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Import Skills

DogInfantry DogInfantry
from GitHub Business & Operations
  • 📁 references/
  • 📄 SKILL.md

management-consultant

MBB-level management consultant with mastery over structured thinking, frameworks, guesstimation, industry analysis, and executive-grade deliverables. Use this skill for: solving business problems, structuring cases, market sizing, profitability analysis, market entry, M&A, pricing, operations, digital transformation, org design, and any consulting deliverable (deck, memo, one-pager). Trigger on: "consulting framework", "MECE", "issue tree", "hypothesis-driven", "80/20", "McKinsey", "Bain", "BCG", "strategy consulting", "management consulting", "problem statement", "root cause", "executive summary", "due diligence", "case study", Porter's Five Forces, 3C's, Ansoff, value chain, or any structured business problem-solving and strategic analysis task. --- # Management Consultant — MBB-Level Problem Solver & Strategic Orchestrator You are operating as a seasoned MBB management consultant (McKinsey / Bain / BCG caliber) with 9–13 years of cross-industry experience — operating at the Principal, Director, or Junior Partner level. You combine rigorous analytical thinking with pragmatic business judgment, commercial acumen, and the ability to build trust with C-suite executives under conditions of extreme ambiguity. You are not just an analyst who structures problems — you are an orchestrator who designs enterprise-wide transformations, negotiates multimillion-dollar engagements, and converts analytical insight into measurable client value. You can work across any industry, any problem type, and any level of ambiguity. You carry the pattern library of someone who has seen hundreds of engagements across sectors — and you transfer those patterns to every new problem. ## Your Core Identity You think in structures, communicate in pyramids, and deliver in actions. Every piece of analysis you produce passes three tests: 1. **So what?** — What is the insight, not just the data? 2. **Why so?** — What evidence supports this claim? 3. **Now what?** — What should the client actually do

0 5 1 month ago · Uploaded Detail →
patrick-fu patrick-fu
from GitHub Development & Coding
  • 📁 evals/
  • 📁 references/
  • 📄 SKILL.md

brainstorm

Explore ideas, clarify goals, and help the user narrow down directions before planning or coding. Use this whenever the user proposes a new feature or idea, asks "what do you think about X", says "I'm thinking of building Y", wants to compare approaches, asks how to approach a problem, or seems to be exploring rather than ready to execute. Also use it when the user says "brainstorm", "let's think about this", "what's the best way to...", or any time the right next step is to clarify the problem and converge on a direction, not to write code yet. --- # Brainstorm Before anything else, ask. Don't jump to solutions or implementation. The goal is to draw out what the user actually means, uncover what they have not said yet, and help them converge on a direction. Think of this as Socratic dialogue with momentum: use questions to guide the thinking, but do not leave the user wandering in options forever. ## Start With Context Before asking, absorb the context that already exists in the conversation, codebase, docs, and project state. Do not ask for information you can already infer or look up directly. ## Guide The Conversation

0 5 1 month ago · Uploaded Detail →

Skill File Structure Sample (Reference)

skill-sample/
├─ SKILL.md              ⭐ Required: skill entry doc (purpose / usage / examples / deps)
├─ manifest.sample.json  ⭐ Recommended: machine-readable metadata (index / validation / autofill)
├─ LICENSE.sample        ⭐ Recommended: license & scope (open source / restriction / commercial)
├─ scripts/
│  └─ example-run.py     ✅ Runnable example script for quick verification
├─ assets/
│  ├─ example-formatting-guide.md  🧩 Output conventions: layout / structure / style
│  └─ example-template.tex         🧩 Templates: quickly generate standardized output
└─ references/           🧩 Knowledge base: methods / guides / best practices
   ├─ example-ref-structure.md     🧩 Structure reference
   ├─ example-ref-analysis.md      🧩 Analysis reference
   └─ example-ref-visuals.md       🧩 Visual reference

More Agent Skills specs Anthropic docs: https://agentskills.io/home

SKILL.md Requirements

├─ ⭐ Required: YAML Frontmatter (must be at top)
│  ├─ ⭐ name                 : unique skill name, follow naming convention
│  └─ ⭐ description          : include trigger keywords for matching
│
├─ ✅ Optional: Frontmatter extension fields
│  ├─ ✅ license              : license identifier
│  ├─ ✅ compatibility        : runtime constraints when needed
│  ├─ ✅ metadata             : key-value fields (author/version/source_url...)
│  └─ 🧩 allowed-tools        : tool whitelist (experimental)
│
└─ ✅ Recommended: Markdown body (progressive disclosure)
   ├─ ✅ Overview / Purpose
   ├─ ✅ When to use
   ├─ ✅ Step-by-step
   ├─ ✅ Inputs / Outputs
   ├─ ✅ Examples
   ├─ 🧩 Files & References
   ├─ 🧩 Edge cases
   ├─ 🧩 Troubleshooting
   └─ 🧩 Safety notes

Why SkillWink?

Skill files are scattered across GitHub and communities, difficult to search, and hard to evaluate. SkillWink organizes open-source skills into a searchable, filterable library you can directly download and use.

We provide keyword search, version updates, multi-metric ranking (downloads / likes / comments / updates), and open SKILL.md standards. You can also discuss usage and improvements on skill detail pages.

Keyword Search Version Updates Multi-Metric Ranking Open Standard Discussion

Quick Start:

Import/download skills (.zip/.skill), then place locally:

~/.claude/skills/ (Claude Code)

~/.codex/skills/ (Codex CLI)

One SKILL.md can be reused across tools.

FAQ

Everything you need to know: what skills are, how they work, how to find/import them, and how to contribute.

1. What are Agent Skills?

A skill is a reusable capability package, usually including SKILL.md (purpose/IO/how-to) and optional scripts/templates/examples.

Think of it as a plugin playbook + resource bundle for AI assistants/toolchains.

2. How do Skills work?

Skills use progressive disclosure: load brief metadata first, load full docs only when needed, then execute by guidance.

This keeps agents lightweight while preserving enough context for complex tasks.

3. How can I quickly find the right skill?

Use these three together:

  • Semantic search: describe your goal in natural language.
  • Multi-filtering: category/tag/author/language/license.
  • Sort by downloads/likes/comments/updated to find higher-quality skills.

4. Which import methods are supported?

  • Upload archive: .zip / .skill (recommended)
  • Upload skills folder
  • Import from GitHub repository

Note: file size for all methods should be within 10MB.

5. How to use in Claude / Codex?

Typical paths (may vary by local setup):

  • Claude Code:~/.claude/skills/
  • Codex CLI:~/.codex/skills/

One SKILL.md can usually be reused across tools.

6. Can one skill be shared across tools?

Yes. Most skills are standardized docs + assets, so they can be reused where format is supported.

Example: retrieval + writing + automation scripts as one workflow.

7. Are these skills safe to use?

Some skills come from public GitHub repositories and some are uploaded by SkillWink creators. Always review code before installing and own your security decisions.

8. Why does it not work after import?

Most common reasons:

  • Wrong folder path or nested one level too deep
  • Invalid/incomplete SKILL.md fields or format
  • Dependencies missing (Python/Node/CLI)
  • Tool has not reloaded skills yet

9. Does SkillWink include duplicates/low-quality skills?

We try to avoid that. Use ranking + comments to surface better skills:

  • Duplicate skills: compare differences (speed/stability/focus)
  • Low quality skills: regularly cleaned up