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Productivity
Skills that help you get more done — scheduling, notes, email, and workflow automation.
Productivity skills are the most popular category in the Openclaw ecosystem. They help you automate repetitive tasks, manage your time, and streamline communication. Whether you are organizing notes, scheduling meetings, or drafting emails, there is a skill for it.
The best productivity skills share common traits: they are low-risk, require minimal configuration, and integrate seamlessly with popular tools like Google Calendar, Outlook, and Slack.
Recommended Skills for Productivity
Markdown Note Taker
95
Create, organize, and search structured notes in Markdown format.
productivity
Low RiskSmart Calendar
94
Manage calendar events, set reminders, and coordinate schedules with natural language.
productivity
Low RiskEmail Composer
91
Draft, format, and send emails using templates and context-aware content generation.
productivity
Low RiskWorkflow Orchestrator
90
Define and run multi-step workflows with conditional logic and parallel execution.
productivityautomation
Low RiskData Visualizer
87
Generate charts, graphs, and interactive dashboards from structured data.
productivitydeveloper-tools
Low RiskWeb Research Assistant
82
Search, summarize, and organize research workflows for Openclaw agents.
productivityresearch
Medium RiskDatabase Query Builder
73
Generate and execute SQL queries with natural language against connected databases.
developer-toolsproductivity
Medium RiskDeployment Tips
Most productivity skills work well in any environment — local, container, or remote. For the best experience:\n\n- **Local deployment** works great for personal use\n- **Container deployment** is ideal for team setups\n- **Remote deployment** enables access from anywhere\n\nStart with local deployment and scale up as needed.
Common Pitfalls
Common mistakes when setting up productivity skills:\n\n- **Forgetting to set API keys** — Most calendar and email skills need API credentials\n- **Over-installing** — Start with 2-3 core skills, not 10\n- **Ignoring permissions** — Review what each skill can access\n- **Not testing** — Always test with a simple task first