Skill v1.0.0
currentTrusted Publisher100/100version: "1.0.0" name: content-strategy description: > Analyzes sales data from PayPal and QuickBooks to find top performers and slow movers, layers in seasonality, and produces a prioritized 30-day content brief: what to push, what offers to run, what to hold. Strategic output only — no calendars or assets. Use when the user asks what to post, wants a content plan, asks what's selling, or what to promote this month.
Content Strategy
Status: MVP draftOwner: JJVersion: 0.2.0 · Phase MVPCategory: Marketing & Sales
Quick start
When an SMB owner asks "what should I post this month?" or "what's my content plan?", this skill:
- Pulls sales data from QuickBooks or PayPal (transaction history, product/service revenue by date)
- Identifies patterns — top-selling products, slow movers, seasonal trends
- Layers in context — seasonality (user-provided or industry benchmarks), past performance
- Produces a 30-day brief — ranked recommendations of what to push, what to hold, what offers to consider
- Gets owner approval before the brief feeds into
canva-creatorfor asset generation
The output is strategic only — no calendar scheduling, no creative assets.
Workflow
Step 1: Pre-flight check (QuickBooks only)
If using QuickBooks, verify the business profile is set up:
- Call
company-infoto check ifIndustryis populated - If missing or "Unknown":
- Ask: "I need your business category to pull the right seasonality benchmarks. What industry are you in?" (e.g., retail, services, SaaS)
- Call
quickbooks-profile-info-updatewith the user's industry - Confirm: "Profile updated. Ready to pull your sales data."
- If profile is set, proceed to Step 2
Note: PayPal and Square do not require profile setup.
Step 2: Clarify priorities & metrics
When triggered, ask the user:
- "How do you want me to measure 'top performers'?"
- By total revenue?
- By profit margin?
- By sales velocity (how fast they're selling)?
- Combination of the above?
- "Do you have seasonality patterns in mind?"
- If yes: "Tell me about them" (capture user's known seasonality)
- If no: "I'll use industry benchmarks for your category"
Step 3: Pull and analyze sales data
Fetch data from the authenticated connector (QuickBooks, PayPal, or Square, user's choice):
- Date range: Last 90 days (or full history if <90 days available)
- Extract: Product/service name, date sold, revenue, quantity
Connector-specific notes:
- QuickBooks: Fetch invoice line items via
profit-loss-quickbooks-account(pre-flight sets industry context) - PayPal: Fetch merchant transactions via
list_transactions. Rate-limiting: If you hit rate limits, pause 30 seconds and retry once. If still blocked, gracefully offer: "PayPal is rate-limited. Would you like to switch to QuickBooks or Square instead, or I can continue with historical data I already pulled?" - Square: Requires location ID first. Call
make_api_request(service="locations", method="list")to discover available locations, then fetch orders for each location. Future enhancement: Square integration is stubbed; full path documented inreference/square-integration.md.
Fallback: If <3 months of data, use industry seasonality benchmarks for the SMB's category (e.g., retail, services, e-commerce)
Identify:
- Top 3–5 performers (by user's chosen metric)
- Bottom 3–5 slow movers (consider holding or repositioning)
- Trending up (gaining momentum in last 30 days)
- Trending down (losing momentum)
Step 4: Layer in seasonality
- User-provided: If they shared seasonal patterns, weight recommendations against them
- Industry benchmarks: For categories without strong user data (e.g., "Q1 is strong for tax services")
- Timing: Flag products that should ramp up/down in the next 30 days based on seasonal patterns
Step 5: Build the 30-day brief
Structure:
- Executive summary (1–2 sentences: "Your best sellers are X and Y. Seasonal shift to Z is starting.")
- Push hard (Top 2–3 products + recommended content angle, e.g., "Case study on ROI", "How-to video")
- Hold steady (Middle performers; maintain visibility but no heavy lift)
- Reposition or pause (Slow movers; consider discounting, bundling, or pausing)
- Seasonal opportunities (What's coming next month that you should position for now)
- Recommended offers (Bundle, discount, or free-trial strategy based on data)
Example length: 200–400 words (brief and actionable, not essay-length).
Step 6: Owner approval & iteration
Present the brief to the owner. Ask:
- "Does this match your gut?"
- "Anything to adjust?"
- "Ready to feed this to canva-creator for asset generation?"
Iterate if needed; once approved, return the final brief as structured JSON (ready for downstream tools).
Gotchas & edge cases
See `reference/gotchas.md` for common pitfalls.
Examples
See `reference/examples/` for worked examples (SaaS, retail, services).