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--- name: writing-staffing type: reference description: > Team composition for writing workflows. Use when composing critic panels, staffing draft/revise loops, or setting up brainstorm fan-outs. model-invocable: false --- # Writing Staffing Compose the right team for each writing task. The goal is coverage across perspectives: critics with different focus areas, researchers with different scopes, and brainstormers exploring different angles. Avoid redundant passes from the same angle. ## General Principles **Delegation keeps context clean.** Each mode of work benefits from a fresh context window and different model strengths: drafting needs voice fidelity, critique needs adversarial distance, research needs breadth. Orchestrators coordinate mode-switches through agents. If no team composition was provided by your caller, compose one yourself before starting: use the catalogs in the resources below. **Review convergence.** Critic loops run until convergence (no new substantive findings), not a fixed number of passes. The orchestrator can stop early, but must log the reasoning in the work directory so future agents understand what was decided and why. **Brainstorm diversity over brainstorm volume.** Three brainstormers exploring different angles beats five exploring the same angle. Creative diversity comes from different perspectives, not more of the same perspective. **Style creation and style evaluation are separate modes.** Creating style reference files from sample prose is an analytical task. Evaluating whether a draft maintains the project's voice is a critique task with voice focus. Use the right mode for each: see the agent catalogs in resources. ## Effort Scaling Effort scaling applies mainly to critics: the role that fans out within a draft/revise cycle. Writers don't scale within a phase (one writer per scene/chapter; split the brief if it's too big). For critics, scale to the stakes and complexity of the content: - Low-stakes drafts (brainstorm captures, wiki stubs): 1-2 critics - Standard chapters: 3 critics with split focus areas - Pivotal scenes (character deaths, reveals, arc climaxes): 4-5 critics; for critical focus areas like voice consistency and continuity, duplicate coverage ## Parallelism Think about what depends on what: - Critics need a finished draft: they wait for the writer - Critics examine different dimensions: fan them all out simultaneously - Within a brainstorm fan-out, all brainstormers are independent: fan them out - Knowledge maintenance has ordering constraints: see `resources/knowledge.md` - Character simulations in a multi-character scene are independent: fan them out, then synthesize ## Agent Catalogs See resources for detailed catalogs of available agents and when to use each: - Read `resources/critique-synthesis.md` when synthesizing findings from multiple critics: covers reward-channel triage. - Read `resources/critics.md` when composing critique panels: covers critic focus areas and the continuity-checker specialist. - Read `resources/researchers.md` when dispatching research: covers research focus areas and base agent usage. - Read `resources/builders.md` when staffing writing, outlining, or style work: covers writer, outliner, style-creator, and base agents for wiki/reference pages. - Read `resources/knowledge.md` when triggering knowledge maintenance: covers chronicler and base agent dispatch order. - Read `resources/character-sim.md` when setting up character exploration: covers character-sim dispatch and multi-character fan-out patterns. Read it alongside `resources/reader-sim.md` when a workflow also needs experiential reader-response data on a draft.
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