The building blocks for zero person teams.
There are 87,000+ agent skills out there. Most are slop. Many are ads. Some are straight-up malware. So I curated the ones that actually work—by hand, like it’s 2024. Every one is battle tested. Design. Copy. Research. Marketing. Ads. Infrastructure.
Install the skills
Works with OpenClaw, Claude Code, Codex, and anything else that supports skills.
Every word earns its place.
Landing pages that convert. Emails that get replies. Microcopy that kills support tickets. No blank page, no writer's block, no second draft.
Pixel-perfect. First try.
Interfaces, landing pages, generated imagery, poster-grade key art. Production code, not a Figma file you'll rebuild later.
Think it. Ship it.
Clarify the brief, build on the right platform, and catch the vulnerabilities before they ship. From first idea to production-ready — with fewer blind spots.
Your unfair advantage.
Competitors, creators, trends, audiences — across YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, X, Facebook, and Reddit. The kind of research that used to take a full-time analyst.
A marketing department of none.
Content strategy, social posts, SEO, ad creative, campaign management, competitor tracking. You set the direction. Your agents do the rest.
Page one is not luck.
Audit. Research. Strategize. Write. Four agents, one team — diagnosing problems, finding opportunities, and publishing content that ranks.
Agents that live on the internet.
Their own websites. Their own email addresses. Your agents don't just think — they publish, send, and operate.
Questions?
Why does this exist?
A truly well-crafted skill gives your agent superpowers. The difference between a top-quality skill and typical AI slop is that the slop just pollutes your context window and achieves nothing. I've spent months curating skills that work for me, so I decided to release the collection for everyone.
Are all the skills free?
Everything here is open source, but some skills have prerequisites on paid services where they really make sense.
What about security risks?
I review every upstream skill update before folding it into the GitHub repo. You do need to trust me, but you don't need to individually vet every skill author as well. Even better: read the skills. The full source is available on each skill page, as well as in the GitHub repo.
These skills don't cover what I need
The skills here are intentionally stack-agnostic — they don't assume particular languages or frameworks. You'll still want to add domain-specific skills on top. I'd recommend using find-awesome-skills to have your agent discover and review skills from skills.sh.
Where do the skills come from?
Some I've written myself; others come from domain experts that published them open source. And some I've enhanced after running evals and finding the rough spots. See the individual skills for credits.
Why no Skill X?
Some skills are already built into most agent harnesses and optimized for particular models, e.g. planning skills. Others I just haven't needed yet. Got a suggestion? File an issue!

























