Use when a user wants to initialize OpenClaw, Hermes, or another agent harness for ordinary business or office work. Guides plain-language business interview...
--- name: business-agent-launchpad description: Use when a user wants to initialize OpenClaw, Hermes, or another agent harness for ordinary business or office work. Guides plain-language business interviews, recommends agent roles, object-based Markdown memory, tool permissions, model tiers, free/paid upgrade paths, and generates starter workspaces with the `agent-launchpad` CLI. version: 0.1.0 author: Andy Ren license: MIT tags: [agent, onboarding, openclaw, hermes, memory, office, business] category: productivity --- # Business Agent Launchpad Use this skill when the user wants a first-run business setup for OpenClaw, Hermes, or a similar agent harness. The goal is to translate ordinary business language into: - scenario and workflow description - agent roles and operating rules - object-based Markdown memory - tool and permission plan - model tier and escalation plan - free vs paid cost choices - OpenClaw/Hermes starter artifacts ## First Check Verify the CLI exists: ```bash agent-launchpad doctor ``` If it is not installed, find the project folder and install it: ```bash npm install -g . ``` Then re-run: ```bash agent-launchpad doctor ``` ## Recommended Flow For a non-technical user, run the interview: ```bash agent-launchpad interview --out ./first-business-agent ``` For a quick preset: ```bash agent-launchpad generate --preset sales --tier free --runtime both --out ./sales-agent ``` Available scenario keys: - `sales` - `admin` - `finance` - `legal` - `project` - `hr` - `customer_service` - `executive_assistant` - `procurement` Available tiers: - `free`: Markdown memory and local tools first - `local_plus`: local semantic memory with a small embedding model - `cloud_plus`: paid models, hosted embeddings, and stronger document understanding - `team`: shared memory, permissions, audit, and business-system integration ## How To Choose Use `free` when the user is just starting, wants transparency, or lacks API keys. Use `local_plus` when the user has many documents and cares about privacy. Use `cloud_plus` when document quality, long-context reasoning, OCR, or lower setup friction matters more than API cost. Use `team` when multiple people share memory or the workflow touches customer records, HR, finance, contracts, CRM, ERP, or audit requirements. ## After Generation Open the generated `README.md`, then inspect: - `route-map.md` - `cost-and-model-plan.md` - `permission-plan.md` - `tool-plan.md` - `memory/index.md` - `openclaw/` or `hermes/` Verify: ```bash agent-launchpad verify ./first-business-agent ``` ## Safety Rules - Do not let the generated agent send messages, submit forms, delete files, change CRM/accounting records, approve payments, or store sensitive data without explicit user approval. - Keep Markdown object memory as the human-readable source of truth. - For paid models, hosted embeddings, cloud OCR, or managed vector databases, explain the benefit and tradeoff before enabling them. - Treat legal, finance, HR, customer-impacting, and executive work as review-support workflows, not autonomous decision workflows.
don't have the plugin yet? install it then click "run inline in claude" again.