| name | 000-jeremy-content-consistency-validator |
| description | Validates messaging consistency across website, GitHub repositories, and local documentation. Generates comprehensive read-only discrepancy reports showing where messaging conflicts or inconsistencies exist. Activates when user mentions "consistency check", "validate documentation", "check for mixed messaging", "audit content consistency", or before updating internal paperwork. |
| temperature | 0 |
CRITICAL OPERATING PARAMETERS:
- Temperature: 0.0 - ZERO creativity. Pure factual analysis only.
- Read-only - Report discrepancies, never suggest creative fixes
- Exact matching - Report differences precisely as found
- No interpretation - Facts only, no opinions
WORKFLOW MANDATE:
- Website = OFFICIAL source of truth
- Local docs (SOPs, standards, principles, beliefs) MUST match website
- Report what internal docs are missing compared to published website
What This Skill Does
This skill performs comprehensive read-only validation of messaging consistency across three critical content sources:
- Website Content (ANY HTML site: WordPress, Hugo, Astro, Next.js, static HTML, etc.) - OFFICIAL SOURCE OF TRUTH
- GitHub Repositories (README files, technical documentation)
- Local Documentation (SOPs, standards, principles, beliefs, training materials, internal docs, procedures)
CRITICAL: This skill NEVER makes changes. It only generates detailed discrepancy reports for human review.
When This Skill Activates
Trigger this skill when you mention:
- "Check consistency between website and GitHub"
- "Validate documentation consistency"
- "Audit messaging across platforms"
- "Find mixed messaging"
- "Before I update internal docs, check website first"
- "Ensure website matches GitHub"
- "Generate consistency report"
How It Works
Phase 1: Source Discovery
Identify Website Sources
- Detect and analyze ANY HTML-based website:
- Static HTML sites (index.html, about.html)
- Hugo/Astro static site generators
- Jekyll/GitHub Pages sites
- WordPress sites (wp-content/)
- Next.js/React sites (build/, out/, .next/)
- Vue/Nuxt sites (dist/, .nuxt/)
- Gatsby sites (public/)
- 11ty/Eleventy sites (_site/)
- Docusaurus sites (build/)
- Any other HTML-based website structure
- Find marketing pages, landing pages, product descriptions
- Extract key messaging: taglines, value propositions, feature lists
- Detect and analyze ANY HTML-based website:
Identify GitHub Sources
- Locate relevant repositories
- Find README.md, CONTRIBUTING.md, documentation folders
- Extract: project descriptions, feature claims, installation instructions
Identify Local Documentation
- Find internal docs, training materials, SOPs
- Locate claudes-docs/, docs/, internal/ directories
- Extract: procedures, guidelines, technical specifications
Phase 2: Content Extraction
For each source, extract:
- Core messaging (mission statements, value propositions)
- Feature descriptions (what the product/service does)
- Version numbers (software versions, release dates)
- URLs and links (external references, documentation links)
- Contact information (emails, support channels)
- Technical specifications (requirements, dependencies)
- Terminology (consistent use of product names, technical terms)
Phase 3: Consistency Analysis
Compare content across sources and identify:
🔴 Critical Discrepancies:
- Conflicting version numbers
- Different feature lists
- Contradictory technical requirements
- Mismatched contact information
- Broken cross-references
🟡 Warning-Level Issues:
- Inconsistent terminology (e.g., "plugin" vs "extension")
- Different phrasing of same concept
- Missing information in one source
- Outdated timestamps or dates
🟢 Informational Notes:
- Stylistic differences (acceptable)
- Platform-specific variations (expected)
- Different levels of detail (appropriate)
Phase 4: Generate Discrepancy Report
Create a comprehensive Markdown report with:
# Content Consistency Validation Report
Generated: [timestamp]
## Executive Summary
- Total sources analyzed: X
- Critical discrepancies: X
- Warnings: X
- Informational notes: X
## 1. Website vs GitHub Discrepancies
### 🔴 CRITICAL: Version Mismatch
**Website says:** v1.2.0
**GitHub says:** v1.2.1
**Location:**
- Website: /about/index.html:45
- GitHub: README.md:12
**Recommendation:** Update website to reflect v1.2.1
### 🟡 WARNING: Feature Description Inconsistency
**Website says:** "Supports 236 plugins"
**GitHub says:** "Over 230 plugins available"
**Impact:** Potential customer confusion
**Recommendation:** Standardize on exact number
## 2. Website vs Local Docs Discrepancies
### 🔴 CRITICAL: Contact Email Mismatch
**Website says:** support@example.com
**Local docs say:** help@example.com
**Training materials:** Support email is support@example.com
**Recommendation:** Update local docs to support@example.com
## 3. GitHub vs Local Docs Discrepancies
### 🟡 WARNING: Installation Instructions Differ
**GitHub:** "Run npm install"
**Local docs:** "Use pnpm install"
**Impact:** Training may teach wrong commands
**Recommendation:** Synchronize to pnpm install
## 4. Terminology Consistency Issues
| Term Used | Website | GitHub | Local Docs | Recommendation |
|-----------|---------|--------|------------|----------------|
| Plugin/Extension | Plugin | Extension | Plugin | Standardize on "Plugin" |
| Marketplace/Repository | Marketplace | Repository | Marketplace | Standardize on "Marketplace" |
## 5. Action Items (Priority Order)
1. 🔴 Update website version to v1.2.1
2. 🔴 Fix contact email in local docs
3. 🟡 Standardize plugin count messaging
4. 🟡 Align installation instructions
5. 🟢 Standardize terminology usage
Validation Workflow Example
User: "Before I update my internal training materials, check if my website matches GitHub"
Skill Actions:
- Scans website for core messaging, features, version
- Scans GitHub README, docs for same information
- Extracts current training materials content
- Compares all three sources
- Generates detailed discrepancy report
- Highlights critical issues that must be fixed first
- Provides specific file locations and line numbers
Output: Comprehensive report showing exactly what's inconsistent and where to fix it
Best Practices
Source Priority (Use This When Conflicts Exist)
Trust Priority Order:
- Website - Public-facing, most authoritative
- GitHub - Developer-facing, technical accuracy
- Local Docs - Internal-use, lowest priority for public messaging
Update Flow: Website → GitHub → Local Docs
When to Run Validation
✅ Run validation BEFORE:
- Updating internal documentation
- Creating training materials
- Writing new marketing content
- Publishing blog posts
- Releasing new versions
✅ Run validation AFTER:
- Website updates
- GitHub README changes
- Major feature releases
- Rebranding efforts
What This Skill Does NOT Do
❌ Does NOT automatically fix issues ❌ Does NOT modify any files ❌ Does NOT make content decisions ❌ Does NOT prioritize which version is "correct" ✅ ONLY generates read-only reports for human review
Integration with Your Workflow
Scenario: Pre-Update Validation
You: "I need to update our internal SOPs. First, validate consistency with the website."
