
ncklrs/startup-os-skills
52 skills523 installs1.4k starsGitHub
Install
npx skills add https://github.com/ncklrs/startup-os-skillsSkills in this repo
1Proposal Writerproposal-writer is a Startup OS agent skill that teaches a structured method for building proposals that busy decision-makers actually read. It organizes work into seven impact-weighted areas—from core architecture and the executive summary through pricing presentation, statement of work, RFP response strategy, visual formatting, and competitive follow-up. Solo and indie builders use it when they are selling consulting, dev retainers, or productized services and need more than a generic ChatGPT letter: they need anchoring on investment, defensible scope, and differentiation against alternatives. The skill fits naturally after you have clarified offer and price (validate) and when you are actively pursuing deals (grow), but the same framework also supports launch partnerships and operate renewals. Treat it as editorial procedure plus templates rather than a CRM integration—your agent applies the sections, enforces hierarchy of impact labels (CRITICAL vs HIGH), and outputs proposal-ready narrative blocks you can paste into Docs or PandaDoc.472installs2Account ExecutiveAccount Executive is an agent skill from Startup OS that packages how a founder-led or early AE sells B2B: pipeline strategy, relationships, deal execution, account planning, and operational excellence. It treats predictable revenue as a system—qualification, forecasting, multi-threading, and executive engagement—rather than heroic one-call closes. High-impact sections spell out land-and-expand math (lower cost and higher win rates on expansions) and territory thinking so solo builders do not only chase cold outbound while ignoring existing accounts. The skill fits when you are the salesperson and the builder: you need talk tracks, stage definitions, and expansion plays without a RevOps team. Primary shelf is Grow lifecycle work, but scenarios also apply in Validate when testing pricing and ICP with real conversations, and in Launch when turning early design partners into references. Invoke it before pipeline reviews, before executive calls, or when structuring an expansion proposal.1installs3AdrADR is a startup-oriented agent skill for writing Architecture Decision Records using established ADR and MADR methodology. It steers solo builders and small teams to capture context, options, and consequences in Markdown so future-you and agents can reason about why the stack looks the way it does. The skill embeds pointers to definition-of-ready (START), definition-of-done (ECADR), ASR significance testing, and ADR creation best practices—so decisions are neither premature nor endlessly open. Use it when choosing databases, auth models, deployment topology, or module boundaries and you need an auditable log instead of Slack threads. It pairs naturally with planning and review rituals but does not replace security review or load testing; it produces the decision artifact other build and ship skills can reference.1installs4Community BuilderCommunity Builder is an agent skill that structures how solo and indie founders grow through communities: strategy and positioning, picking the right platform, onboarding for first-value moments, rituals and events, UGC, ambassador programs, health metrics, moderation, and DevRel basics. It treats community as a growth channel with explicit impact tiers so you invest first in strategy, platform fit, and activation before scaling programs. Use it when you are standing up a Discord or Slack space, reviving a dead forum, or layering community-led growth on top of SaaS distribution. The skill is advisory and sectional—nine disciplines—rather than automating posts or installs. It pairs well with launch distribution planning and later analytics reviews when you measure engagement ROI. Builders with no audience yet may still use the strategy and platform sections during Validate to decide if community fits their motion.1installs5Competitive Strategistcompetitive-strategist is a startup-os methodology skill that packages how solo and indie builders research rivals, learn from wins and losses, and turn insight into battlecards, positioning, and sales-ready messaging. It is organized into nine impact-ranked areas—competitive research, win/loss analysis, battlecard creation, market landscape, positioning, messaging, feature comparison, sales enablement, and monitoring—so an agent can walk you from raw intelligence to repeatable competitive plays instead of one-off Google searches. Use it when you are evaluating a niche, sharpening differentiation for a landing page, or arming yourself for founder-led sales. It complements validation work (scope and pricing) and launch copy without replacing legal review of comparative claims. Expect structured interviews, pattern identification, maintenance cadence for battlecards, and ecosystem-level mapping rather than automated scrapers or paid intel feeds.1installs6Create Video StartCreate Video Start is an orchestration skill for solo and indie builders who want programmatic marketing or product videos using Remotion inside a Claude Code workflow. Instead of improvising one long chat, it encodes how to run a ordered pipeline: validate step dependencies and gates, invoke each sub-skill with the right CLI flags and tool permissions, and pass artifacts like VIDEO_SPEC.md and scaffold folders forward with explicit format contracts. The bundled rules cover graceful failure handling—retries, recovery, and cleanup—so a broken animation step does not leave half-written project state. Use it when you are beginning a multi-step video build that chains motion-designer, remotion-scaffold, and remotion-animation through the same repo skills. It matters for AEO-minded builders who need repeatable, citable procedures rather than ad-hoc prompts, and who ship content alongside code without a dedicated motion team.1installs7Cs StrategistCS Strategist is an agent skill that packages customer success leadership knowledge for founders who must design retention systems before they can afford a dedicated CS team. It organizes guidance into eight impact-rated areas: organization design and hiring profiles, customer tiering and coverage models, metrics-driven