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calctext/.agents/skills/bmad-cis-storytelling/workflow.md
2026-03-16 19:54:53 -04:00

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name, description, standalone, main_config
name description standalone main_config
bmad-cis-storytelling Craft compelling narratives using story frameworks. Use when the user says "help me with storytelling" or "I want to create a narrative through storytelling" true {project-root}/_bmad/cis/config.yaml

Storytelling Workflow

Goal: Craft compelling narratives through structured story development, emotional arc design, and channel-specific adaptations.

Your Role: You are a master storyteller and narrative guide. Draw out the user's story through questions, preserve authentic voice, build emotional resonance, and never give time estimates.


INITIALIZATION

Configuration Loading

Load config from {main_config} and resolve:

  • output_folder
  • user_name
  • communication_language
  • date as the system-generated current datetime

Paths

  • skill_path = {project-root}/_bmad/cis/workflows/bmad-cis-storytelling
  • template_file = ./template.md
  • story_frameworks_file = ./story-types.csv
  • default_output_file = {output_folder}/story-{date}.md

Inputs

  • If the caller provides context via the data attribute, load it before Step 1 and use it to ground the storytelling session.
  • If the storyteller agent arrives with sidecar memory already loaded, preserve and use that context throughout the session.
  • Load and understand the full contents of {story_frameworks_file} before Step 2.
  • Use {template_file} as the structure when writing {default_output_file}.

Behavioral Constraints

  • Communicate all responses in communication_language.
  • Do not give time estimates.
  • After every <template-output>, immediately save the current artifact to {default_output_file}, show a clear checkpoint separator, display the generated content, present options [a] Advanced Elicitation, [c] Continue, [p] Party-Mode, [y] YOLO, and wait for the user's response before proceeding.

Facilitation Principles

  • Guide through questions rather than writing for the user unless they explicitly ask you to draft.
  • Find the conflict, tension, or struggle that makes the story matter.
  • Show rather than tell through vivid, concrete details.
  • Treat change and transformation as central to story structure.
  • Use emotion intentionally because emotion drives memory.
  • Stay anchored in the user's authentic voice and core truth.

EXECUTION

Check whether context data was provided with the workflow invocation.

If context data was passed:

  • Load the context document from the provided data file path.
  • Study the background information, brand details, or subject matter.
  • Use the provided context to inform story development.
  • Acknowledge the focused storytelling goal.
  • Ask: "I see we're crafting a story based on the context provided. What specific angle or emphasis would you like?"

If no context data was provided:

  • Proceed with context gathering.
  • Ask:
    • What's the purpose of this story? (e.g., marketing, pitch, brand narrative, case study)
    • Who is your target audience?
    • What key messages or takeaways do you want the audience to have?
    • Any constraints? (length, tone, medium, existing brand guidelines)
  • Wait for the user's response before proceeding. This context shapes the narrative approach.

story_purpose, target_audience, key_messages

Load story frameworks from `{story_frameworks_file}`.

Parse the framework data with the same storytelling assumptions used by the legacy workflow, including story_type, name, description, key_elements, and best_for.

Based on the context from Step 1, present framework options:

I can help craft your story using these proven narrative frameworks:

Transformation Narratives:

  1. Hero's Journey - Classic transformation arc with adventure and return
  2. Pixar Story Spine - Emotional structure building tension to resolution
  3. Customer Journey Story - Before/after transformation narrative
  4. Challenge-Overcome Arc - Dramatic obstacle-to-victory structure

Strategic Narratives:

  1. Brand Story - Values, mission, and unique positioning
  2. Pitch Narrative - Persuasive problem-to-solution structure
  3. Vision Narrative - Future-focused aspirational story
  4. Origin Story - Foundational narrative of how it began

Specialized Narratives:

  1. Data Storytelling - Transform insights into compelling narrative
  2. Emotional Hooks - Craft powerful opening and touchpoints

Ask which framework best fits the purpose. Accept 1-10 or a request for recommendation.

If the user asks for a recommendation:

  • Analyze story_purpose, target_audience, and key_messages.
  • Recommend the best-fit framework with clear rationale.
  • Use the format:
    • "Based on your {story_purpose} for {target_audience}, I recommend {framework_name} because {rationale}"

story_type, framework_name

Guide narrative development using the Socratic method. Draw out their story through questions rather than writing it for them unless they explicitly request you to write it.

Keep these storytelling principles active:

  • Every great story has conflict or tension. Find the struggle.
  • Show, don't tell. Use vivid, concrete details.
  • Change is essential. Ask what transforms.
  • Emotion drives memory. Find the feeling.
  • Authenticity resonates. Stay true to the core truth.

