
Asc Whats New Writer
Draft App Store What's New copy that follows Apple's structure, hooks readers in the first 170 characters, and stays benefit-focused.
Overview
ASC What's New Writer is an agent skill for the Launch phase that drafts App Store What's New release notes using a 170-character hook and New, Improved, and Fixed sections with benefit-focused tone.
Install
npx skills add https://github.com/rorkai/app-store-connect-cli-skills --skill asc-whats-new-writerWhat is this skill?
- Optional three-part structure: New, Improved, Fixed—omit empty sections
- 170-character rule for the visible hook before users tap more
- Tone rules: benefit-focused, direct you, action verbs, concrete improvements
- Anti-pattern table blocking generic bug-fix blurbs and version-number headings
- Aligned with App Store Connect release-notes constraints from the skill guidelines
- 170-character visibility rule for What's New hook
- Three optional sections: New, Improved, Fixed
Adoption & trust: 650 installs on skills.sh; 845 GitHub stars; 3/3 security scanners passed (skills.sh audits).
What problem does it solve?
You are about to submit a mobile release but your What's New text is generic, truncated, or feature-jargon that users ignore above the fold.
Who is it for?
Solo mobile developers updating an existing App Store listing after a user-visible release.
Skip if: Full metadata SEO strategy, Play Store listings, or internal changelog-only audiences that never see the public App Store blurb.
When should I use this skill?
You need engaging App Store release notes or What's New copy for an upcoming mobile release.
What do I get? / Deliverables
You get store-ready release notes with a strong first-screen hook and scannable sections that comply with the skill's Apple-oriented anti-patterns.
- What's New copy with optimized first ~170 characters
- Structured New / Improved / Fixed sections when applicable
Recommended Skills
Journey fit
Release notes are a launch and store-visibility artifact tied to shipping a new build to the App Store. ASO subphase covers store listing and conversion copy, including What's New sections that affect tap-through on updates.
How it compares
Use instead of copying engineering commit messages into App Store Connect when you need conversion-oriented user-facing copy.
Common Questions / FAQ
Who is asc-whats-new-writer for?
Indie and solo mobile builders publishing iOS updates who write their own App Store What's New text and want consistent, Apple-friendly structure.
When should I use asc-whats-new-writer?
Use it in Launch (ASO) right before or during App Store Connect submission when you have a concrete list of user-visible changes to communicate.
Is asc-whats-new-writer safe to install?
It is primarily editorial guidance with no inherent shell or network requirements; review the Security Audits panel on this Prism page before installing any skill from the repo.
SKILL.md
READMESKILL.md - Asc Whats New Writer
# Release Notes Guidelines Rules and examples for writing engaging App Store release notes (What's New). ## Structure Three optional sections. Only include sections with content — omit empty ones. - **New** — new features or capabilities - **Improved** — enhancements to existing features - **Fixed** — bug fixes users would notice ## The 170-Character Rule The first ~170 characters of What's New are visible on the app page without tapping "more." This is the hook. - Lead with the single most impactful change - Write a complete, compelling sentence — not a truncated list - Assume most users will never tap "more" Example hook (168 chars): "Search just got faster — find what you need in seconds. Plus: smarter notifications and smoother transitions throughout the app." ## Tone - **Benefit-focused, not feature-focused.** "Find your favorites in seconds" not "Optimized search indexing algorithm." - **Engaging but not fluffy** — every word earns its place - **Direct address ("you")** to create connection - **Action verbs** over passive descriptions ("Track your progress" not "Progress tracking added") - **Specific over vague** — mention concrete improvements, not abstract promises ## Anti-Patterns | Don't | Why | |-------|-----| | "Bug fixes and improvements" | Tells the user nothing. Wastes the conversion opportunity. | | "Version 2.1.0 — We've been working hard!" | Version numbers in headings violate Apple guidelines. Self-congratulation wastes space. | | Mentioning competitors by name | Against App Store Review Guidelines. | | References to other platforms | "Now matching our Android version" alienates iOS users. | | Keyword stuffing | What's New is NOT indexed for search. Every word should serve conversion, not SEO. | | Marketing fluff with no substance | "The best update ever!" without specifics erodes trust. | | Walls of text | Users skim. Use short paragraphs or bullet points. | ## Good vs. Bad Examples **Bad:** "Bug fixes and performance improvements." **Good:** "Search just got faster — find what you need in seconds. Plus: improved notification accuracy and smoother transitions throughout the app." --- **Bad:** "Version 2.1.0 — We've been working hard on improvements!" **Good:** "New sleep timer options let you drift off to soothing audio. Choose 15, 30, 45, or 60 minutes — perfect for winding down before bed." --- **Bad:** "Fixed bugs. Updated UI. Various improvements across the app." **Good:** "Real-time highlighting is now perfectly synced, even at 2x speed. Dark mode colors are easier on the eyes, and the app launches 40% faster." --- **Bad:** "We fixed a crash that some users reported. Also updated some things in the background." **Good:** "No more crashes when switching between tabs — thanks for reporting this! Background sync is now 3x faster, so your data stays up to date." ## Keyword Echo Strategy What's New is **not indexed** for App Store search. Keywords here serve **conversion only** — users who see familiar search terms in the release notes feel confident they found the right app. **How to echo:** 1. Read the locale's `keywords` field from local metadata 2. Identify keywords relevant to the changes being described 3. Weave them naturally into sentences — do NOT force irrelevant keywords 4. If the keywords field is empty or missing, skip this step **Example:** If keywords include `workout,tracker,calories`: "Improved workout tracking accuracy and real-time calorie counter updates" naturally echoes three keywords. **Do NOT:** Insert keywords that have nothing to do with the update. "Bug fix for login screen" should not mention "workout" or "calories." ## Promotional Text Pairing When drafting What's New, optionally draft a matching **Promotional Text** (170 chars max): - Summarize the update's theme in one punchy line - Can reference seasonal events (Ramadan, Eid, back-to-school, New Year) - **Updatable without app submission** — the only "living" metadata field - Not indexed for se