operations with NRR and health scores, operational playbooks from onboarding through renewal, executive relationship programs, CS platform build-vs-buy decisions, value realization and ROI storytelling, and end-to-end customer journey mapping. Solo builders use it when they are moving from founder-led support to repeatable success motions—deciding how to segment SMB self-serve versus high-touch accounts, which KPIs to instrument, and how QBRs and escalation paths should run. The skill is editorial and strategic rather than a CRM integration; agents apply it to produce plans, role charters, and playbook outlines aligned with scalable CS models. It pairs naturally with pricing and validate-phase scope work when packaging determines touch level, and with grow-phase analytics when you wire dashboards to the metrics the skill prioritizes.1installs8Customer Health AnalystCustomer Health Analyst is an agent skill package for solo and indie operators running subscription or usage-based products who must spot churn before invoices lapse. It walks through health-score design—components, weights, thresholds, and validation—then separates predictive leading signals from lagging revenue metrics so interventions fire early. Churn prediction covers feature engineering, risk scoring, and early-warning cadence; usage analytics tracks engagement and feature adoption against benchmarks. Risk identification adds escalation playbooks and stakeholder communication for at-risk accounts, while cohort analysis compares segment retention over time. Data enrichment frames how to stitch product, billing, and support data into a governed customer view, and executive reporting selects KPIs and dashboard layouts founders can share with investors or a first CS hire. Use it when you have paying customers and need a repeatable health model instead of reactive support tickets.1installs9Customer Lifecycle MarketerCustomer Lifecycle Marketer is a Startup OS agent skill that gives solo and indie SaaS founders a structured go-to-market layer after the product ships: activation in the first 30 days, expansion revenue, churn prevention, advocacy that turns happy users into referrals, segmented lifecycle email, and measurable satisfaction loops. Unlike a single landing-page generator, it treats growth as six interacting workstreams with explicit impact labels (CRITICAL for onboarding, expansion, and retention). Agents can use it to draft advocacy ladders, intervention triggers for at-risk accounts, and communication sequences aligned to lifecycle stages. It fits Prism’s Grow phase for builders who wear product, support, and marketing hats and need repeatable prose and frameworks rather than ad-hoc tweets. Pair outputs with your real CRM data and analytics stack; the skill teaches motion and messaging, not automatic data pipelines.1installs10Demo SpecialistDemo Specialist is an agent skill from the startup OS skills pack that turns ad-hoc product walkthroughs into repeatable, deal-oriented presentations. Solo and indie builders use it when they need to pitch investors, close early customers, or run stakeholder reviews without sounding like a random feature tour. The methodology spans a storytelling arc and timing (structure), mapping who is in the room and what they care about (audience), executing the live session with confidence (technique), hardening demo data and environments (environment), and converting interest into concrete next steps (follow-up). A critical thread integrates discovery findings into what you actually show, so every segment reflects pain points you already validated. It fits builders shipping SaaS or content products who sell through calls and live demos rather than only self-serve signup. Complexity is intermediate because it assumes you already have a prototype or MVP to demonstrate and basic sales conversations underway.1installs11Discovery Callerdiscovery-caller is a Startup OS agent skill that guides solo founders and small teams through professional sales discovery calls end to end. It organizes work into preparation, question frameworks, listening, qualification, live discovery mapping, and CRM-ready documentation so each conversation tests assumptions instead of becoming a vague chat. The methodology stresses SPIN questioning, reading between the lines, and explicit budget-timeline-authority-need checks before you over-build. Every call is meant to end with a concrete commitment, not a hand-wavy follow-up email. Use it when validating a SaaS idea with prospects, running early design-partner interviews that mirror enterprise discovery, or tightening your grow-stage pipeline as a technical founder who does not have a full sales org.1installs12Event MarketerEvent-marketer is a structured agent skill that walks solo founders and small GTM teams through end-to-end event marketing—not just booking a booth, but strategy, budget, formats, and ROI. It organizes guidance into nine sections spanning planning, conferences, webinars, virtual production, promotion, speakers, on-site engagement, follow-up, and field programs, each tagged with impact levels so you prioritize CRITICAL paths like promotion and follow-up first. Use it when you are choosing which events to attend, producing a webinar, or building post-conference nurture. It complements product launch distribution by turning launches into live moments while also supporting Grow-phase lifecycle touches through sequenced follow-up. The skill is editorial and strategic rather than a single integration; outputs are plans, playbooks, and sequence designs you can hand to contractors or execute yourself.1installs13Growth Product Managergrowth-product-manager packages startup growth product thinking into sectional guidance your coding agent can apply while you design features, funnels, and experiments. It emphasizes compounding loops and flywheels, then drills into activation and onboarding because nothing downstream matters if first value is slow. Retention, viral/referral design, monetization expansion, experimentation discipline, and north-star metrics follow, capped with product-led growth implementation patterns. Solo builders wearing PM and engineer hats use it to keep roadmap conversations anchored in measurable levers instead of vanity features. The skill is editorial and strategic—it