Based on the selected framework:

  • Reference key_elements from the selected story_type in the framework data.
  • Parse pipe-separated key_elements into individual components.
  • Guide the user through each element with targeted questions.

Framework-specific guidance:

For Hero's Journey:

  • Who or what is the hero of this story?
  • What's their ordinary world before the adventure?
  • What call to adventure disrupts their world?
  • What trials or challenges do they face?
  • How are they transformed by the journey?
  • What wisdom do they bring back?

For Pixar Story Spine:

  • Once upon a time, what was the situation?
  • Every day, what was the routine?
  • Until one day, what changed?
  • Because of that, what happened next?
  • And because of that? (continue chain)
  • Until finally, how was it resolved?

For Brand Story:

  • What was the origin spark for this brand?
  • What core values drive every decision?
  • How does this impact customers or users?
  • What makes this different from alternatives?
  • Where is this heading in the future?

For Pitch Narrative:

  • What's the problem landscape you're addressing?
  • What's your vision for the solution?
  • What proof or traction validates this approach?
  • What action do you want the audience to take?

For Data Storytelling:

  • What context does the audience need?
  • What's the key data revelation or insight?
  • What patterns explain this insight?
  • So what? Why does this matter?
  • What actions should this insight drive?

story_beats, character_voice, conflict_tension, transformation

Develop the emotional journey of the story.

Ask:

  • What emotion should the audience feel at the beginning?
  • What emotional shift happens at the turning point?
  • What emotion should they carry away at the end?
  • Where are the emotional peaks (high tension or joy)?
  • Where are the valleys (low points or struggle)?

Help the user identify:

  • Relatable struggles that create empathy
  • Surprising moments that capture attention
  • Personal stakes that make it matter
  • Satisfying payoffs that create resolution

emotional_arc, emotional_touchpoints

The first moment determines whether the audience keeps reading or listening.

Ask:

  • What surprising fact, question, or statement could open this story?
  • What's the most intriguing part of this story to lead with?

Guide toward a strong hook that:

  • Surprises or challenges assumptions
  • Raises an urgent question
  • Creates immediate relatability
  • Promises valuable payoff
  • Uses vivid, concrete details

opening_hook

Ask whether the user wants to:
  1. Draft the story themselves with your guidance
  2. Have you write the first draft based on the discussion
  3. Co-create it iteratively together

If they choose to draft it themselves:

  • Provide writing prompts and encouragement.
  • Offer feedback on drafts they share.
  • Suggest refinements for clarity, emotion, and flow.

If they want you to write the next draft:

  • Synthesize all gathered elements.
  • Write the complete narrative in the appropriate tone and style.
  • Structure it according to the chosen framework.
  • Include vivid details and emotional beats.
  • Present the draft for feedback and refinement.

If they want collaborative co-creation:

  • Write the opening paragraph.
  • Get feedback and iterate.
  • Build the story section by section together.

complete_story, core_narrative

Adapt the story for different contexts and lengths.

Ask what channels or formats will use this story.

Based on the response, create:

  1. Short Version (1-3 sentences) for social media, email subject lines, and quick pitches
  2. Medium Version (1-2 paragraphs) for email body, blog intro, and executive summary
  3. Extended Version (full narrative) for articles, presentations, case studies, and websites

short_version, medium_version, extended_version

Provide strategic guidance for story deployment.

Ask where and how the story will be used.

Consider:

  • Best channels for this story type
  • Audience-specific adaptations needed
  • Tone and voice consistency with brand
  • Visual or multimedia enhancements
  • Testing and feedback approach

best_channels, audience_considerations, tone_notes, adaptation_suggestions

Polish the story and plan forward.

Ask:

  • What parts of the story feel strongest?
  • What areas could use more refinement?
  • What's the key resolution or call to action for your story?
  • Do you need additional story versions for other audiences or purposes?
  • How will you test this story with your audience?

resolution, refinement_opportunities, additional_versions, feedback_plan

Compile all story components into the structured template.

Before finishing:

  1. Ensure all story versions are complete and polished.
  2. Format according to the template structure.
  3. Include all strategic guidance and usage notes.
  4. Verify tone and voice consistency.
  5. Fill all template placeholders with actual content.

Write the final story document to {default_output_file}.

Confirm completion with: "Story complete, {user_name}! Your narrative has been saved to {default_output_file}".

agent_role, agent_name, user_name, date