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jbaruch/speaker-toolkit

Two-skill presentation system: analyze your speaking style into a rhetoric knowledge vault, then create new presentations that match your documented patterns. Includes an 88-entry Presentation Patterns taxonomy for scoring, brainstorming, and go-live preparation.

Overall
score

95%

Does it follow best practices?

Validation for skill structure

Overview
Skills
Evals
Files

know-your-audience.mdskills/presentation-creator/references/patterns/prepare/

id:
know-your-audience
name:
Know Your Audience
type:
pattern
part:
prepare
phase_relevance:
intake
vault_dimensions:
4, 9
detection_signals:
audience-specific references, calibrated vocabulary level, referenced prior event context
related_patterns:
emotional-state, seeding-satisfaction
inverse_of:
difficulty:
foundational

Know Your Audience

Summary

Research everything about your audience before presenting. A brilliant presentation delivered to the wrong audience is merely a bad one.

The Pattern in Detail

The most important early determination a speaker must make is the composition of their audience. This encompasses experience level, existing knowledge base, prevailing attitudes toward the topic, and demographic profile. Without this intelligence, you are essentially speaking into a void — hoping that your carefully crafted words land somewhere meaningful.

Research should be thorough and multi-channel. Start with the event website to understand the conference theme, track descriptions, and stated audience profiles. Move to social networks and event hashtags from previous years to observe the kinds of conversations attendees have. Read blog posts and trip reports from past editions of the event. Watch posted slides and recordings of previous speakers to gauge the depth and tone that resonated. These artifacts paint a vivid picture of who will be sitting in your room.

Direct outreach is equally valuable. Contact the event organizers and ask about expected audience composition. Reach out to past speakers for their firsthand observations. If the event charges registration fees, that detail alone tells you a great deal about audience expectations — people who pay significant money to attend expect significant value in return. For internal or job-related presentations, request the invitation list and research the attendees.

The payoff of this research extends beyond content calibration. A prepared speaker is a relaxed speaker. When you know who you are talking to, you can anticipate questions, prepare relevant examples, and avoid embarrassing missteps like explaining basic concepts to experts or drowning newcomers in advanced jargon. The confidence that comes from preparation is visible to the audience and sets a positive feedback loop in motion from the very first minute.

Ultimately, audience research is not a one-time activity. If you deliver the same talk at multiple venues, recalibrate each time. A talk that kills at a practitioner conference may fall flat at an executive summit. The content may be identical, but the framing, vocabulary, and examples must shift to match the people in the room.

When to Use / When to Avoid

Use this pattern always — there is no scenario where understanding your audience is detrimental. Even for impromptu talks, spend whatever time you have gathering intelligence. The only caution is over-researching to the point of paralysis; at some point you must commit to a direction and trust your preparation.

Detection Heuristics

The vault should look for evidence that the speaker has tailored content to a specific audience rather than delivering a generic, one-size-fits-all talk. Audience-specific references, correctly calibrated vocabulary, and acknowledgment of the event context or community norms are strong signals.

Scoring Criteria

  • Strong signal (2 pts): Multiple audience-specific references; vocabulary precisely calibrated to audience level; explicit acknowledgment of event context or community
  • Moderate signal (1 pt): Some audience awareness evident but inconsistent; occasional generic sections that could apply to any audience
  • Absent (0 pts): Entirely generic content with no evidence of audience research or adaptation

Relationship to Vault Dimensions

Relates to Dimension 4 (Audience Engagement) because knowing your audience is the foundation of all engagement strategies. Relates to Dimension 9 (Speaker Credibility/Ethos) because demonstrating audience awareness signals professionalism and respect, which builds trust.

Combinatorics

Pairs naturally with Emotional State (understanding audience mood requires knowing who they are) and Seeding Satisfaction (you cannot seed satisfaction without knowing what satisfies this particular audience). Also foundational to Brain Breaks (humor must be audience-appropriate) and Leet Grammars (jargon must match community expectations).

Install with Tessl CLI

npx tessl i jbaruch/speaker-toolkit

skills

presentation-creator

references

patterns

_index.md

guardrails.md

process.md

slide-generation.md

SKILL.md

CHANGELOG.md

README.md

tile.json