10x Your Workflow: The Ultimate Claude Skills Collection for Every Role

Claude Skills Collection

Save this list. Share it with your team. Your future self will thank you.

Here's the deal: Every skill below works with Claude right out of the box. No complex setup, no technical headaches—just type a command and go. Perfect for beginners, powerful enough for pros.

Bottom line up front: If you're still doing repetitive tasks manually in 2026, you're competing with one hand tied behind your back.


Role 1: Content Creators & Social Media Managers

You know the grind—staring at a blank page for three hours, switching between five tabs to resize images, manually replying to every comment, and somehow still missing that trending topic everyone's talking about.

The data doesn't lie: QuestMobile's 2025 report shows 82% of content teams now use AI tools, with average efficiency gains of 60%.

While you're crafting one headline, someone else using these skills has generated three variants, designed matching visuals, and scheduled posts across six platforms. It's not about working harder anymore.

1. Media Ops Suite

Source: MediaLab (GitHub: medialab/claude-media-skills, 5.7k ⭐)

Eight specialized skills built for content teams: headline generation, copywriting, formatting optimization, trend tracking, asset organization, analytics, comment moderation, and multi-platform publishing.

Type /media-write and it adapts tone for WeChat, Xiaohongshu, Douyin, or whatever platform you're targeting. But here's what actually matters—it connects directly to Canva, image editors, and publishing platforms. Generate copy, create visuals, format, and publish without leaving your workflow.

Real test: I tried /media-title with a bare topic. Got 10 headlines in 10 seconds. Three were genuinely publish-ready. That's three hours of my life back.

2. Content Planner Pro

Source: ContentHub (GitHub: contenthub/awesome-claude-content-skills, 3.2k ⭐)

Content calendar on autopilot. Built-in templates for 12 industries. Generates weekly, monthly, and quarterly content plans.

What it actually does: Tells you what's trending, what to write about, where to publish, and learns from your past performance to improve future recommendations. Includes data integrations with major platforms—trend prediction accuracy hits 80%+.

It's like having a content strategist who doesn't sleep and doesn't charge by the hour.

3. Comment Auto-Reply

Source: ComposioHQ Community (GitHub: ComposioHQ/awesome-claude-skills, 38k ⭐)

Simple premise, massive time-saver: Automatically detects comment sentiment (positive/negative/neutral), replies in your brand voice, handles batch responses, filters by keywords, and catches problematic comments before they escalate.

After publishing, when dozens or hundreds of comments roll in—dump them here. Done in minutes. Your community stays engaged, your reputation stays intact, and you get your evening back.

The takeaway: Content creation is about quality and creativity. Let AI handle the repetitive stuff.


Role 2: Product Managers

Remember when "product management" meant spending 70% of your time on documentation, prototyping, and alignment meetings—leaving 30% (on a good day) for actual product thinking?

Those days are over.

1. Product Toolkit

Source: ProductDev (GitHub: productdev/claude-product-skills, 4.8k ⭐)

Fifteen product-specific skills. The standout: Automatic PRD generation. Input your problem statement, core features, and user scenarios—get a complete PRD with background, specs, interaction logic, acceptance criteria, and even prototype descriptions.

What used to take a day now takes an hour. Also includes: requirements analysis, user feedback analysis, competitive analysis, roadmap planning, and prototype annotation.

2. User Research Pro

Source: UserLab (GitHub: userlab/claude-user-research-skills, 1.9k ⭐)

Integrates with survey tools and provides five user research modes. The killer feature: user_interview_analysis—upload interview transcripts or recordings, and it extracts core needs, pain points, and hidden expectations into a visual analysis report.

Also handles: survey design, persona generation, prioritization frameworks, and usability test planning. Stop manually coding interview notes. That's what computers are for.

3. PRD Review Helper

Source: DevTools (GitHub: devtools/claude-dev-skills, 2.1k ⭐)

Automatically reviews PRDs for logical gaps, unclear specifications, and missing edge cases. Built-in best practices for the entire product development lifecycle.

You know that cycle—write PRD, get it rejected by engineering, rewrite, resubmit, repeat? This skill catches the issues before your dev team does. Fewer revision rounds. Better specs. More respect from engineering.

The takeaway: Your job is making decisions, not formatting documents. Let AI handle the grunt work.


Role 3: Developers & Engineers

2 AM. You're debugging a mysterious error. You've been staring at the same 50 lines of code for three hours. You've rewritten the same boilerplate three times today.

