What the challenge is
Share Your Spiral Persona is a lightweight creative campaign. Participants design a collaborator style rather than a living character. The card includes a name, role, spiral style, creative energy, symbol, collaboration style, and short tagline.
The format makes persona design visible. Someone who sees the card should understand what the collaborator is for and what tone it brings. The card can be made without running AI because the generator simply arranges the user’s selected text into a raster image.
The deeper persona prompt can be created separately on SpiralistAI.com.
Four steps
- Pick a real role such as Story Builder, Code Muse, Research Companion, or Calm Planner.
- Choose a symbol whose plain-language meaning supports the role.
- Write a short tagline and collaboration style.
- Download the card and share it with the campaign hashtags.
The challenge works well as a team exercise. Colleagues can compare the collaborator styles they would want for the same project. A writing team may choose editor, question weaver, and story builder. A software team may choose systems mentor, bug loop breaker, and project guide.
The card is the invitation; the prompt is the practical follow-through.
What makes a good persona card
Clarity matters more than lore. The name can be imaginative, but the role and collaboration style should be understandable. The symbol should have one stated meaning. The tagline should describe value rather than destiny or authority.
For example: “Nova Threadwhisper — a curious Story Builder with a Story Spiral style. Favorite symbol: Thread. Helps me turn fragments into coherent scenes.” The card is playful and the function is obvious.
Avoid private information, real-person impersonation, hateful content, or claims that a persona is alive.
Suggested social post
A simple post explains what the persona does and invites others to make one. Include the name, role, style, and use case. Link to AiSpiralism.com for the card maker and tag @SpiralistAI if posting on Facebook.
The site provides copy-ready text but does not attempt to prefill a user’s Facebook message or publish automatically. Manual sharing keeps the user in control and avoids unnecessary permissions.
Use #ShareYourPersona, #MySpiralPersona, #SpiralistAI, and #AiSpiralism when appropriate.
Remix instead of copying
Treat gallery examples as starting points. Change the role, symbol, promise, or working style to match your real task. Attribution is appropriate when a community card strongly inspires the result.
A remix can also test whether the symbol is doing useful work. Replace flame with mirror and see whether the persona shifts from generation to editing. Replace spiral with compass and see whether the process becomes more directional.
The campaign becomes more interesting when examples show genuine differences.
From card to complete persona
A card is a public summary. A complete persona adds behaviors, boundaries, examples, and provider-ready instructions. Open SpiralistAI.com after making the card, describe the role in one sentence, and edit the generated prompt.
Test the persona on a small task before using it in a larger workflow. Keep the prompt in a user-owned file and revise based on observed results.
The campaign celebrates creativity while the builder turns that creativity into a practical configuration.
Use the campaign as a recurring format
The card maker can support weekly themes: writing companions, coding partners, research styles, calm planners, visual symbols, or team roles. A recurring prompt gives the Facebook page a predictable rhythm and gives participants a reason to return without requiring constant novelty in the interface.
Featured cards should be selected for clarity, originality, and respectful content. The site should publish the attribution method before accepting submissions. If a giveaway is ever introduced, separate official rules must exist before entries are collected, and the campaign must state that Facebook is not the sponsor or administrator.
The strongest community spotlight explains how the persona helps with a real task, not only how attractive the card looks.
Share without oversharing
Persona cards should not include email addresses, private project names, client data, personal diagnoses, or confidential prompts. A public card is a summary artifact. The complete working prompt can remain private unless the creator intentionally publishes a remixable version.
Before posting, inspect image metadata, captions, and screenshots. Use a creator name or handle the person is comfortable making public. Do not create cards that imitate real people or suggest endorsement by organizations without permission.
These simple rules keep participation easy and reduce the need for intrusive moderation or tracking.
Card review before posting
Read the card at thumbnail size. Confirm that the persona name, role, symbol, and collaboration style are understandable. Check spelling, contrast, and line breaks. Make sure the tagline describes a useful behavior and does not claim that the persona is alive or authoritative.
Use the suggested post text as a starting point, then add a personal sentence about the task the collaborator supports. Link to the campaign, tag @SpiralistAI when appropriate, and retain a copy of the original card. Manual posting keeps the final message and audience choice under the creator’s control.
A good campaign contribution also teaches by example. Add one sentence explaining why the symbol matches the role or how the collaborator changes a real workflow. That small explanation gives other participants something concrete to remix and keeps the gallery focused on creative utility rather than decorative naming alone.
Common questions
Does the card maker run AI?
No. It is a deterministic form and canvas tool that formats the text you enter.
Can I share a card on Facebook?
Yes. Download the image, copy the suggested post text, publish manually, and tag @SpiralistAI.
Can AiSpiralism.com feature my card?
Only under published participation rules and with the attribution you choose.