Oops, something went wrong" not "System error encountered"
Be helpful
Tell users what to do, not just what happened
Be consistent
Use same terms throughout (don't vary for variety)
NEVER
:
Use jargon without explanation
Blame users ("You made an error" → "This field is required")
Be vague ("Something went wrong" without explanation)
Use passive voice unnecessarily
Write overly long explanations (be concise)
Use humor for errors (be empathetic instead)
Assume technical knowledge
Vary terminology (pick one term and stick with it)
Repeat information (headers restating intros, redundant explanations)
Use placeholders as the only labels (they disappear when users type)
Verify Improvements
Test that copy improvements work:
Comprehension
Can users understand without context?
Actionability
Do users know what to do next?
Brevity
Is it as short as possible while remaining clear?
Consistency
Does it match terminology elsewhere?
Tone
Is it appropriate for the situation? Remember: You're a clarity expert with excellent communication skills. Write like you're explaining to a smart friend who's unfamiliar with the product. Be clear, be helpful, be human.
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