Day 5: Unlock the Skill Tree
"If Day 4 was giving your assistant hands, today is handing it a whole toolbox. Screwdrivers, wrenches, power drills... grab what you need, put it back when done. That's the Skills system."
Chapter Overview
Today you'll explore OpenClaw's skill ecosystem:
- Understand how the Skills system works
- Browse the ClawdHub skill marketplace
- Install useful skill packs (weather, GitHub, Reddit, SEO...)
- Learn to combine multiple skills for complex tasks
- Understand how to develop your own Skills
What Are Skills?
What's the App Store on your phone? A place to install various apps—need food delivery, install Uber Eats; need a ride, install Uber; need videos, install YouTube.
OpenClaw's Skills system is your AI assistant's App Store.
Each Skill is a set of files, usually including:
- SKILL.md — Skill manual (tells the AI what this skill does and how to use it)
- Config files — API Keys, connection parameters, etc.
- Script files — Specific execution logic (if needed)
Installing a Skill means putting these files in the skills directory. When the assistant starts, it automatically loads them, just like your phone auto-loading installed apps at boot.
Core idea: The AI's "brain" is already smart enough—what it lacks is "tools." Skills are those tools.
Skill Marketplace
The OpenClaw community maintains a growing skill repository: clawdhub.com
Browse by category:
| Category | Example Skills | What Problem It Solves |
|---|---|---|
| Communication | Gmail, Outlook, Slack | Email management, message notifications |
| Productivity | Google Calendar, Todoist | Schedule management, task tracking |
| Search | Brave Search, Tavily | Web search, information retrieval |
| Development | GitHub, VS Code, Docker | Code management, development assistance |
| Data | GA4, GSC, Ahrefs | Traffic analysis, SEO optimization |
| Content | Markdown, PDF Parser | Document processing, format conversion |
| Browser | Playwright, Puppeteer | Web browsing, data scraping |
| Smart Home | HomeAssistant | Control lights, temperature, devices |
Install Your First Skill Pack
Let's use remind-me (reminders) as an example—this is the most beginner-friendly first skill: install it and use it immediately.
MyClaw Cloud: You can install skills directly from the MyClaw Dashboard. Navigate to your instance's Skills panel, browse available skills, and click Install. Alternatively, you can ask your assistant in Telegram to install a skill for you:
Install the remind-me skill from ClawdHub
Your assistant will handle the installation within your cloud instance.
Self-hosted: Install from ClawdHub (recommended):
clawdhub install remind-me
It downloads the skill and installs it to your skills directory. You can also install manually:
cd ~/.openclaw/skills
git clone https://github.com/openclaw/skill-remind-me remind-me
After installation, no restart needed—most Skills auto-load in the next conversation.
You can also browse and pick from the GitHub community list: github.com/VoltAgent/awesome-openclaw-skills
Recommended Skills: 10 Most Useful
Here's a curated list sorted by "beginner benefit": install 3 that immediately improve things, then add more based on your needs.
Must-Have Tier
1. remind-me — Reminders/Timers Turn chat mentions into timely reminders: meetings, bills, reviews, hydration, early bedtime. Once you use it, you can't live without it.
2. todo-tracker — To-Do List Capture things you mention casually into TODOs, check anytime, mark complete. Especially good for the "too many things, brain overflowing" phase.
3. Gmail (or imap-email) — Email Summary Let your assistant watch for important emails, extract key points, draft replies. Inboxes often hide partnership opportunities, system alerts, and customer feedback.
4. Web Search — Online Search Any scenario needing real-time information requires this. An AI assistant without search capability is like a phone with no internet.
Highly Recommended
5. Browser — Web Operations/Info Extraction Let your assistant open pages, scrape information, compare competitors, verify if websites are working.
6. weather (or weather-nws) — Weather/Travel One sentence to check weather, remind to bring umbrella/dress warmer. Perfect as part of "daily briefing."
7. newsletter-digest / youtube-watcher — Information Intake Turn long articles/videos into key points and action items. Directly solves the "too much information" problem.