helps you decide what to build or measure next across lifecycle stages rather than wiring a single analytics SDK. Pair it with analytics or data skills when you need quantitative proof behind the frameworks.1installs14Gtm CopywriterGTM Copywriter is a startup-oriented agent skill that turns scattered marketing prompts into a single procedural playbook for voice, channels, and launch moments. Solo founders who must write emails, blog posts, social threads, and release notes without a full marketing hire use it to keep tone consistent while adapting format per channel. The skill ranks sections by impact—voice and email as critical, content and social as high, launch copy as medium-high—so agents prioritize foundations before chasing viral hooks. Blog guidance pairs intent (how-to vs comparison vs case study) with word-count bands and headline formulas, which helps AI-search and SEO pages read intentional rather than generic. It fits the Launch phase when you are shipping positioning and announcements, and the Grow phase when content and lifecycle emails compound; it is not a substitute for validated positioning from Validate, but it accelerates execution once you know what you are selling.1installs15Gtm LeaderGTM Leader is a section-organized agent skill from the startup OS that helps solo and indie builders sequence go-to-market work instead of random posting. It treats GTM strategy as critical foundation—motion, positioning, ideal customer profile, and channels—then layers content systems, brand strategy (personal versus business brand with explicit tradeoffs), channel-specific platform tactics, and growth distribution mechanics. The readme emphasizes impact tiers so founders spend time on CRITICAL strategy and content before medium-high growth experiments. It is editorial and strategic rather than a single integration; agents use it to structure plans, voice, and distribution choices that stay consistent as the company outgrows founder-only marketing.1installs16Logging Best Practiceslogging-best-practices packages Boris Tane’s “Logging Sucks” philosophy into an agent skill with focused markdown rules for solo builders running real services. Instead of sprinkling printf-style lines, it pushes one rich wide event per request lifecycle, structured fields with intentional cardinality, and business context that survives triage at 3 a.m. Sampling guidance insists on tail sampling after completion so errors and slow paths stay visible while routine traffic can be throttled. Anti-pattern docs call out scattered statements and reliance on raw string grep—failure modes that explode cost and shrink signal. The skill is reference-shaped: agents pull the right rule file (architecture, fields, sampling, anti-patterns) when designing new services or reviewing existing logging. It suits indie SaaS and API authors who want OpenTelemetry-friendly habits without hiring an observability team first. Journey-wide placement reflects that logging contracts should be chosen during backend build and enforced through ship and operate, not bolted on after launch.1installs17Marketing StrategistMarketing Strategist is an agent skill that packages strategic marketing leadership for B2B SaaS and technology companies. Solo and indie builders use it when they need a coherent go-to-market story, product positioning, content and demand plans, SEO direction, community and event plays, PR, partnerships, or pricing tied to market entry—not scattered tactical chat. The SKILL.md frames marketing as a revenue engine with four pillars: lead with strategy, own the narrative, measure pipeline-relevant outcomes, and scale with playbooks. It is especially valuable before and during a launch when you must align messaging across channels, and it remains useful in Grow for content and lifecycle-adjacent demand work and in Validate when pricing and positioning need stress-testing. Invoke it for “marketing plan”, “GTM strategy”, “content strategy”, “demand gen”, or “product launch marketing” planning sessions with your coding agent.1installs18Motion DesignerMotion Designer is an agent skill that channels senior motion-graphics judgment into written video specifications tailored for Remotion workflows. Solo and indie builders use it when they know they need a compelling video—launch teaser, product demo, social clip—but lack the structure to brief an agent or developer without endless revision loops. Instead of improvising in chat, the skill walks you through philosophy-driven choices: visual storytelling, rhythmic timing tied to beats and cuts, and emotional resonance from typography, color, and motion cues. Each invocation yields a practical blueprint: every scene described, animations and transitions timed, audio strategy documented, and SFX cataloged with purpose and placement. It does not render video; it front-loads creative decisions so Remotion implementation becomes execution against a clear spec. Use it during product build when drafting demo narratives, before launch when shaping distribution assets, or during growth when planning repeatable content formats—whenever motion quality matters and you want specs, not guesswork.1installs19Onboarding SpecialistOnboarding-specialist is an agent skill that encodes how a solo founder or tiny team should run B2B-style customer onboarding programs—not just in-app tooltips, but end-to-end success motions. It organizes work into eight impact-rated areas: program architecture and kickoff, accelerating time-to-first-value and aha moments, implementation project management, training and enablement, go-live readiness, sales-to-CS handoff, early warning and escalation signals, and automation for tech-touch scale. Builders using Claude Code or Cursor can invoke it when selling SaaS with a guided setup phase and need checklists that match how customer success teams think, without hiring a CS ops lead. The output is planning and operational guidance across lifecycle and support facets; it complements product-led growth experiment lists by focusing on human-led onboarding governance, milestones, and continuity from the closed deal through stable adoption.1installs20Performance Marketerperformance-marketer is a structured growth playbook for solo and indie builders running paid channels on a limited budget. It organizes work into seven