--- title: "How to Get Claude to Match Your Tone and Style" description: "Making AI responses sound like you, not like a corporate manual" --- ## The Problem Claude's given you some great content, but it sounds like it was written by a very polite, very professional robot. The ideas are solid, but the voice is all wrong. You need something that sounds like you - whether that's casual and conversational, professional but warm, sarcastic and witty, or whatever your natural style is. Maybe you're working on: - An email that needs to sound professional but not stuffy - Social media content that should match your usual voice - A blog post that feels authentically yours - A proposal that reflects your communication style - Any writing where voice matters as much as content The problem isn't that Claude can't match different styles - it's that it doesn't know *your* style unless you show it what you want. ## Solution 1: Show, Don't Just Tell The most effective way to get Claude to match your style is to show examples of your actual writing alongside what you want. ### Pattern: "Here's how I usually write, now help me with [new thing]" **Try this:** "I'm working on [type of content] and I want it to match my usual style. Here are a couple examples of how I normally write [similar content]: [Paste 2-3 examples of your actual writing] Now can you help me write [specific thing] in a similar tone and style?" **Real example:** "I'm working on an email to a client and I want it to match my usual style. Here are a couple examples of how I normally write client emails: [Example 1: Your actual email] [Example 2: Another actual email] Now can you help me write an email about [specific topic] in a similar tone and style?" ### Pattern: "Here's my voice, here's the generic version, now match my voice" **Try this:** "I need help rewriting this to sound more like me. Here's the current version: [Paste the generic/formal version] And here's how I usually write about similar topics: [Paste your example] Can you rewrite the first one to match the style of the second?" ## Solution 2: Give Claude Your Style Guidelines Sometimes examples aren't enough - you need to explicitly describe your voice. ### Pattern: "My writing style is [specific characteristics]" **Be specific about:** - **Formality level**: "conversational but professional" vs "casual and friendly" vs "formal but approachable" - **Sentence structure**: "I use short sentences" vs "I like longer, flowing sentences" vs "I mix short and long for rhythm" - **Word choice**: "I avoid jargon" vs "I use industry terms" vs "I explain technical stuff in simple terms" - **Personality**: "slightly sarcastic" vs "enthusiastic and positive" vs "thoughtful and measured" **Example:** "My writing style is conversational and direct. I use short paragraphs, avoid corporate buzzwords, and I'm not afraid to start sentences with 'And' or 'But.' I like to use specific examples rather than abstract concepts, and I tend to be slightly irreverent but not unprofessional. Can you rewrite this email to match that style?" ## Solution 3: Use Iterative Feedback Getting your style right usually takes a few back-and-forth exchanges. Don't expect perfection on the first try. ### Pattern: "That's closer, but adjust [specific thing]" **After Claude's first attempt, try:** - "That's much better! Can you make it a bit more [specific adjustment]?" - "Good direction, but I would never say [specific phrase]. Can you try [alternative approach]?" - "Perfect tone, but can you make the sentences shorter/longer?" - "I love the content, but it needs to be more casual/formal/conversational" **Example conversation:** You: "Can you rewrite this to be more conversational?" Claude: [Rewrites it] You: "That's better, but I'd never use the phrase 'best practices.' I'd probably say something like 'what actually works' instead. Also, can you break up that long paragraph?" Claude: [Adjusts it] You: "Perfect! That sounds exactly like me." ### Pattern: "Here's what I'd change about this version" **Try this:** "This is really close to my style. The only things I'd change are: - [Specific change 1] - [Specific change 2] - [Specific change 3] Can you adjust those while keeping everything else the same?" ## Solution 4: Style Guidelines for Different Content Types Your voice might shift depending on what you're writing. Be explicit about context. ### For professional emails: "I want this to sound professional but warm. I usually start emails with something personal, use conversational language but avoid slang, and I always end with something that invites response rather than just 'let me know if you have questions.'" ### For social media: "I want this to sound like my usual social media voice: casual, sometimes funny, but not trying too hard. I use contractions, sometimes incomplete sentences for emphasis, and I like to end with questions to start conversations." ### For blog posts or articles: "I want this to match my usual blog style: conversational but informative, like I'm talking to a smart friend. I use 'you' a lot, include personal examples, and I'm not afraid to have opinions." ### For presentations or formal writing: "I want this to sound authoritative but not stiff. I use clear, direct language, avoid corporate buzzwords, and I like to include specific examples rather than abstract concepts." ## Solution 5: Common Style Adjustments Here are quick fixes for the most common style mismatches: ### "Make it less formal" "Can you rewrite this to be more conversational? Use contractions, shorter sentences, and make it sound like I'm talking to a friend rather than giving a presentation." ### "Make it more professional without being stuffy" "Can you adjust the tone to be more professional but still approachable? Keep it conversational but avoid slang and casual phrases." ### "Make it sound more confident" "Can you rewrite this to sound more decisive? Less 'I think maybe' and more 'here's what I recommend.'" ### "Make it warmer/more personal" "Can you add some personality to this? Maybe include a brief personal example or make it sound less like a manual and more like advice from someone who's been there." ### "Make it shorter and punchier" "Can you tighten this up? Shorter sentences, fewer words, more direct." ## Advanced: Training Claude on Your Voice Over Time Once you start working with Claude regularly on writing, you can reference previous conversations: **Try:** "Remember how we worked on my email style yesterday? Can you write this new email in that same voice?" Or: "You nailed my blog voice in that post we worked on about [topic]. Can you use that same style for this new post?" ## Quick Reference: Style-Matching Conversation Starters **For showing examples:** "Here's how I usually write [type of content]: [examples]. Now help me write [new thing] in the same style." **For describing your voice:** "My writing style is [specific characteristics]. Can you [write/rewrite] this to match?" **For iterative refinement:** "That's closer, but can you make it more [specific adjustment]?" "Good direction, but I'd never say [phrase]. Try [alternative] instead." **For different content types:** "I want this to sound like my usual [email/social media/blog] voice: [description]" **For common adjustments:** "Make it less formal/more professional/more confident/warmer/shorter" Remember: Getting your voice right is usually a conversation, not a single request. Don't be afraid to give specific feedback and ask for adjustments until it sounds like you. --- ## What's Next? **If this helped:** Try [How to Maintain Your Voice in Collaborative Writing](/how-to/maintain-voice-writing/) for keeping authenticity in longer collaborations. **If you're still getting robotic responses:** Check [How to Fix It When Claude Completely Misses the Point](/how-to/fix-misunderstandings/) for conversation recovery techniques. **For advanced tone control:** [How to Use Persona Prompts for Focused Perspectives](/how-to/persona-prompts/) lets you request specialized voices and perspectives. **See also:** - [Tutorial 1: From Awkward Small Talk to AI Collaboration](/tutorials/first-conversation/) - Experience tone matching in practice - [Why Conversations Work Better Than Commands](/explanations/conversations-vs-commands/) - Understand why this collaborative approach works **◀ Previous:** [How to Ask When You Don't Know What You Want](05-howto-ask-when-uncertain.md) | **[Table of Contents](/)** | **Next:** [How to Fix It When Claude Completely Misses the Point](07-howto-fix-misunderstandings.md) ▶