Nufar Gaspar
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It can be the weekly status updates or the meeting prep, stakeholders emails, and so on.
It can be decisions and memos, you name it.
And I believe that every knowledge worker easily has 20 or 30 of these patterns.
And each one can be written as when I say some kind of a trigger, do some kind of a process using the following sources and produce output in this format.
So without a skill, you're basically re-explaining the format every time, you paste the same sources every time, you complain that AI writes in a weird voice, and you never bother to teach it your voice.
So a skill fixes that, and if you write it once, well, it fires forever.
Again, I want to encourage an MVP skill, not a perfect skill to begin with.
The first version is always not perfect and kind of wrong, but you use it for a week and then you notice when it's off and what it needs to improve.
You patch it and then a few weeks in, that skill is writing better first draft than you'd ever get from starting over each time.
For our beloved chief of staff agent, a bunch of skills that you can consider will be pre-read, that will produce a one-page pre-read for any meeting.
It can be daily brief that scans everything that is open on my inbox or Slack or calendar and gives me what is on my plate for today.
Voice match that helps AI write like you.
Commitment tracker, and I can think of many others, and I'm sure you can.
And of course, if you want to go deeper on skills, we did a skill masterclass episode in this show a few weeks ago.
Memory is the next layer.
And this is where every agentic tool company is probably investing extensively right now.
And that is happening for a very good reason, because it is clearly one of the biggest unlocks.
It's kind of the core part of what makes OpenClaw feel like magic.
Cloud Code recently added auto memory and Kerser has project level memory and things are changing on a daily basis in the memory front.
And because it's so important, every tool is racing to improve and they frequently copy each other's breakthroughs.