Stack Overflow's 2025 survey: 78% of developers now use AI coding tools, saving an average of 2-3 hours per day.

Your competition isn't working harder. They're working smarter.

1. Code Helper Suite

Source: Anthropic Official (GitHub: anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins, 8.1k ⭐)

Six development-specific skills from the people who built Claude. Code debugging, generation, and syntax checking that actually understands context—supports Python, Java, JavaScript, and 20+ languages.

It doesn't just say "there's an error." It shows you exactly where, explains why, suggests the fix, and often writes the corrected code. Also handles: comment generation, refactoring, and API documentation.

Honest moment: The debugging demo got me. Every developer knows the pain of spending four hours hunting a bug that turns out to be a missing semicolon.

2. Claude-Code-Assistant

Source: CodeLab (GitHub: codelab/claude-code-assistant, 3.7k ⭐)

Code generation and optimization trained on millions of open-source repositories. Supports 20+ languages.

Describe what you need—"Write a Python scraper that pulls data from X and saves to CSV"—and get working code with inline explanations. Also generates unit tests, optimizes performance, and matches your coding style.

3. Awesome Code Skills

Source: CodeCommunity (GitHub: codecommunity/awesome-claude-code-skills, 2.8k ⭐)

This isn't one skill—it's an ecosystem. 30+ independent coding skills covering frontend, backend, mobile, testing, and DevOps. The developer tools space isn't just adopting AI—it's building an entire ecosystem around it.

The takeaway: AI can write the code you've written a hundred times. It can't architect your system or debug that one-in-a-million edge case. Focus on the latter.


Role 4: Human Resources

"Do you have skills for HR?" — asked by someone in the comments on my last post.

Yes. Absolutely yes.

HR is about people—hiring them, developing them, keeping them. But somehow, 60% of your week disappears into resume screening, attendance tracking, and performance paperwork.

1. HR Ops Bundle

Source: HRTech Team (GitHub: hrtech/claude-hr-skills, 2.3k ⭐)

Twenty-two HR-specific skills. I double-checked the list because it seemed too good to be true.

Job description generation, resume screening, interview question design, attendance analytics, performance reviews, training programs, exit interviews—it's all there. The output isn't just text—it generates data visualizations and HR dashboards you can actually present to leadership.

Real test: I ran the resume screening module with 100 sample resumes. Filtered down to 20 qualified candidates in 5 minutes, with strengths and match scores already highlighted. That's a morning's work done before coffee.

2. Resume Analyzer Pro

Source: HRAssistant (GitHub: hrassistant/claude-resume-skills, 890 ⭐)

Two-stage analysis: Phase 1 screens for keywords and role alignment. Phase 2 goes deep on capabilities, experience, and compensation expectations.

Three commands: /resume-filter (quick screen), /resume-deep (deep analysis), /resume-compare (candidate comparison). Works for campus recruiting, experienced hires, and executive search. Includes industry-specific templates.

3. HR-Training / Performance-Assistant

Source: Alireza Rezvani (GitHub: alirezarezvani/claude-skills, 2k ⭐)

Eighteen skills covering the full HR spectrum: training program generation (customized by role and level), performance review templates, compensation benchmarking, employee relations, and culture communications.

Also includes: employee satisfaction surveys and exit interview frameworks. Because retaining talent is harder than hiring it.

The takeaway: AI can do 80% of HR's baseline work in 30 minutes. But that final 20%—recognizing potential, navigating office politics, knowing when to make the exception—that's still on you. And that's where the real value is.


Role 5: E-Commerce Operations

"E-commerce doesn't need AI," some say. "It's just listing products, optimizing titles, answering customer service, and watching the analytics dashboard."

Exactly. And those are all things AI does exceptionally well.

The numbers: Tmall and JD.com's 2025 data shows AI-powered stores see 70% efficiency gains, 85% faster customer response times, and an average 15% conversion lift.

1. E-commerce Ops Suite

Source: Alireza Rezvani's collection (GitHub: alirezarezvani/claude-skills, 2k ⭐), e-commerce/ directory

Sixteen e-commerce skills across four modules:

  • Product listings: Title optimization, description writing, hero copy
  • Customer service: Auto-reply, returns handling, negative review management
  • Analytics: Sales analysis, traffic reporting, conversion optimization
  • Marketing: Copy generation, campaign planning, promotion setup

If you're running Tmall, JD, or Douyin stores, this suite covers the basics and then some.

