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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

leet-grammars.mdskills/presentation-creator/references/patterns/prepare/

id:
leet-grammars
name:
Leet Grammars
type:
pattern
part:
prepare
phase_relevance:
content
vault_dimensions:
7, 10
detection_signals:
correct use of community jargon, insider references, specialized vocabulary deployed accurately
related_patterns:
analog-noise, brain-breaks
inverse_of:
tower-of-babble
difficulty:
advanced

Leet Grammars

Summary

Use specialized jargon, slang, or insider language correctly to bond with your audience and establish credibility as a peer.

The Pattern in Detail

Every community develops its own language — specialized terminology, slang, abbreviations, in-jokes, and cultural references that distinguish insiders from outsiders. Leet Grammars is the deliberate and accurate use of this insider language to establish yourself as a member of the audience's community rather than an outsider talking at them. When deployed correctly, it is one of the most powerful credibility-building tools available to a speaker.

The term itself comes from "leet speak" (1337 5p34k), the stylized language of internet culture, but the pattern applies far beyond that specific domain. Every technical community has its equivalent: Kubernetes engineers say "k8s," Ruby developers talk about "gems" and "Rake tasks," data scientists reference "feature engineering" and "model drift." Business communities have their own vocabularies: "synergy" and "leverage" in corporate contexts, "burn rate" and "runway" in startup culture. Academic communities speak in citations and methodological frameworks. The specific words differ, but the social function is identical — correct usage signals belonging.

The risk of Leet Grammars is proportional to its power. If you use community language incorrectly — mispronouncing a key term, using jargon in the wrong context, referencing a meme that the community has moved past — it is the single fastest way to lose your audience irrevocably. The audience shifts from "this person is one of us" to "this person is pretending to be one of us," and recovering from that perception is nearly impossible. Even small cultural errors hurt credibility. Calling it "a SQL database" versus "an SQL database" signals your community affiliation (or lack thereof). Pronouncing "kubectl" reveals whether you have actually used it.

The key principle is authenticity. Only use insider language for communities you genuinely belong to. If you are presenting to a community you are less familiar with, do your research thoroughly (Know Your Audience) and err on the side of using less jargon rather than risking incorrect usage. It is far better to be perceived as a knowledgeable outsider who speaks clearly than as a poser who butchers the community's language.

When you do commit to stylized or insider language, embrace it fully. Half-measures are worse than abstinence. A speaker who casually drops one piece of slang and then reverts to formal language creates cognitive dissonance — the audience wonders whether the slang was deliberate or accidental. If you are going to speak the community's language, speak it fluently throughout. This does not mean every sentence must be jargon-laden, but the jargon you do use should feel natural and effortless, as though you could not imagine using any other words.

When to Use / When to Avoid

Use Leet Grammars when presenting to a community whose language you genuinely know and can deploy accurately. It is especially powerful at community conferences, meetups, and internal team presentations. Avoid when presenting to mixed audiences where insider language would exclude segments, when you are not confident in your accuracy, or when the community norms favor plain language over jargon.

Detection Heuristics

The vault should look for specialized vocabulary used correctly and naturally. Insider references that demonstrate genuine community membership, technical terms deployed with precision, and cultural references that resonate with the target audience are all positive signals.

Scoring Criteria

  • Strong signal (2 pts): Community jargon used correctly and naturally throughout; insider references resonate; speaker demonstrates genuine membership in the audience's community
  • Moderate signal (1 pt): Some specialized vocabulary present but used cautiously; speaker demonstrates familiarity with the community but not deep membership
  • Absent (0 pts): Generic vocabulary only; no community-specific language; speaker could be addressing any audience

Relationship to Vault Dimensions

Relates to Dimension 7 (Technical Depth/Accuracy) because correct use of specialized vocabulary demonstrates genuine technical knowledge. Relates to Dimension 10 (Creativity/Originality) because skillful deployment of community language shows creative communication ability.

Combinatorics

Pairs with Analog Noise (authentic personal touches reinforce community membership signals) and Brain Breaks (insider humor is the most effective break type). The inverse is Tower of Babble — using jargon incorrectly or excessively to the point of incomprehensibility.

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