impact-ranked domains—paid advertising strategy, creative and copy, landing page optimization, testing and experimentation, analytics and attribution, budget and scaling, and retargeting—so you know what to fix first when CPL spikes or ROAS drifts. The attribution material stresses that wrong credit assignment wastes spend across Meta, Google, and downstream lifecycle campaigns. Use it when you are moving from organic-only traction to measurable paid tests, when you need a checklist for message match between ad and landing page, or when you are deciding how to cap frequency and sequence retargeting audiences. It fits small teams wearing marketing hats because it favors frameworks and prioritization over enterprise ad-ops tooling. Pair it with your analytics stack and creative iterations rather than treating ads as a set-and-forget channel.1installs21Platform Product ManagerPlatform Product Manager is a journey-wide agent skill from startup-os-skills that gives solo and indie builders a disciplined lens for shipping developer platforms and APIs, not just a single feature backlog. It organizes work into eight impact-tagged areas—API design principles, developer experience, documentation strategy, SDK strategy, versioning and deprecation, developer community, integration marketplace, and platform metrics—so conversations with your coding agent stay anchored in how third parties actually adopt your product. Use it whenever you are deciding REST versus GraphQL conventions, onboarding time-to-value, doc structure, language SDK priority, semver policy, partner integrations, or which health metrics prove the platform is working. The embedded API design section stresses that APIs are user interfaces for developers and deserve the same rigor as consumer UI. Because platform PM spans validation scoping through launch distribution and ongoing iteration, invoke it early and revisit at major releases rather than treating it as a one-off spec generator.1installs22Pricing StrategistPricing Strategist is a structured pricing playbook for solo and indie builders who need more than a gut-feel number before launch. It walks through eight impact-ranked areas—from behavioral economics and anchoring through tier packaging, value metrics, and pricing-page conversion—so you can align what you charge with how customers perceive value. Use it when you are scoping a new SaaS, API, or ecommerce offer, redesigning plans after early feedback, or preparing enterprise and annual deals without training buyers to wait for discounts. The skill emphasizes differentiation across tiers, choosing the right usage or seat metric, and communicating lifecycle changes when you raise prices. It is editorial guidance rather than a billing integration: you apply the frameworks in your stack (Stripe, Lemon Squeezy, etc.) and on your marketing site. Treat competitive pricing as supporting context, not a race to the bottom.1installs23Product AnalystProduct-analyst is a startup-os agent skill that packages product analytics methodology into seven numbered capability areas, each labeled with impact from CRITICAL through MEDIUM-HIGH. Solo and indie builders shipping SaaS or content products use it when they must choose KPIs, diagnose funnel leaks, read retention curves, judge feature adoption, run statistically disciplined experiments, instrument events reliably, and report in dashboards stakeholders actually use. The skill does not wire up Mixpanel or Amplitude for you—it teaches the decision patterns that keep analytics from becoming vanity charts. It fits naturally in Grow when you have traffic and accounts, but instrumentation and experiment design also matter during Validate scoping and Ship launch readiness. Treat it as procedural knowledge you invoke before major growth bets or when metrics disagree with intuition.1installs24Product DiscoveryProduct Discovery is a Startup OS agent skill that organizes how solo founders run discovery from first interviews through competitive positioning and pre-build experiments. It treats research operations and problem validation as critical foundations, then layers analysis—segmentation, opportunity sizing, synthesis—and testing workflows so insights become evidence rather than anecdotes. The embedded competitive analysis guidance pushes gap-finding across direct, indirect, alternative, and inertia competitors instead of checklist parity. Use it during Idea when you are mapping audience and market, and carry it into Validate when scoping MVPs, running prototype or usability tests, and sizing opportunities. It pairs naturally with landing and pricing work once you know which job you are hired to do. The skill is methodology-heavy rather than a single integration; your agent applies the sections as playbooks while you maintain the actual interview notes and experiment logs.1installs25Product Launch ManagerProduct Launch Manager is an agent skill that turns chaotic ship dates into an end-to-end launch operating system for solo founders and small teams. It walks through six high-impact areas: foundational launch planning and tiering, cross-functional RACI-style coordination, beta and early access validation, internal and external communications, launch-day execution with war-room discipline, and post-launch monitoring with retrospectives. Most launches fail on alignment and timing—not code quality—so the skill emphasizes success criteria, stakeholder orchestration, and explicit communication plans before the moment of truth. Use it when you are past core build and need a single narrative for who does what, what gets said when, and how you measure the first weeks in market. It complements marketing-strategist for narrative and channel strategy while owning operational launch mechanics.1installs26Product LeaderProduct Leader is an agent skill that packages strategic product-management judgment for solo and indie SaaS builders: vision and positioning, roadmap planning, discovery, growth PM, platform thinking, analytics, and launches. It is meant for moments when you are defining where the product goes next, deciding which features deserve scarce time, validating problems with users, reading product metrics, or preparing a launch—not for writing application code. The embedded philosophy pushes outcome-focused delivery, user-informed