Nice to Have
8. GitHub — Code-related (For Developers) Check Issues, view PRs, read code, track CI. Worth installing if you write code or use open source.
9. GSC / GA4 — Website Growth (Install If You Have Sites) Essential for website owners: check search terms, index status, traffic sources. Skip if you don't have a website.
10. PDF Parser (markitdown) — Document Parsing Convert PDF/Word/PPT to text for instant AI reading and summarization. Life-saving when you receive dozens of pages of materials.
Skill Combos: 1 + 1 > 2
A single skill is useful, but combining multiple skills is even more powerful. This is where AI assistants are more powerful than traditional tools—they can connect data from different tools and think across them.
Combo 1: Email + Calendar
Check what meetings I have tomorrow, then search my email for related background info
The assistant first checks the calendar, finds there's a "Partner Discussion" tomorrow, then automatically searches Gmail for related correspondence and puts together a pre-meeting brief.
Before: open calendar, check meeting, open Gmail, search keywords, organize yourself. Now: one sentence.
Combo 2: Search + Browser
Search "best headless CMS 2025", find the top three articles, and compile their recommendations into a comparison table
The assistant searches first, finds article links, uses the browser to open each article, extracts key information, then organizes it into a structured comparison.
Combo 3: GSC + GA4 + Browser
Analyze my site's /generator page—how's search performance, user behavior, and what does the page look like now
The assistant calls three skills:
- GSC for search performance (rankings, clicks, CTR)
- GA4 for user behavior (time on page, bounce rate)
- Browser to open the page and see current state
Finally gives you a complete analysis report with optimization suggestions.
A single tool is a knife, multiple tools combined is a kitchen. The AI assistant is the chef.
Managing Your Skills
MyClaw Cloud: Manage your skills through the Dashboard's Skills panel:
- View all installed skills and their status
- Install new skills from the marketplace
- Update skills to latest versions
- Configure skill-specific settings
You can also manage skills by chatting with your assistant directly — ask it to list, install, or update skills for you.
Self-hosted: Use these commands:
openclaw skills list # View installed skills
clawdhub install <skill-name> # Install a skill
clawdhub update <skill-name> # Update single skill
clawdhub update --all # Update all skills
clawdhub search <keyword> # Search marketplace
Each skill's config is typically in SKILL.md (and can be overridden in openclaw.json's skills.entries.*). Skill directories are usually at: <workspace>/skills/<skill-name>/ or ~/.openclaw/skills/<skill-name>/.
Don't Be Greedy
One final reminder: more skills isn't always better.
Each skill adds to your assistant's "cognitive load"—it needs to read more SKILL.md files to understand what it can do. Too many skills can lead to:
- Slower responses (more context to process)
- Increased token consumption (every conversation carries all skill descriptions)
- Occasionally calling the wrong skill
Suggestion: Start with the 3-5 you need most, get comfortable with them, then add more.
Just like installing phone apps—someone with 200 installed but only using 20 definitely has a slower phone than someone who only installed 20.
Key Takeaways
- Skills = AI's App Store: Each skill is a set of files, install and use
- ClawdHub marketplace: Community contributed, one command to install
- Core recommendations: Reminders, to-do, email, search, browser, weather
- Skill combos are king: Multiple skills working together = automated workflows
- Quality over quantity: Start with 3-5 essential skills, then expand
Today's Achievement
- Understood how the Skills system works
- Installed new skills for your assistant
- Learned about the community skill marketplace
- Learned multi-skill combo usage
- Mastered skill management
Your assistant has now transformed from a "chatting AI" to a "personal assistant armed with a complete toolkit."
But there's still one problem—it still only moves when you ask. If you don't reach out, it just quietly waits, doing nothing.
Tomorrow, we change that.
Preview: Day 6 — Make Your Assistant Work Proactively
A true assistant shouldn't wait for you to ask. It should check emails, look at calendar, run data on its own, and proactively notify you when something important comes up. Tomorrow we configure heartbeat mechanism and scheduled tasks—turning your assistant from "passive responder" to "proactive worker."
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