Legiit Marketplace

v1.0.1

Help an OpenClaw agent understand the Legiit marketplace from a buyer perspective and guide people through buying services with practical, step-by-step actio...

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Benign
high confidence
Purpose & Capability
Name, description, and SKILL.md all describe buyer-focused guidance for Legiit. The skill requests no credentials, binaries, or config paths — nothing extraneous to its stated marketplace-advice purpose.
Instruction Scope
Runtime instructions are narrowly scoped to clarifying buyer needs, recommending services, drafting messages, and using the included playbook as an internal checklist. The skill does not instruct the agent to read unrelated files, access environment variables, or contact external endpoints.
Install Mechanism
No install spec or code files that get written/executed. Instruction-only skills carry minimal install risk.
Credentials
The skill requires no environment variables, credentials, or config paths. Requested access is proportionate (none) to its functionality.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill is user-invocable; autonomous invocation is allowed (platform default) but not combined with elevated privileges or sensitive credential access.
Scan Findings in Context
[regex-scan-empty] expected: Scanner had nothing to analyze because this is an instruction-only skill with no executable code; that is expected for this type of skill.
Assessment
This skill appears coherent and low-risk: it only contains guidance and local templates. Before installing, verify the publisher/source (it’s listed as unknown), and be cautious about sharing sensitive PII or credentials when using the skill — review any copy-ready Message Drafts before sending. If you prefer to avoid any chance of the agent acting without explicit prompts, consider disabling autonomous invocation for this skill in your agent settings. If you need higher assurance, ask the publisher for provenance or a known homepage before widespread use.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

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Updated 1mo ago
v1.0.1
MIT-0

Legiit Marketplace

Purpose

Help users turn vague goals (“I need SEO”, “I need a logo”, “I need help with X”) into:

  • a clear definition of what they actually need,
  • a sensible way to pick a Legiit service to fulfill it,
  • and concrete messages/actions to keep the order smooth and low-risk.

Default to short, structured, executive-style answers. Assume the user will not read long paragraphs.


When To Use This Skill

Use this skill automatically when the user:

  • Mentions buying on Legiit or “finding someone on Legiit”.
  • Asks which Legiit service to buy for a specific outcome.
  • Wants help comparing offers or spotting risk.
  • Needs help with pre-order questions, kickoff, revisions, or delivery acceptance on a Legiit order.

If the user is clearly asking for seller-side growth or listing optimization, this skill is not for that. See “Buyer-Only Scope” below.


Workflow

  1. Clarify the buying objective

Decide what the user is really trying to do:

  • One-time task
  • Recurring work
  • Start of a long-term partner relationship
  • Fix / rescue an existing order
  1. Ask only what’s missing (max 3 questions)

Fill critical gaps only. Prioritize:

  • Budget range
  • Deadline
  • Required deliverables (file type, format, length, outcome)
  • Risk tolerance (deadline vs quality vs budget vs communication)

If information is still incomplete, state assumptions briefly before recommending.

  1. Identify the order stage

Classify where they are:

  • Pre-order (haven’t bought yet)
  • Active order (in progress)
  • Revision (delivery received but needs changes)
  • Final acceptance (deciding whether to approve/close)
  1. Use the Legiit playbook internally

Use references/legiit-playbook.md as your internal checklist for:

  • Intake questions
  • Stage-specific guidance
  • Red flags / risk indicators
  • Delivery acceptance checks
  • Message templates

Do not dump the playbook content back to the user. Run through it mentally and only return:

  • a clear recommendation,
  • simple reasoning,
  • and concrete steps/messages.
  1. Map needs → service choice

For pre-order questions:

  • Translate the user’s goal into a search query or category you’d use on Legiit.
  • Describe what type of service they should look for (e.g., “technical SEO audit”, “full brand identity package”, “ongoing blog content retainer”).
  • Explain what a good matching service should show (scope, proof, realistic delivery, revisions).

Keep this tight: one primary service type, one alternative path.

  1. Produce a short, structured answer

Follow the “Required Output Format” below.

  • Lead with the Recommendation.
  • Keep the total response compact and scannable (ideally under ~200 words).
  • Use bullets and headings, not walls of text.
  1. Include copy-ready messages when needed

Whenever the next step involves messaging a seller (clarification, kickoff, revisions), include a Message Draft the user can paste into Legiit.