decisions backed by data, ruthless prioritization, and fast cheap learning loops. Use it across validate-and-build work when you need PRD-quality thinking, prioritization frameworks, or launch discipline without a dedicated CPO. It complements execution skills by keeping strategy and scope honest before agents or you ship the wrong output.1installs27Product ManagerProduct Manager is a journey-wide agent skill from Startup OS that gives solo founders a repeatable operating system for product leadership without hiring a full-time PM. It organizes critical practices into roadmap strategy, prioritization frameworks, stakeholder management, sprint and backlog hygiene, feature scoping, release planning, outcome-focused metrics and OKRs, and technical debt trade-offs. Use it when you are deciding what belongs in the MVP, communicating timelines to collaborators, grooming a backlog between customer calls, or aligning feature work with measurable results instead of vanity output. The skill stresses data-informed prioritization—RICE, ICE, MoSCoW—and the ceremonies that keep a tiny engineering loop productive. Stakeholder and cross-functional sections help you narrate decisions to design, sales, and early users even when you wear every hat. It is methodology and templates, not a ticket tracker integration; your agent applies the frameworks to your repo notes, specs, and roadmap docs. Confidence is high on structure from the section map; deepen rationales by invoking specific sections (roadmap vs sprint) per task.1installs28Product Specs WriterProduct Specs Writer is an agent skill for solo and indie builders who need stakeholder-ready product documentation without a full PM org. It sequences work across eight high-leverage specification types: Product Requirements Documents for vision and success criteria; user stories that bridge business goals and engineering; acceptance criteria as testable done definitions; technical specifications for architecture and implementation guidance; API specifications for cross-team interfaces; edge cases and error handling for failure modes; design handoff notes for components, states, and responsive behavior; and feature flags with progressive rollout and kill switches. CRITICAL-tagged areas ensure you establish PRD, stories, and criteria before diving into API minutiae. Use it when scoping a new feature, handing work to an coding agent, or preparing QA-ready definitions. The skill fits early validation when you still change scope cheaply, and again during build PM when you extend APIs or rollouts. Pair its output with implementation planning skills so approved specs become ordered tasks rather than open-ended chat.1installs29Product StrategistProduct Strategist is an agent skill from the startup-os-skills bundle that walks solo and indie builders through structured product strategy before execution drift sets in. It organizes work into six impact-ranked areas: product vision and north-star metrics, market assessment and sizing, competitive strategy and moats, strategic frameworks and prioritization, business model and monetization, and build decisions including platform versus product paths. The embedded platform-vs-product material explains how enabling others changes economics and defensibility compared with shipping a direct problem-solving product. Use it when you have an idea or early traction but lack a written spine connecting why you exist, where you play, how you win, and what you should build next. It is editorial methodology—not a code generator—so outputs are decisions, frameworks, and narrative strategy artifacts your agent can extend into PRDs, roadmaps, or validation plans. Pair it with validation and planning skills once vision and market sections are crisp enough to test.1installs30Pr SpecialistPR Specialist is a structured agent skill for indie and solo builders who need credible launch and growth communications without hiring a PR firm. It breaks public relations into nine high-impact sections—from press release writing and journalist targeting through embargo strategy, crisis statements, thought leadership placement, analyst briefings, awards, and measurement. Use it when you are preparing a product launch, responding to bad press, or building repeatable media outreach. The skill emphasizes quotes, boilerplate, personalization, follow-up cadence, and when to trade exclusives for broader coverage. It fits SaaS and content products where narrative and third-party validation drive discovery. Pair it with landing and SEO work in validate/launch and with lifecycle content in grow when you need sustained share of voice.1installs31Qbr Facilitatorqbr-facilitator from startup-os-skills structures how solo founders and lean customer-success leads run Quarterly Business Reviews for B2B SaaS. It breaks work into program design, executive preparation, value demonstration, metrics presentation, strategic account planning, roadmap alignment, and risk or opportunity discovery—each labeled by impact so small teams prioritize CRITICAL paths first. Use it when you must translate product usage into executive-ready ROI stories, align success plans with product roadmaps, and proactively flag churn signals before renewal conversations. The skill is workflow-oriented facilitation guidance rather than a slide template generator, optimized for agents helping you draft briefs, agendas, and quantified outcomes per account tier.1installs32Remotion AnimationRemotion Animation is a narrow generator skill for startup builders shipping programmatic video with Remotion. When you ask to configure animations, set up spring configs, or define easing curves, the skill produces structured animation configuration documents—spring behaviors, interpolation mappings, easing functions, timing constants, and progress calculations—while deliberately refusing to implement scenes, layout, or styling. That separation keeps solo developers from mixing motion math with component boilerplate in one noisy pass. Use it in Build/frontend after you know what should move and before you invoke companion skills for components, compositions, or assets. Beginner-friendly if you already use Remotion’s frame model; the skill encodes parameters agents can hand to implementation skills or your own code. It fits content-led SaaS, launch