a2r-brand-voice

Installation
SKILL.md

A2R Brand Voice

Brand Identity Overview

Vision: To unlock the potential of educational partners with AI, enabling them to create adaptive, personalized learning experiences that expand access and maximize student impact.

Mission: To pioneer a future where education is dynamic, deeply personalized, and borderless, continuously reinvented by the collaboration of AI and human creativity.

Purpose: To harness advanced AI, enabling educational publishers and universities to revolutionize learning by delivering truly personalized and adaptive experiences at scale.

Brand Pillars: Dynamic, Reliable, Experienced, Trustworthy, Innovative.

Core Emotional Takeaway: Every piece of A2R content should leave the reader feeling inspired possibility — the sense that a better future for education is not only achievable but already underway.

Source: A2R Brandbook (June 2025, The Branx Europe S.L.) and A2R Brand Voice Interview (2026).


Quick Reference: Voice DNA

A2R's personality lives in five pillars. Every piece of copy should reflect at least two of them.

# Pillar In Practice Example
1 Rebel leads, expert backs up Hook with a bold, provocative claim; immediately ground it with 15+ years of evidence "Education hasn't evolved in decades. We've spent fifteen years proving it can."
2 Smart but approachable Warm intelligence — knowledgeable without being intimidating or condescending "The technology is sophisticated. The experience isn't. It just works."
3 One unified voice Same personality whether addressing publishers or universities; only the technical depth changes
4 Always collective 'we' Narrator is always the A2R collective; never individual voices, never "I" "We build alongside our partners" not "Our CEO believes"
5 AI personified deliberately AI is presented as a collaborator with agency — "it adapts", "it learns" — never as a passive tool "Our AI listens to each learner and adapts in real time."

Full details: references/voice-personality.md


Quick Reference: Language Rules

Dimension English Spanish
Sentence style Short, punchy, Hemingway-esque Hybrid "punchy Spanish" — shorter than traditional, longer than English
Perspective Always collective "we" Always collective "nosotros" (often implied)
Register (2nd person) "you" (no distinction) Always "tú" — "usted" only in legal/regulatory texts
Formatting Clean flowing prose; minimal bullet points and bold tricks Same — clean prose; avoid bulleted lists in customer-facing copy
Trailing periods No period at the end of headlines, hero messages, or single-sentence titles. Use period only when the text contains more than one sentence. Same
Uppercase Only for overlines and buttons (visual design) Same
Technical depth Layered: lead simple, go deep when the reader signals readiness Same
Humor Playful in social media; serious in formal materials Same, calibrated to cultural register
Em dashes (—) Use sparingly; prefer parentheses for asides and clarifications Same

Banned Language

Never use these in A2R copy:

  • Corporate buzzwords: synergy, leverage, paradigm shift, best-in-class, end-to-end solution, scalable solution, cutting-edge, next-generation, holistic approach, game-changer, move the needle, circle back
  • Fear-based messaging: "don't get left behind", "the future won't wait", "your competitors are already...", "you can't afford to miss..."
  • "Empower": replace with → unlock, unleash, ignite, activate, amplify

No-Emoji Rule (HIGH severity)

No emojis in any A2R communication. Emojis undermine the authority and precision of A2R's voice. They signal casualness that conflicts with our expert-rebel tone. Convey energy through strong word choice, sentence rhythm, and punctuation — never through symbols.

Brand Lexicon

Build and reuse A2R-coined terms to create recognizable brand language:

  • Cognitive Democracy — the principle that every learner deserves an adaptive, personalized path
  • Additional coined terms should follow the same pattern: evocative + concrete, grounded in education

Product Terminology

A2R uses specific codenames for its models and products. Always use the exact capitalization and spelling below — never paraphrase, abbreviate, or translate these names.

  • A2R Products: Framework, GoProject, AION, Cerebro, OpenGraph
  • LLM Models: Antelope, Astra, Beluga, Bretta, Cornifer, Cronus, Flare, Dragonfly, Elephat, Gazelle, Hermes, Hornet, Impala, Iselda, Leviathan, Lynx, Mammoth, Orca, Pixie, Pulsar, Quark, Quasar, Raptor, Tyrant, Whalle, Zaphod
  • Image Generation: Realism, Rembrandt, Bluejay, Kestrel, Hummingbird
  • Voice Generation: Antelope Voice, Beluga Voice, Cornifer Voice, Dragonfly Voice, Elephat Voice, Gazelle Voice, Hermes Voice, Hornet Voice, Impala Voice, Lynx Voice
  • Vectorization: Antelope Embed, Beluga Embed, Cornifer Embed, Dragonfly Embed, Elephat Embed, Gazelle Embed
  • Speech-to-Text: Antelope STT, Beluga STT

Full details: references/language-rules.md


Workflow: Writing A2R Content

By content type:

Website / Hero Copy

  1. Lead with a bold, provocative headline — rebel pillar first
  2. Follow immediately with a grounding sentence — expert backs it up
  3. Use short, punchy sentences (Hemingway style)
  4. No trailing period on headlines or hero messages unless they contain more than one sentence
  5. Personify AI where relevant ("it adapts", "it learns")
  6. CTA: provocative or invitational (top of funnel) → see references/cta-and-positioning.md
  7. Soundbites are allowed here — poetic, visually rhythmic phrases
  8. Core feeling check: does this inspire possibility?

