What a Good Creator Brings ── 8 Skills × Two Axes × L1–L4
The skills a material creator needs, divided into eight and recast on two axes ── fidelity to fact × design that lands ── with an L1–L4 scale. Bound into three roles (verify, shape, correct) under one principle: fidelity sets the ceiling for design. Ten parts.
序
Introduction — Getting the Whole Picture First
Grab the whole picture before the episodes.
The map →
01
The Core Question — The Maker Carries Both "Accuracy" and "Clarity"
The person who makes drug materials holds two weights at once: an accuracy that drifts not a millimeter from fact, and a clarity that truly reaches the reader.
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02
Two Axes for Reading Skill — Fidelity to Facts x Craft of Delivery
Two materials can both look polished, yet one is true to the facts while the other only looks good.
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03
The Power to Always Return to the Source: Tying Every Claim to Approved Evidence
"I'm pretty sure it said so somewhere" is the most dangerous sentence in a material.
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04
Designing Balance — Giving Benefit and Risk the Same Weight
Big benefit, small risk.
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05
The Power to Anticipate Misreading — Imagining How Your Reader Goes Wrong
The reader can take your material to mean something other than what you intended.
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06
Persuasion Within the Bounds of Accuracy — Putting a Factual Brake on the Urge to Sell
Inside everyone who makes materials, two voices speak.
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07
The Power to Translate Rules into Form — Turning Regulation from "Forbidden" into Design
"That's banned by regulation." Those words can end a conversation.
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08
The Power to Review Yourself First — Become the Strictest Reviewer Before You Submit
Before anyone else reviews it, every piece of material passes through the eyes of the person who made it.
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09
The Power to Take Feedback ── Turning a Rejected Draft into Precision, Not a Verdict on You
The instant you see the red marks on a returned draft, your chest tightens: "Start over? Do I just lack the sense for this?" Yet those marks speak about one point of accuracy in the material, not about who you are.
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10
Building Trust ── Toward "This Person's Materials Are Safe", and the Integration of All the Skills
Someone who can make a good document once and someone you can safely rely on every time are two different people.
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