Write a conference talk proposal / CFP submission for a tech or developer conference. Use when asked to submit to a CFP, propose a talk, or write a session a...
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name: conference-talk-proposal
description: "Write a conference talk proposal / CFP submission for a tech or developer conference. Use when asked to submit to a CFP, propose a talk, or write a session abstract. Produces a compelling title, abstract, audience takeaways, an outline, and the speaker pitch — tuned to what selection committees actually look for."
homepage: https://mohitagw15856.github.io/pm-claude-skills/skill/conference-talk-proposal.html
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{
"openclaw": { "emoji": "🗣" }
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---
# Conference Talk Proposal Skill
CFP committees skim dozens of submissions; they pick the ones with a clear, specific promise and an obvious
takeaway. This skill turns a talk idea into a **submission that gets accepted** — a sharp title, an abstract
that hooks then delivers, concrete audience takeaways, a credible outline, and the "why me, why this" pitch.
## Required Inputs
Ask for these only if they aren't already provided:
- **The topic & core message** — what the talk is about and the one thing people leave with.
- **Target audience & level** — who it's for (beginners, senior backend, SREs…) and assumed knowledge.
- **The story / evidence** — the real experience, project, data, or failure behind it.
- **Format & length** — talk type and duration (lightning / 30 / 45 min, workshop).
- **Speaker background** (optional) — relevant experience, for the bio/pitch.
## Output Format
### Talk proposal
**Title options (3)** — specific and intriguing; promise a concrete payoff, avoid vague nouns.
**Abstract (the public blurb, ~150 words)** — hook with the problem/tension, state what the talk covers, and end on what the audience walks away able to do. Written to make an attendee *choose this session*.
**Audience takeaways (3–5)** — concrete, action-oriented ("you'll be able to…"), not topics.
**Who this is for** — audience and level, stated plainly.
**Outline** — the talk's arc with rough timings (setup → core content/sections → demo → takeaways/Q&A), so the committee sees it's a real, well-paced talk.
**Notes to organizers (private pitch)** — why this talk, why now, why you're the person to give it; any demo/AV needs.
**Speaker bio** — 2–3 sentences, credibility without bragging.
## Quality Checks
- [ ] The title makes a specific promise; the abstract hooks then says what's covered
- [ ] Takeaways are concrete and action-oriented, not a list of topics
- [ ] Audience and level are explicit, and the content matches them
- [ ] The outline shows a real arc with timings that fit the slot
- [ ] The private pitch answers "why this / why now / why you"
## Anti-Patterns
- [ ] Do not write a vague abstract that could describe any talk — be specific about the payoff
- [ ] Do not list topics as "takeaways" — say what the attendee will be able to do
- [ ] Do not oversell a talk you can't deliver in the time — match scope to the slot
- [ ] Do not ignore audience level — a mismatched talk gets rejected or bombs
- [ ] Do not forget the committee's view — give them the private "why this matters now" pitch
## Based On
Conference CFP practice (clear promise, concrete takeaways, paced outline, the committee's selection lens).
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