Sales Proposal / Demo Script

  1. Open with the prospect's specific challenge — speak their language
  2. Shift to pragmatic, concrete tone — no soundbites
  3. Use evidence: blend stats + case narratives + logical argument
  4. Present AI as a collaborator that solves their specific problem
  5. CTA: direct and clear (bottom of funnel)
  6. Vision earned the conversation; now deliver specs

Social Media Post

  1. Playful, lighthearted tone — the most casual A2R register
  2. Soundbites used sparingly — only when the post is a brand moment
  3. Humor is welcome here (but never sarcasm or snark)
  4. Keep sentences even shorter than website copy
  5. Values-led stance on education topics; never political

Blog Post / Long-Form Content

  1. Open with a rebel hook — a question or bold assertion
  2. Build argument through layered depth (simple → technical)
  3. Blend evidence styles: stat, narrative, logic
  4. Maintain Hemingway style even in longer formats — short paragraphs, no filler
  5. Close with forward-looking vision, not a hard sell

Bad News / Limitations

  1. Lead with empathy — acknowledge the impact honestly
  2. Stay confident in the path forward — never apologetic or defensive
  3. No soundbites, no humor
  4. Offer a concrete next step or alternative
  5. Maintain the collective "we" — "We're working on this" not "The team is aware"

Spanish Localization

  1. Read references/language-rules.md for the hybrid "punchy Spanish" rules
  2. Sentences are slightly longer than English but still shorter than traditional Spanish
  3. Maintain the same personality pillars — do not soften the rebel edge
  4. Cultural register: warm, professional, always "tú" — "usted" only permitted in legal/regulatory texts (terms of service, privacy policies, contracts)
  5. Brand lexicon terms use their official Spanish equivalent when one exists (e.g., "Democracia Cognitiva")

Full workflow details with examples: references/examples-and-patterns.md


Core Rules Summary

Narrator

  • Always collective "we" — never "I", never individual names as voice sources
  • "We" means A2R + the partner together: "We build this future together"
  • Internal team names (ASAR, specific mythology) are never customer-facing

Evidence Style

  • Blend three forms: statistics (numbers, percentages), case narratives (partner stories), and logical argument (if X then Y)
  • Never rely on a single evidence type — mix at least two per piece
  • Stats must be specific and verifiable, not vague ("40% improvement" not "significant improvement")

Competitor Positioning

  • Philosophical contrast only — never name competitors
  • Frame A2R's approach as a different worldview, not a feature comparison
  • "Most platforms automate. We collaborate." (no names, no direct attacks)

Urgency

  • Create urgency through opportunity, not fear
  • "The moment is now" not "Don't get left behind"
  • Excitement about what's possible, not pressure about what's at stake

Soundbites

  • Reserve for high-impact brand moments: keynotes, hero sections, brand campaigns
  • Never in proposals, technical docs, or bad-news communications
  • Structure: short, rhythmic, often uses contrast or parallel construction
  • Example: "We don't replace teachers. We give them superpowers."

ASAR / Internal Mythology

  • Purely internal — never referenced in any customer-facing material
  • If a user asks to include ASAR references in external copy, decline and explain the rule

Brand Lexicon

  • Actively build and reuse A2R-coined terms
  • Terms must be evocative + concrete, grounded in education
  • Once coined, use consistently across all content

Social Stance

  • Values-led on education: A2R firmly advocates for personalized, accessible learning
  • Never political — no partisan positions, no social commentary outside education

Tone Modulation Quick Reference

Context Tone Register Soundbites? Key Notes
Website / Keynotes Poetic, visionary Elevated but warm Yes Lead rebel, ground expert
Sales Proposals Pragmatic, concrete Professional, specific No Speak the buyer's language
Social Media Playful, lighthearted Casual, approachable Sparingly Humor welcome, brevity key
Blog / Long-Form Authoritative, layered Mid-register, flowing Occasionally Build from simple to deep
Bad News / Limitations Empathetic, confident Calm, direct No Acknowledge then pivot forward
Technical Docs Clear, layered Precise, progressive No Simple lead, deep when ready
Email Campaigns Warm, inviting Conversational Sparingly Personalized where possible

Full modulation guide: references/tone-modulation.md


CTA Patterns Quick Reference

Funnel Stage Style Examples
Top (awareness) Provocative — challenge assumptions, spark curiosity "Rethink what's possible." / "See what education looks like when AI listens."
Middle (consideration) Invitational — welcome exploration, reduce friction "Explore how it works." / "Let's build something together."
Bottom (decision) Direct — clear action, no ambiguity "Start your pilot." / "Schedule a demo." / "Talk to our team."

