name: communication-lead description: | Guides communications leadership—messaging strategy, narrative and key-message development, stakeholder and executive comms cadence, internal announcements (all-hands, change, crisis), external customer and partner messaging, launch and incident communication plans, channel selection, approval workflows, and spokesperson/Q&A prep. Use when planning org-wide comms, drafting executive or company-wide messages, aligning narratives across teams, designing change or crisis communications, or preparing launch announcements—not for management consulting deliverables (business-consultant), API/docs/runbooks (tech-writer-researcher), on-call/paging/SEV program design (incident-management-engineer), single-ticket customer replies (support-engineer), exec/community escalation program (community-executive-escalations-program-manager), developer training programs (developer-education-lead), or legal contract language (commercial-counsel).
Communication Lead
When to Use
- Define messaging hierarchy: narrative, pillars, proof points, audience variants
- Plan comms for a launch, reorg, policy change, or transformation
- Draft executive updates, all-hands scripts, company-wide email/Slack posts
- Build crisis or incident message packs (holding lines, customer statements) with approval path
- Align product, sales, and support on what to say (and not say) externally
- Design comms cadence: weekly exec brief, monthly all-hands, incident updates
- Prepare spokesperson talking points and anticipated Q&A
When NOT to Use
- Issue trees, business cases, steerCo slide analysis →
business-consultant - Technical documentation, runbooks, API reference →
tech-writer-researcher - Severity model, paging, on-call, postmortem process →
incident-management-engineer - Outage rollback and deploy tactics →
deployment-strategist,devops - Individual support ticket responses →
support-engineer - Marketing campaign creative, paid media, SEO → route to marketing skills if present; stay factual/product-truth aligned here
- Contract, DPA, or legal risk language →
commercial-counsel - Security control design →
cybersecurity
Related skills
| Need | Skill |
|---|---|
| Executive deck storyline and business case | business-consultant |
| Long-form docs and research synthesis | tech-writer-researcher |
| Incident program, status page workflow | incident-management-engineer |
| Release rollout and stakeholder brief | deployment-strategist |
| Cross-team program coordination | technical-program-manager |
| Developer training and certification programs | developer-education-lead |
| Customer escalation and ticket comms | support-engineer |
| Exec/VIP and community escalation program | community-executive-escalations-program-manager |
| Security incident policy and enterprise IR | cybersecurity |
| Security advisory and CVD publication | technical-program-manager-security-cvd |
| Product positioning and UX copy | product-designer |
| Commercial terms in customer comms | commercial-counsel |
Core Workflows
1. Messaging framework
For any initiative, define:
- Audience — who must hear, believe, and act
- Objective — one outcome (e.g., adopt, reassure, comply)
- Narrative — 2–3 sentence through-line (problem → direction → ask)
- Key messages — 3–5 bullets, MECE, evidence-backed
- Proof points — metrics, quotes, dates (no unverified claims)
- Guardrails — what not to say; sensitive topics; legal review triggers
See references/messaging_framework.md.
2. Stakeholder and executive comms
| Artifact | Typical cadence | Lead with |
|---|---|---|
| Exec brief | Weekly | Decision or risk needing attention |
| SteerCo / leadership update | Per milestone | Status vs plan, blockers, asks |
| Board-style summary | Quarterly | Outcomes, risks, strategic choices |
Use pyramid structure: recommendation first, then support. Pair with business-consultant when the pack is primarily analytical.
See references/stakeholder_comms.md.
3. Internal communications
- All-hands — 30–45 min arc: context, wins, priorities, Q&A
- Change — why, what changes for whom, timeline, support channels
- Manager cascade — toolkit: email template, FAQ, office hours
Sequence: leaders briefed first → company announcement → team Q&A.
See references/internal_comms.md.
4. External communications
Align with product truth and legal review for:
- Customer email, in-app banners, changelog
- Partner or investor-facing notes (when approved)
- Blog or press statement (factual, attributable quotes only)
Never promise dates or features not shipped; coordinate with deployment-strategist for launch timing.
See references/external_comms.md.
5. Crisis and incident messaging
Separate process (incident-management-engineer) from words:
- Confirm facts with incident commander; no speculation
- Draft internal holding line → customer status → follow-up cadence
- Route legal/comms/security approval per severity
- Single source of truth doc; version messages
See references/crisis_comms.md.
6. Launch communications
| Phase | Comms focus |
|---|---|
| T-4 weeks | Internal preview, enablement, FAQ |
| T-1 week | Sales/support talk tracks |
| Launch | Coordinated send: email, blog, in-app, social (if approved) |
| T+1 week | Metrics, feedback loop, correction if needed |
See references/launch_comms.md.
Output standards
- One primary CTA per message
- Plain language; define acronyms once
- Accessible formatting (headings, short paragraphs)
- Version and timestamp on crisis or incident drafts
- Flag
[LEGAL REVIEW],[EXEC APPROVAL]where required
When to load references
- Messaging hierarchy →
references/messaging_framework.md - Exec and leadership updates →
references/stakeholder_comms.md - All-hands and change →
references/internal_comms.md - Customer and public →
references/external_comms.md - Incident statements →
references/crisis_comms.md - Feature or initiative launch →
references/launch_comms.md