trailers, and in-app explainers where motion must stay consistent and tweakable across renders.1installs33Remotion Asset CoordinatorRemotion Asset Coordinator is an agent skill for solo builders shipping programmatic video with Remotion. It closes the gap between a motion design spec and files that actually render: it extracts asset requirements from the spec, points you to appropriate sources, walks through preparation and optimization per asset class, and outputs import snippets that match Remotion conventions. The skill bundles structured rule sections for images, video, audio, and fonts, plus end-to-end workflows for sourcing, prep, performance tuning, and folder naming. Use it when you know what the video should look like but not where to get stock, which codec to export, or how to wire assets into your composition without bloating bundle size or breaking builds.1installs34Remotion Best PracticesThis agent skill encodes Remotion-specific rules for embedding Three.js and React Three Fiber inside programmatic video projects. Solo builders shipping explainers, launch reels, or in-app motion graphics use it when they want 3D spheres, models, or custom shaders without breaking frame-accurate MP4 or WebM output. The guidance centers on @remotion/three’s ThreeCanvas wrapper sized from useVideoConfig(), mandatory lighting so materials read correctly, and a hard rule that no element may animate unless useCurrentFrame() drives the timeline—preventing the flicker common when R3F’s useFrame runs decoupled from Remotion’s render pass. Prerequisites are spelled out per package manager so agents do not guess install commands. It complements general R3F tutorials by narrowing focus to export-safe patterns for indie founders who treat video as a ship artifact, not a live game loop.1installs35Remotion Component GenRemotion component gen is a build-phase skill for solo builders shipping programmatic video in React/Remotion. You give a visual and animation description for a single scene—intro, feature callout, loader—and the skill produces SCENE_COMPONENT.md with a complete scene component implementation, not a stub. It leans on categorized rules for particles, text reveals, progress indicators, and transitions, plus guides for standard props, composition, timing sync, and performance. That structure helps agents avoid one-off CSS hacks and instead match Remotion primitives like springs and interpolators. Use it when a scene spec exists from creative direction or a storyboard and you need executable TSX aligned to your project’s patterns. It does not replace full project scaffolding or render farm operations—it focuses on one scene at a time.1installs36Remotion CompositionRemotion Composition is an agent skill for solo builders who treat launch and growth video as code but want timing divorced from pixel pushing. You feed a scene list with durations; the skill produces COMPOSITION_STRUCTURE.md that defines how Remotion Sequences are ordered, how long each scene runs in frames, and how transitions overlap. Scope is deliberately narrow: layout and timing orchestration only, with clear handoffs to remotion-component-gen for scene implementation, remotion-animation for motion parameters, and remotion-asset-coordinator for media. That separation keeps agents from rewriting components when you only need a revised storyboard timing pass. Use it when reorganizing a product demo reel, restructuring onboarding motion after copy changes, or preparing constants.ts before an implementation sprint. Intermediate familiarity with Remotion’s frame model helps; beginners can still use it if scenes and durations are already decided.1installs37Remotion Performance OptimizerRemotion Performance Optimizer is an agent skill for solo builders who ship programmatic video with Remotion and need renders to finish faster without guessing. Activate it when someone asks to improve performance, speed up renders, or optimize a Remotion video, or when batch exports blow past acceptable duration. The skill performs structured analysis: expensive computations on the render path, unnecessary re-renders, oversized or slow-loading assets, missed memoization opportunities, and architectural improvements to component structure. Supporting rule sections group guidance into optimization categories—computation, assets, memoization strategies, and render optimization—and analysis categories covering profiling, bottleneck detection, benchmark targets, and impact-based priorities. The agent is steered to recommend actionable fixes rather than micro-optimizing cold paths. It fits indie marketing clips, product demos, and content SaaS where Remotion is the render engine. Pair it with your existing composition repo and profiling runs; outputs are recommendations and refactors aligned to documented targets, not automatic cloud scaling.1installs38Remotion Render Configremotion-render-config is a narrow generator skill for solo builders shipping programmatic video with Remotion. You describe target platform and quality goals in plain language or structured requirements; the skill returns RENDER_CONFIG.md focused solely on render commands, codec choice, compression, resolution, and social-platform presets. That separation keeps composition work in remotion-composition or remotion-component-gen and keeps this skill aligned with export-time decisions indie teams often get wrong on the first render. Use it when MP4 versus WebM, CRF versus bitrate, or Instagram aspect constraints would otherwise cost you iteration cycles. It does not implement scenes or animations, so invoke it after compositions exist and before you wire `npx remotion render` or CI jobs. For Prism’s journey shelves, it sits in Build → frontend beside other Remotion skills in the startup-os stack, making long-tail “how do I render for YouTube with Remotion” queries land on a citable, scope-bounded page.1installs39Remotion Scaffoldremotion-scaffold is an agent skill that encodes Remotion template creator rules for solo and indie builders shipping React-based programmatic video. It tells your coding agent how to lay out composition folders under src/remotion/compositions/, when to keep a single entry file versus a scenes/ directory, and how to separate colors, springs, timing, and TypeScript types from scene components. The skill