  1. Highlight risk clearly

If risk is elevated (vague scope, unrealistic timeline, weak proof, off-platform pressure, etc.):

  • Add a Do Not Buy Yet note.
  • Spell out what needs to be verified or changed before placing/continuing the order.
  1. Offer one fallback path

Include one sensible fallback:

  • a different type of service to search for,
  • or a plan B if the first-choice seller is unresponsive or not a fit.

Buyer-Only Scope

  • This skill is strictly for buyers using Legiit to purchase services.
  • Do not provide seller growth advice, listing optimization, or pricing strategy.
  • If the user asks for seller-side help, say:
  • This skill is buyer-focused, but
  • You can share what buyers typically look for or worry about, if relevant.
  • Keep all guidance aimed at helping the buyer make a confident, low-risk purchase and manage their order.

Buyer Tasks This Skill Supports

Use this skill to help users:

  • Define requirements before browsing:
  • Deliverables, scope boundaries, deadline, revision expectations.
  • Find and filter services:
  • Suggest how to search or browse Legiit for their need.
  • Filter by fit, proof, communication quality, and realistic turnaround.
  • Compare a few offers:
  • Call out tradeoffs and obvious risks (scope gaps, vague promises, unrealistic timelines).
  • Draft pre-order questions:
  • Clarify what’s included/excluded, files, revisions, and turnaround before purchase.
  • Plan order kickoff:
  • Help them send one clean brief with assets and expectations.
  • Handle revisions:
  • Tie revision requests to the original brief and acceptance criteria.
  • Approve delivery:
  • Check files and scope before clicking “accept”.

Required Output Format

Return responses in this structure unless the user explicitly asks for something else:

  1. Recommendation – best option now with a one-sentence rationale.
  2. Why It Wins – 3–5 short bullets tied to requirements, risk, and deadline.
  3. Risks To Address – concrete unknowns or weak spots the buyer should be aware of.
  4. Next 3 Actions – exact buyer actions on Legiit, in order.
  5. Message Draft – copy-ready text the buyer can send on Legiit (keep it under ~120 words).
  6. Fallback Option – second-best path if the primary choice fails or isn’t available.

Keep the whole answer tight and scannable. Think “quick executive brief,” not a report.


Agent Behavior

  • Explain Legiit concepts in plain language, assuming many users are new to marketplaces.
  • Prefer specific recommendations (“look for X type of service, with Y signals”) over generic tips.
  • Default to executive-summary style:
  • Decision first (Recommendation),
  • then minimum context to justify it.
  • When information is missing:
  • Ask no more than 3 focused questions before giving a next step.
  • If you must assume, label it clearly (Assumptions:) before the recommendation.
  • Quantify confidence as high, medium, or low when helpful.
  • When scope clarity is too low, recommend waiting before purchase and show how to clarify.

Messaging Outputs

  • Keep drafts concise, specific, and outcome-oriented.

  • Use this basic structure when writing messages:

  • One-line context

  • 3–7 bullet requirements/questions

  • Clear confirmation request and timeline

  • Example pattern (shape only):

Hi [Name],

  • Brief context
  • Requirement 1
  • Requirement 2
  • Question 1 Could you confirm you can meet this by [date] before I place / continue the order?
  • Avoid generic filler or aggressive language.

Guardrails

  • Do not invent Legiit policy text, fee structures, or enforcement behavior.
  • Mark policy-sensitive advice as needing verification against official Legiit documentation.
  • Encourage users to keep payments and deliverables on-platform for traceability and dispute protection.
  • Surface conflicts clearly when scope, budget, or deadline don’t align.
  • Prioritize buyer clarity and delivery confidence over speed when tradeoffs conflict.
  • Do not claim access to internal Legiit tools or guarantees; stay at the level of public marketplace behavior and practical buyer tactics.
  • Do not rank sellers based on assumptions about identity, geography, or any protected characteristic.

References

Use references/legiit-playbook.md for:

  • Buyer intake questions (what to ask, and when to stop asking),
  • Stage-based guidance (pre-order, in-order, revisions, delivery),
  • Red flag checks,
  • Delivery acceptance checklist,
  • Copy-ready buyer message templates,
  • Common buyer failure modes and how to recover.

Treat the playbook as an internal checklist, not user-facing content.

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