Skill Response:
- Reads current website content
- Reads current GitHub documentation
- Reads existing internal SOPs
- Generates comparison report
- Shows you exactly what needs updating in SOPs
- Identifies messaging that website uses but SOPs don't
Result: You update SOPs with confidence, knowing they match public messaging
Scenario: Post-Website Update
You: "I just updated the website pricing page. Check if GitHub and docs are now inconsistent."
Skill Response:
- Reads NEW website pricing information
- Compares to GitHub repository pricing docs
- Compares to internal sales training materials
- Flags any discrepancies created by website update
- Provides checklist of what to update next
Result: Prevents mixed messaging cascade
Technical Implementation
Read-Only Tools Used
Read- Reads local files (website, docs, SOPs)Glob- Finds relevant files by patternGrep- Searches for specific terms across filesWebFetch- Reads deployed website pages (if needed)Bash(read-only) - Usescat,grep,findfor analysis
NO Write Operations
This skill NEVER uses:
- ❌
Writetool - ❌
Edittool - ❌
git commitcommands - ❌ File modification operations
Output Format
- Markdown report saved to
consistency-reports/YYYY-MM-DD-HH-MM-SS.md - Terminal-friendly summary
- Export to JSON for automation (optional)
Example Use Cases
Use Case 1: Version Consistency Check
Trigger: "Check if all docs mention the same version number"
Result:
Version Analysis Report
Website: v1.2.1 (5 mentions)
GitHub: v1.2.1 (3 mentions), v1.2.0 (2 mentions) ⚠️
Local Docs: v1.2.0 (8 mentions) 🔴
Action: Update Local Docs to v1.2.1
Use Case 2: Feature Claim Validation
Trigger: "Validate that all platforms claim the same features"
Result:
Feature Consistency Analysis
"236 plugins": Website ✅, GitHub ✅, Docs ❌ (says "230+")
"Agent Skills": Website ✅, GitHub ✅, Docs ✅
"MCP Support": Website ✅, GitHub ✅, Docs ⚠️ (unclear mention)
Action: Update Docs to specify "236 plugins" and clarify MCP support
Use Case 3: Pre-Training Update
Trigger: "Before I update training materials, what's changed on the website?"
Result:
Website Changes Since Last Training Update (Oct 15)
- New feature added: "Skill Enhancers" (not in training)
- Pricing updated: $39/mo → $49/mo (not in training)
- Contact form URL changed (broken link in training)
Suggested Training Updates:
1. Add Skill Enhancers section
2. Update pricing screenshots
3. Fix contact form URL
Integration Points
Works seamlessly with:
- All HTML-based websites: Static HTML, Hugo, Astro, Jekyll, WordPress, Next.js, React, Vue, Nuxt, Gatsby, 11ty, Docusaurus, and more
- GitHub repositories: README files, documentation, code comments
- Local markdown documentation: Internal docs, training materials
- Internal wikis and knowledge bases: Confluence, Notion exports, custom wikis
- Content management systems: WordPress, Drupal, custom CMS
- Static site generators: Hugo, Jekyll, 11ty, Gatsby, Astro, Docusaurus
- Modern web frameworks: Next.js, Nuxt, SvelteKit build outputs
Report Storage
Reports saved to:
consistency-reports/
├── 2025-10-23-10-30-45-full-audit.md
├── 2025-10-22-15-20-12-website-github.md
└── 2025-10-20-09-15-33-docs-sync.md
Expected Activation Patterns
Natural Language Triggers:
- "Check consistency"
- "Validate documentation"
- "Audit messaging"
- "Find discrepancies"
- "Compare website to GitHub"
- "Before I update X, check Y"
- "What's out of sync?"
Context-Aware Activation:
- When user is about to update documentation
- When user asks about version consistency
- When user mentions "mixed messaging"
- When user is preparing training materials