is for founders and small teams who want launch-ready motion graphics without a dedicated motion team—product demos, changelog reels, and landing hero loops. Use it when starting a new Remotion project or refactoring a messy composition tree before adding animations. It matters because inconsistent structure makes sequences hard to review in PRs and expensive to extend. The rules emphasize clean index.tsx entry points, AbsoluteFill and Sequence patterns, and explicit registration so previews and renders stay predictable in Claude Code, Cursor, or Codex workflows.1installs40Remotion Spec TranslatorRemotion Spec Translator is an agent skill for solo builders who already wrote animation briefs in markdown and need them turned into working Remotion TypeScript without hand-translating every spring and interpolate block. It packages translation patterns for scene layout, animation conversion, frame timing, and constants extraction, plus implementation guides for Audio timing, staticFile imports, reusable components, and interfaces. Use it when you are building launch videos, product demos, or content pipelines in Remotion and want consistent code from a motion spec instead of ad-hoc chat guesses. The skill emphasizes CRITICAL-impact conversion rules so scale, opacity, and position timelines map cleanly to spring-driven progress values. It suits indie SaaS founders and content-heavy products who treat video as a ship artifact alongside the app.1installs41Remotion Video ReviewerRemotion Video Reviewer is a checker skill for builders who render marketing or product video in code and need the same rigor as a code review. You supply the motion designer’s VIDEO_SPEC.md—duration, fps, palette, scene timing—and the agent walks six layers: whether scenes match the spec, whether frame math and easing are correct, whether typography and colors match, whether assets are production-ready, and whether render cost looks sane. It is aimed at solo founders pairing programmatic video with a separate motion-design spec skill, so you catch drift before batch renders or client delivery. Use after implementation and before calling a render good enough to publish.1installs42Renewal ManagerRenewal Manager is an agent skill from the Startup OS skills pack that turns ad hoc customer-success renewals into a documented operating system for subscription businesses. Solo founders and small CS teams install it when they need repeatable renewal forecasting, cohort-style pipeline hygiene, and segment-specific touchpoint plans instead of one generic renewal email. The skill organizes work across seven high-impact areas—from revenue forecasting and probability scoring through enterprise versus SMB playbooks, early renewal incentives, multi-year term design, renewal-specific pricing and packaging, at-risk identification with save plays, and competitive displacement defense. It fits builders shipping B2B SaaS who own retention themselves and want agent-guided checklists aligned to how revenue actually closes at term end. Use it during quarterly planning, 90-day renewal reviews, and exec prep when NRR or logo churn is slipping, so your agent outputs motions and timelines you can paste into CRM notes or customer briefs without inventing a retention framework from scratch each quarter.1installs43Sales EnablementSales Enablement is a Startup OS skills package that walks solo founders and tiny GTM teams through eight enablement domains: training architecture, new-hire ramp, playbooks, content, coaching, certification, tool adoption, and measurement. Each section states impact level—several marked CRITICAL for training, onboarding, and ROI—so an agent can prioritize what matters before polishing secondary programs. The skill is methodology-heavy rather than a single CRM integration: it expects you to design delivery methods, retention strategies, findable content, manager feedback loops, and certification assessments that match a startup budget. Use it when you are hiring your first seller, refreshing a playbook, or proving enablement ROI without a dedicated enablement org. It pairs naturally with pricing and positioning work earlier in the journey and with analytics as deals mature.1installs44Sales LeaderSales Leader is an agent skill that packages strategic B2B sales leadership for indie and small-team SaaS builders. It walks you through market segmentation and ICP, GTM motions, hiring and coaching, pipeline inspection and forecasting, and enterprise deal execution from discovery through negotiation. Use it when you are designing your first sales process, reviewing a stuck pipeline, planning quotas, or trying to improve win rates without hiring a full sales org. The embedded philosophy stresses qualifying hard, selling ROI over features, and turning ad-hoc wins into playbooks. It complements product and marketing skills by focusing on how revenue actually closes in complex B2B cycles.1installs45Sales NegotiatorSales Negotiator is an agent skill from Startup OS that coaches solo founders and tiny sales teams through structured B2B negotiations without hiring a full-time rep. The playbook spans six impact-tiered areas: preparation and BATNA work rated CRITICAL, buyer psychology and tactical moves at CRITICAL and HIGH, pricing and discount defense, navigating procurement and committees, and closing as a timed commitment process rather than a trick question. Use it when you are live on enterprise-ish deals, defending price, or shepherding legal and procurement while you still build the product. It fits the Grow phase when deals are in motion, and overlaps Validate when you are setting pricing narrative for early paid pilots. The skill is prose methodology—not a CRM integration—so you bring the thread context and export notes into your own contracts stack. Expect mindset shifts (for example reframing closing as the natural next step) alongside concrete anchors, silence, and concession patterns. Pair with your own contract templates and never treat model output as legal advice.1installs46Sales Ops AnalystSales Ops Analyst packages strategic revenue-operations guidance for solo founders and tiny teams who cannot hire a dedicated RevOps hire yet still need Salesforce or HubSpot to tell the truth. The skill is organized as actionable rule sets: CRM data models and