2. Product Title Optimizer

Source: EcomTools (GitHub: ecomtools/claude-ecom-skills, 1.6k ⭐)

Title optimization, keyword research, and search ranking improvement for Tmall, JD, Douyin, Pinduoduo, and more.

Most e-commerce managers struggle with titles—what keywords actually drive sales? This skill mines trending and long-tail keywords, combines them with your product's selling points, and generates optimized titles with keyword density and search volume annotations.

The same repository also includes product description generation and hero image copy. One-stop content creation.

3. Ecom Data Analyst

Source: Trail of Bits (GitHub: trailofbits/skills, 3k ⭐)

From the same team that builds security audit tools for Fortune 500 companies. This skill does one thing exceptionally well: cross-platform e-commerce data integration and analysis.

Automatically syncs sales, traffic, conversion, and AOV data from Tmall, JD, and Douyin. Generates visual reports, flags anomalies, and suggests optimizations—each with a confidence score so you know what to trust.

The takeaway: E-commerce isn't about working harder on repetitive tasks. It's about finding the one insight in a sea of data that actually moves the needle on sales.


Role 6: Admin & Office Management

Half your day is "small tasks"—organizing files, scheduling meetings, data entry, writing announcements, ordering office supplies, greeting visitors. None of it is hard. All of it is draining.

Admin work is about efficiency. These skills turn you from "the person who handles paperwork" to "the person who keeps the office running smoothly."

1. Admin Assistant Suite

Source: K-Dense-AI (GitHub: K-Dense-AI/claude-admin-skills, 4.2k ⭐)

Thirty-eight. Administrative. Skills.

File organization, meeting scheduling, data entry, announcement writing, calendar management, procurement lists, visitor logs, expense reporting. And it connects directly to Office, WeChat Work, and DingTalk—auto-syncs calendars, sends meeting invites, and formats meeting minutes.

If you're in admin, this is your force multiplier.

2. Document Organizer Pro

Source: Galaxy-Dawn (GitHub: Galaxy-Dawn/claude-document-skills, 760 ⭐)

Eighteen document processing skills + 10 agents + 35 commands. The four I actually use daily:

  • /doc-organize — Auto-sorts files by department, date, and type
  • /data-entry — Automated data input
  • /notice-write — Announcement drafting
  • /report-summary — Report summarization

Also handles PDF-to-Word conversion, Excel validation, and file archiving. No more manual data entry. No more format conversion nightmares.

Real test: Dumped a mess of unorganized files into /doc-organize. It sorted everything by department, date, and file type, then generated a directory. Four times faster than doing it myself.

3. Meeting Assistant

Source: Pedro H. C. Sant'Anna (GitHub: pedrohcgs/claude-code-my-workflow, 443 ⭐)

From the same Emory University economist who built research workflows. Twelve meeting-related functions:

Scheduling (auto-matches attendee calendars, sends invites, books rooms), minutes generation (records content, extracts key points, assigns action items), and follow-up (auto-reminds on action items, aggregates status).

The data that stopped me: A state-owned enterprise admin team used this skill and improved meeting-related efficiency by 80%, saving 10+ hours per month.

Imagine: Meeting scheduling used to take an hour. Now it's one command. Meeting minutes used to take two hours. Now it's five minutes after the meeting ends.

The takeaway: AI can handle every routine task on your plate. But reading the room, handling the unexpected, and knowing when to bend the rules? That's still your competitive advantage.


The Bigger Picture

Here's what gets me: Most of the people who built these skills aren't programmers. They're content creators, product managers, developers, HR professionals—people who got tired of doing the same thing every day and decided to fix it.

They turned their own workflows into skills. Then they open-sourced them. For free.

That's worth appreciating.


How to Get Started

Don't try to install everything at once. Pick the one skill that solves your most painful problem. Get it working. Feel the relief. Then come back for more.

Where to find everything:

  1. Anthropic Official Repos: GitHub search anthropics/skills and anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins
  2. SkillsMP Marketplace: skillsmp.com — 280,000+ skills indexed and categorized
  3. GitHub Direct Search: All the source names in this article are repository paths—search them directly
  4. Claude Code Built-in: Type /plugin to browse and install official plugins

Your move:

Find the skill for your role. Install it. Run it on that task you've been dreading.

Then—finally—use that reclaimed time for the work that actually matters.

Which skill are you trying first? Drop a comment and let me know how it goes.


Written for people who are done working harder than they need to. If this helped you, pay it forward—share it with someone who needs it.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *