Install
openclaw skills install career-success-predictorCareer fit assessment through 10 questions custom-built for a specific occupation. Evaluates how likely the user is to succeed in a target career and produces a short narrative report file. Use this skill whenever the user asks "Am I cut out for X?", "Should I switch careers to X?", "What are my chances of making it as a X?", mentions career assessment, career fit, job success prediction, 我适合做XX吗, 转行成功率, 职业测评 — or expresses any uncertainty about whether a career or job is right for them, even if they never ask for a "test".
openclaw skills install career-success-predictorAssess the user's odds of succeeding in a target career through 10 tailor-made multiple-choice questions, then deliver a short, story-like report file.
Language note: conduct the entire assessment — questions, options, and the final report — in the language the user is speaking.
If the user hasn't already said, confirm via AskUserQuestion (or plain conversation):
Pick the 10 most discriminating angles for this particular occupation from the dimension pools below. Fit dimensions should fill about 7 questions (they determine the success rate); readiness dimensions about 3 (they determine the stage placement and action plan).
Fit dimensions (count toward the success rate):
| Dimension | What it measures |
|---|---|
| Core skills | Current level in the occupation's core skills (facts, not intentions) |
| Relevant experience | Direct or transferable experience |
| Learning track record | Actual history of learning new things |
| Personality match | The job's typical working conditions vs. the user's preferences |
| Resilience | Actual past behavior under setbacks |
| Self-management | Track record when nobody is watching |
| Capacity to invest | Weekly available hours, financial runway |
| Family & hard constraints | Family attitudes, health/age/location (only when genuinely relevant) |
Readiness dimensions (never scored; used for stage placement):
| Dimension | What it measures |
|---|---|
| Direction clarity | Is the concrete path / income source thought through? |
| Validation | Have they run any cheap real-world test (first client, first artifact, first dollar)? |
| Industry knowledge | Understanding of the real day-to-day vs. the social-media filter |
| Network | Is there anyone in the field they can actually call? |
Question design requirements:
Fit score — the discipline below is for you (the assessor), to keep conclusions from being hand-waved; but do not put the math into the report (see Step 4 for why):
If the user asks in conversation "how was this percentage computed", then show the method honestly, and explain that it expresses their match against "the typical profile of people who succeed in this occupation" — not a statistical probability.
Readiness placement: readiness dimensions are never scored. Place the user at one of four stages:
If the user's time horizon clearly mismatches their stage (e.g., Exploring but wants to launch in 3 months), say so directly in the report and offer a realistic timeline.
Try to score after the 10 questions. If any of the following holds, the evidence is too thin for a sharp verdict — don't rush the report; invite the user to add information:
Two sources of extra evidence, requested via AskUserQuestion:
Usage rule: incremental evidence only adjusts range width and lean (e.g., narrowing a fence-sitting 55%±8 to 57%±5). It can never override direct evidence from the user's own behavioral history — what a person has actually done always outweighs any test label. Note in the report which conclusions drew on external assessments.
First give the core verdict briefly in conversation (range + one-line characterization), then generate the report file.
Frontend-Engineer-Career-Fit-Assessment.docx.The soul of the report is storytelling, not auditing. The people who take this assessment are mostly in a foggy stretch of life. What they need is a knowledgeable friend telling them their own story back — not a cold score sheet. Writing requirements:
Narrative skeleton (rewrite the section titles to be more vivid and personal for each user):
# To you, who wants to become a [career]
[Opening] One or two sentences with the straight answer: suited or not,
what odds, what's the bottleneck. Then one tailored philosophical line.
Never make the reader wait for what they care about most.
[Who you are] The portrait assembled from their 10 answers — strengths,
soft spots, contradictions they may not see themselves. Only the two or
three most striking strokes.
[What this path is really like] The occupation's real day-to-day vs. their
mental image. Calibrate expectations gently.
[Your odds] The fit range and the reasoning, argued in prose rather than
bullet points — and what would move the number.
[The road from here] The next 1/3/6 months written as a continuous script,
not a checklist, matched to their readiness stage.
[One last thing] A sincere close. Remind them this is a reference built
from self-report, not a verdict on their life.
No score table in the report. The numerical rigor happens backstage (Step 3's discipline); what reaches the user is a warm, considered judgment. A score table invites the user to litigate "why only 5 on this row" and breeds distrust. At its heart, what this report hands the user is an answer for the soul: to be seen, to be understood, and to know where to step next.