hygiene, pipeline definitions and velocity, reporting dashboards, workflow automation, lead routing and territories, and commission design. Its philosophy is enablement over policing—automate field updates, measure pipeline that closes, and avoid hacks that become technical debt when you add your second rep. Invoke it when you are sketching stage criteria, designing round-robin or territory rules, building a forecast model, or integrating Gong and Outreach into a coherent stack. It does not replace hands-on CRM admin clicks; it gives you the design patterns and analytics framing so your agent or you can implement with fewer false starts. Best when you already sell B2B or high-touch SaaS and need operational rigor without enterprise headcount.1installs47Sales StrategistSales Strategist is a startup-os skill that gives solo founders and small GTM teams strategic sales operations without hiring a full revops bench. When invoked, it applies structured rules for methodology (qualification frameworks, selling approaches), process (stages, exit criteria, deal flow), and planning (territories, forecasts, quotas, compensation). The philosophy is explicit: process beats heroics, time is inventory on bad-fit deals, and compensation drives behavior. Use it while shaping how you sell a B2B SaaS offer—whether you are still proving fit or scaling repeatable pipeline. It helps you pick frameworks, align incentives, and run experiments on conversion rather than guessing from anecdotes. The skill is editorial and procedural, not a CRM integration; your agent walks the checklists and tradeoffs with you.1installs48Senior Product MarketerSenior Product Marketer is a structured playbook skill from Startup OS that encodes how solo SaaS founders think about trials, activation, and conversion. Rather than a single generator step, it organizes guidance into impact-tagged sections—trial acquisition, activation and first value, and freemium-to-paid conversion—so an agent prioritizes what actually moves revenue. The included CTA optimization material gives a ranked ladder of button copy from low-friction trial language to heavier account-creation wording. Indie builders use it when a landing page or onboarding flow feels fuzzy: value proposition clarity, friction reduction, and ethical monetization beats manipulation. It sits primarily on the grow lifecycle shelf but legitimately informs validate landing and pricing pages and launch distribution messaging. Expect editorial, framework-driven answers your agent applies while rewriting flows, not automatic analytics hooks.1installs49Seo Content StrategistSEO Content Strategist is a structured marketing skill that walks solo builders through nine impact-rated domains—keyword discovery, cluster architecture, on-page optimization, technical SEO, links, refresh, programmatic pages, SERP features, and intent mapping. It is meant for agents drafting content plans, audit checklists, and prioritization when you are launching a site or compounding organic traffic without hiring a full SEO team. Start in Launch when defining pillars and metadata; reuse in Validate for topic scoping and in Grow when refreshing decaying posts or scaling template pages. The skill emphasizes topical authority and measurable impact labels rather than one-off blog prompts, so outputs read like a strategist brief your coding agent can execute against.1installs50Support OperationsSupport Operations is a structured reference skill for solo and indie builders who must own help desk, SLAs, and escalation without a dedicated support org. It breaks the function into eight labeled sections—ticket management, SLA design, support tiers, knowledge base strategy, support metrics, escalation procedures, tooling, and support-to-CS feedback loops—each with impact ratings and concise scope descriptions. Use it when you are designing or refactoring how tickets flow, how fast you must respond, and how self-service deflects volume before you wire tools like Zendesk, Intercom, or plain email. The material emphasizes measurable outcomes (CSAT, FRT, TTR, FCR) and cross-functional loops so product feedback from angry tickets becomes roadmap signal. It does not install integrations; it gives you the decision framework agents can turn into policies, runbooks, and dashboard specs.1installs51Vsl Storyboard Writervsl-storyboard-writer is an agent skill for solo founders and marketers who need video sales letters and product storyboards without hiring a full agency writer. It produces complete storyboard scripts: hooks, narrative frameworks, scene lists, messaging, and visual notes structured for the motion-designer skill and eventual Remotion builds. Invoke when someone asks for a VSL, sales video script, or storyboarded product demo—especially before animation work begins. The skill bridges copywriting and motion production so your agent does not jump straight to keyframes without a conversion-aware arc. It fits launch campaigns and growth retargeting alike, and can support validate-stage landing videos when you are proving an offer. Expect template-driven rules files rather than a single generic chat prompt, which keeps outputs consistent for downstream technical skills.1installs52Website Copy SpecialistWebsite Copy Specialist is a structured agent skill for solo and indie builders who need credible marketing site copy without hiring a conversion copywriter. It organizes work into ten high-impact page families—from homepage messaging hierarchy and hero value props through feature and pricing pages, about and comparison narratives, product tours, integrations, use cases, conversion flows, and navigation microcopy. Each section calls out business impact so you prioritize CRITICAL paths like homepage, features, pricing, and conversion before medium-high integration and use-case pages. Use it when you are validating positioning on a landing page, preparing a launch site, or refreshing growth content for an existing SaaS or content product. The skill keeps copy benefit-led and CTA-aware rather than generic feature lists, which helps agents produce drafts that align with how solo builders actually sell: clear routing, trust on about pages, and differentiation on comparison pages. It complements design and SEO skills by supplying the words that fill those layouts.1installs