language
Research and use customer language across Product and Marketing. Sales Safari methodology for finding watering holes, extracting pain language, and creating "OH YEAH!" resonance.
$ Install
git clone https://github.com/majesticlabs-dev/majestic-marketplace /tmp/majestic-marketplace && cp -r /tmp/majestic-marketplace/plugins/majestic-marketing/skills/language ~/.claude/skills/majestic-marketplace// tip: Run this command in your terminal to install the skill
name: language description: Research and use customer language across Product and Marketing. Sales Safari methodology for finding watering holes, extracting pain language, and creating "OH YEAH!" resonance. triggers:
- sales safari
- customer language
- watering hole
- audience language
- voice of customer
- how customers talk
- resonance
- product copy allowed-tools: Read, Write, Edit, Grep, Glob, WebSearch, WebFetch, AskUserQuestion
Customer Language Mastery
Research how your customers actually talk, then use their exact language across Product and Marketing to create instant resonance.
The Core Principle
First Law of Customer Physics: A customer at rest will remain at rest unless you provide a motivating, attention-grabbing force.
Language is that force. Your words must bypass the customer's natural filters by creating resonance โ the "OH YEAH! THAT'S FOR ME!" reaction.
If your language is bland or tries to appeal to everyone, it exerts no gravitational force and gets ignored.
Where Customer Language Applies
| Domain | Examples |
|---|---|
| Product UI | Button labels, error messages, empty states, onboarding |
| Feature Naming | What you call features determines if users understand them |
| Documentation | Guides, tooltips, help text |
| Settings/Options | How you frame choices affects decisions |
| Notifications | Push, email, in-app alerts |
| Marketing | Landing pages, emails, ads, social |
Conversation Starter
Use AskUserQuestion to gather context:
- Who is your target audience? (job title, industry, experience level)
- What problem does your product solve?
- What copy needs work? (Product UI, landing page, feature naming, etc.)
- Do you have existing customer conversations? (support tickets, reviews, interviews)
Part 1: Sales Safari โ Finding Watering Holes
A watering hole is anywhere your target audience gathers to discuss problems, share advice, or seek help.
Watering Hole Keywords
Combine audience terms with these keywords to find communities:
| Category | Keywords |
|---|---|
| Community | forum, community, group, mailing list, chat, Discord, Slack |
| Help-Seeking | help, problems, advice, questions, FAQs, support |
| Learning | tutorial, resources, guide, best practices, how to |
| Evaluation | reviews, comparison, best, vs, alternative |
| Discussion | discussions, sharing, experiences, stories |
| Social | Twitter/X chat, Facebook Group, subreddit, LinkedIn Group |
Search Patterns
[audience term] + forum
[audience term] + community
[audience term] + "I'm struggling with"
[audience term] + "how do you handle"
[audience term] + site:reddit.com
[audience term] + site:news.ycombinator.com
[problem] + "anyone else"
[problem] + "is it just me"
Platform-Specific Searches
| Platform | Search Pattern |
|---|---|
site:reddit.com [audience] [problem] | |
| Hacker News | site:news.ycombinator.com [topic] |
| Stack Overflow | site:stackoverflow.com [technology] [problem] |
| Product Hunt | site:producthunt.com [category] discussions |
| G2/Capterra | site:g2.com [competitor] reviews |
| Twitter/X | [problem] filter:replies min_faves:10 |
Part 2: Extracting Customer Language
Once you find watering holes, extract these language patterns:
1. Pain Language
Words and phrases expressing frustration, anxiety, powerlessness, or uncertainty.
Listen for:
- "I hate when..."
- "It drives me crazy that..."
- "I'm so frustrated with..."
- "Why can't I just..."
- "I've tried everything but..."
- "I'm worried about..."
- "I don't know how to..."
Extract: The exact phrases, not your interpretation.
2. Desire Language
Words expressing what they want but don't have.
Listen for:
- "I wish..."
- "If only..."
- "I just want to..."
- "It would be amazing if..."
- "My dream is..."
3. Jargon & Insider Terms
Every audience has vocabulary that signals belonging.
Types of jargon:
- Technical terms they use (not textbook definitions)
- Abbreviations unique to their world
- Slang that identifies insiders
- Phrases that have specific meaning in context
Why it matters: Using insider language creates instant trust. Wrong language signals "outsider."
4. Recommendation Patterns
How do they give each other advice?
Listen for:
- "You should try..."
- "What worked for me was..."
- "Read this..."
- "Check out..."
- "Think about it this way..."
Use these structures in your copy to feel like peer advice, not sales pitch.