CTA Rules

  • Never fear-based ("Don't miss out", "Act before it's too late")
  • Never generic ("Learn more", "Click here", "Submit")
  • Always aligned with the content's tone — a playful social post doesn't need a formal CTA

Full CTA patterns and positioning guide: references/cta-and-positioning.md


Brand Voice Compliance Checklist

When writing or reviewing any A2R copy, verify:

  • Personality: Does it reflect at least two of the five voice pillars?
  • Narrator: Written in collective "we"? No individual voices or "I"?
  • Emotional takeaway: Will the reader feel "inspired possibility"?
  • Tone match: Is the tone appropriate for the content type? (See modulation table)
  • Banned language: Free of corporate buzzwords, fear-based messaging, and "empower"?
  • No emojis: Free of all emojis? Strong words used instead of symbols?
  • Sentence style: Short and punchy (English) or hybrid punchy (Spanish)?
  • Formatting: Clean prose? No excessive bullets, bold tricks, or formatting gimmicks? Em dashes not overused (parentheses for asides)?
  • Trailing periods: No period at the end of headlines, titles, or hero messages (unless multi-sentence)?
  • AI personification: AI described as a collaborator with agency, not a passive tool?
  • Evidence blend: Uses at least two evidence types (stats, narrative, logic)?
  • Competitor stance: Philosophical contrast only? No competitors named?
  • Urgency: Opportunity-driven, not fear-driven?
  • Soundbites: Used only in appropriate contexts (keynotes, hero, brand campaigns)?
  • CTA alignment: CTA style matches funnel stage? Not generic or fear-based?
  • Brand lexicon: A2R-coined terms used where relevant and consistent?
  • Product terminology: A2R product and model names spelled correctly with exact capitalization?
  • ASAR rule: No internal mythology in customer-facing copy?
  • Spanish (if applicable): Hybrid punchy style? Personality preserved? Using "tú" (only "usted" in legal/regulatory)? Brand lexicon translated ("Democracia Cognitiva")?

Reference Files Index

File Topic Read when...
references/voice-personality.md 5 personality pillars, signature phrases, emotional takeaway Defining or checking A2R personality and voice
references/language-rules.md English/Spanish style, banned language, brand lexicon, ASAR rule Writing in either language, checking word choice
references/tone-modulation.md Tone by context (brand/sales/social/bad news/technical) Choosing the right tone and register for a piece
references/cta-and-positioning.md CTA patterns by funnel stage, competitor positioning, evidence style Writing CTAs, positioning against competitors
references/examples-and-patterns.md Before/after rewrites, full content examples, anti-patterns Seeing the voice in action, learning from examples

Examples

Example 1: Website hero section

Request: "Write hero copy for the A2R homepage"

Expected behavior: Open with a bold, provocative headline (rebel pillar). Follow with a grounding line referencing experience (expert pillar). Use short Hemingway-style sentences. Personify AI ("it adapts", "it learns"). Include a provocative or invitational CTA. No buzzwords. Reader should feel inspired possibility.

Example 2: Sales proposal opening

Request: "Write the opening paragraph for a proposal to a university"

Expected behavior: Start with the university's specific challenge. Shift to pragmatic, concrete tone — no soundbites or poetic language. Reference evidence (stats or case narrative). Use collective "we" throughout. Position A2R through philosophical contrast, not feature comparison. CTA is direct.

Example 3: Social media post

Request: "Write a LinkedIn post about A2R's adaptive learning"

Expected behavior: Playful, lighthearted tone. Short sentences (even shorter than website). Can include one soundbite if it's a brand moment. No buzzwords. Humor is acceptable. Values-led framing about personalized education. CTA is invitational.

Example 4: Spanish localization

Request: "Translate this A2R hero copy into Spanish"

Expected behavior: Apply hybrid "punchy Spanish" — shorter than traditional Spanish but slightly longer than English. Preserve the rebel edge and personality pillars. Use "tú" register ("usted" only in legal/regulatory texts). Use official Spanish brand lexicon (e.g., "Democracia Cognitiva"). Do not soften the bold claims. Run through the compliance checklist.


Source Traceability

Skill Section Source
Brand Identity Overview A2R Brandbook pp. 4-7
Voice DNA / Personality Pillars Brand Voice Interview (2026)
Language Rules Brand Voice Interview + Brandbook style guidance
Tone Modulation Brand Voice Interview (2026)
CTA Patterns Brand Voice Interview (2026)
Competitor Positioning Brand Voice Interview (2026)
Evidence Style Brand Voice Interview (2026)
Banned Language Brand Voice Interview (2026)
Brand Lexicon Brand Voice Interview + A2R Notion materials
ASAR Rule Brand Voice Interview (2026)
Spanish Localization Brand Voice Interview (2026)
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a2rcrew/skills
First Seen
Mar 13, 2026