
from rhdp-skills-marketplace12
Guide an agent to create presenter-led Showroom demo modules using a Know/Show structure, scaffolding files and presenter notes for Red Hat Showroom content.
This skill helps an agent produce presenter-led demo modules for the Red Hat Showroom. It guides the agent through a constrained workflow that collects objectives, audience, assets, and references, then generates facilitator-facing AsciiDoc modules that follow the Know/Show structure (business context then step-by-step presenter actions). The skill includes rules for file locations, image conventions, argument patterns, and quality checks so outputs can be written directly into a Showroom repo.
Use this skill when you need a presenter-led demo: creating a new demo module, converting documentation into a demo, or adding facilitator guidance (not learner exercises). Trigger phrases: "create a demo module", "write a Know/Show demo", "build a presenter demo", "create a Showroom demo", or "write a facilitator guide". It's intended for authors with write access to a Showroom repository.
@showroom/docs/SKILL-COMMON-RULES.md conventions and prefers repo templates when presentDesigned for agents that can write files and run repository operations (e.g., Claude Code / Codex-style agents with Write/Run capabilities). The skill expects the orchestrator to clone or operate on a Showroom repo and to use the Write tool for file outputs.
This skill guides an agent through creating Red Hat Showroom demo modules using a Know/Show structure for presenter-led demonstrations. No scripts are bundled — it's purely instructional via a very detailed 12-step SKILL.md workflow. The SKILL.md body is a relative path reference (symlink) rather than inline content, which is a minor architectural concern. Well-organized with clear sequential questioning patterns, argument parsing, and a thorough quality checklist, but limited to the Red Hat/Showroom ecosystem.
Purely instructional skill with no executable scripts. The git clone guidance for GitHub URLs is standard practice. No security concerns whatsoever. The skill is very well-documented with specific anti-patterns, quality gates, and step-by-step workflows. Narrowly targeted at Red Hat demo content creators — high quality for that niche but very limited general appeal.