Part 3: Language Extraction Template
When researching, fill this out:
## Language Research: [Audience]
### Watering Holes Found
- [Platform]: [Community name] - [Why relevant]
- [Platform]: [Community name] - [Why relevant]
### Pain Phrases (Exact Quotes)
| Quote | Emotion | Frequency |
|-------|---------|-----------|
| "[exact quote]" | frustrated/anxious/desperate | common/rare |
### Desire Phrases (Exact Quotes)
| Quote | What They Want |
|-------|----------------|
| "[exact quote]" | [interpretation] |
### Insider Jargon
| Term | What It Means to Them |
|------|----------------------|
| [term] | [contextual meaning] |
### Recommendation Patterns
- "[How they give advice]"
- "[Structure they use]"
### Words They NEVER Use
- [terms that signal outsider]
Part 4: Worldview Resonance
Effective language expresses a worldview โ shared beliefs and values.
Take a Stand
Polarizing language attracts the right people and repels the wrong ones.
Weak (appeals to everyone, resonates with no one):
"A better way to manage projects"
Strong (takes a stand):
"Project management for teams who hate project management"
Worldview Crossover
Find the overlap between YOUR worldview and your CUSTOMER'S worldview:
Your Beliefs Customer's Beliefs
\ /
\ /
\ /
[CROSSOVER ZONE]
This is where your
messaging lives
Positioning Through Language
| Audience Type | Language Signals |
|---|---|
| Professional/Enterprise | "controls", "governance", "compliance", "scalable" |
| Startup/Indie | "ship fast", "no bloat", "just works", "for builders" |
| Creative | "beautiful", "craft", "artisan", "curated" |
| Technical | "API-first", "extensible", "open source", "self-hosted" |
| Budget-conscious | "affordable", "free tier", "no hidden fees", "transparent" |
Part 5: The "OH YEAH!" Test
Before shipping any copy, run this test:
Does your language...
| Criterion | โ/โ |
|---|---|
| Use words your customers actually use? | |
| Express a worldview they share? | |
| Address a pain they've expressed (in their words)? | |
| Feel like advice from a peer, not a pitch? | |
| Repel people who aren't your customer? | |
| Make the right person say "That's for me!"? |
Red Flags
- โ Afraid of offending anyone โ too weak
- โ Using industry jargon they don't use โ outsider signal
- โ Describing features, not outcomes โ no resonance
- โ Corporate-speak when audience is casual โ tone mismatch
- โ Casual when audience is professional โ credibility loss
Part 6: Application Examples
Product UI
Before (generic):
Error: Invalid input
After (using customer language):
Hmm, that doesn't look right. Double-check the format?
Before (feature-focused):
Enable notifications
After (outcome-focused, using desire language):
Never miss an update from your team
Feature Naming
Before (technical):
Automated Workflow Engine
After (using customer problem language):
"Set it and forget it" automation
Empty States
Before (bland):
No projects yet
After (using desire language):
Ready to ship something? Create your first project.
Error Messages
Before (blame user):
Invalid email address
After (helpful, peer tone):
That email looks incomplete โ missing something after the @?
Landing Page Headline
Before (feature-focused):
All-in-one project management platform
After (pain language + worldview):
Finally, project management that doesn't feel like a second job
Output Format
When applying this skill, deliver:
## Customer Language Analysis
### Research Summary
- **Watering holes searched:** [list]
- **Quotes extracted:** [count]
- **Key insight:** [one sentence]
### Language Patterns Discovered
**Pain phrases:**
- "[exact quote]" โ Use for: [where to apply]
**Desire phrases:**
- "[exact quote]" โ Use for: [where to apply]
**Insider jargon:**
- [term]: [meaning] โ Use for: [where to apply]
### Recommended Copy Changes
| Location | Before | After | Why |
|----------|--------|-------|-----|
| [UI element/page] | [current] | [recommended] | [language pattern used] |
### "OH YEAH!" Test Results
[Run the test on recommended copy]
When to Use This vs Other Skills
Use language when... | Use other skills when... |
|---|---|
| Researching how customers talk | Need emotional trigger words (power-words) |
| Writing product UI copy | Need full landing page (landing-page-builder) |
| Naming features | Need brand names (namer agent) |
| Improving resonance | Need SEO optimization (seo-audit) |
| Extracting voice of customer | Need to find communities (customer-discovery) |
What This Skill Does NOT Do
- Replace user research interviews
- Guarantee conversion (testing required)
- Provide word lists (see
power-wordsfor that) - Write full marketing campaigns
Repository
