Install
openclaw skills install job-offer-evaluation-kitCompare job offers with structured compensation, benefits, risk, career-fit, and life-fit frameworks. Provides comparison tools only; no financial, tax, legal, or employment-law advice.
openclaw skills install job-offer-evaluation-kitJob Offer Evaluation Kit helps users compare one or more job offers with a structured decision framework. It organizes compensation, benefits, role quality, career trajectory, risk, and life-fit factors so the user can make their own decision.
This skill belongs to the Career & Work Decisions category and has priority P1.
This is a comparison and organization tool only. It does not provide financial advice, tax advice, legal advice, employment-law advice, immigration advice, or personalized investment guidance. It does not tell the user which offer to accept. It helps the user compare trade-offs and prepare questions for qualified advisors when needed.
Use this skill when the user asks to:
Trigger keywords: job offer comparison, evaluate job offer, compare offers, offer decision, compensation comparison, benefits comparison, equity offer, remote versus office job, accept job offer, life fit matrix
Collect only the information needed for comparison. The user may provide partial data; mark missing fields instead of guessing.
If the user asks for legal, tax, immigration, or financial advice, redirect to a qualified professional and continue with neutral comparison framing if useful.
Start with a brief boundary when the request touches money, contracts, equity, tax, immigration, or employment rights:
"I can help you compare the offers using structured decision frameworks, but I cannot provide financial, tax, legal, employment-law, or immigration advice. For those questions, use a qualified professional. The comparison can still help you identify what to ask."
Create a snapshot table for each offer:
| Field | Offer A | Offer B | Offer C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Role / Level | |||
| Location / Work Mode | |||
| Base Pay | |||
| Bonus / Commission | |||
| Equity / LTI | |||
| Sign-On / Relocation | |||
| Core Benefits | |||
| Schedule / Travel | |||
| Growth Path | |||
| Key Unknowns |
Use labels like Offer A or Company 1 if the user wants privacy.
Compare compensation and benefits without advising on taxes, investments, or whether the user can afford a choice.
Use these categories:
Present numbers as user-supplied inputs and comparisons, not as tax-adjusted advice or investment recommendations. If equity is involved, frame it as scenario modeling with uncertainty, not valuation advice.
Create a risk matrix:
| Risk Area | What to Check | Offer A | Offer B | Notes / Questions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Role clarity | Are responsibilities and success metrics clear? | Low/Med/High | Low/Med/High | |
| Company stability | Funding, profitability, runway, layoffs, market pressure | |||
| Manager / team fit | Manager style, team health, support | |||
| Compensation risk | Variable pay, equity liquidity, repayment clauses | |||
| Workload risk | Hours, travel, on-call, burnout signals | |||
| Location risk | Commute, relocation, visa or authorization dependency | |||
| Growth risk | Promotion path, skill stagnation, limited scope |
Risk levels are practical comparison labels only. Do not make factual claims about a specific employer unless the user provided evidence, and do not advise on legal enforceability of terms.
Use a life-fit matrix to compare the work against the user's real life:
| Life-Fit Factor | Weight 1-5 | Offer A Score 1-5 | Offer B Score 1-5 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commute and location | ||||
| Schedule flexibility | ||||
| Energy and stress | ||||
| Family or caregiving fit | ||||
| Health and accessibility needs | ||||
| Personal identity and values fit | ||||
| Community and social life | ||||
| Time for outside goals |
Compute weighted scores if the user wants:
Assess the career side:
Avoid saying one path is objectively better. Identify trade-offs and unknowns.
Return a concise summary:
If there is no clear winner, say that and show which missing information would most improve the decision.
Use this structure for a full response:
## Job Offer Comparison
### Boundary
This is a structured comparison only, not financial, tax, legal, employment-law, immigration, or investment advice.
### Offer Snapshot
[Side-by-side table]
### Compensation and Benefits Matrix
[Guaranteed cash, variable cash, equity/LTI, benefits, leave, work expense support]
### Risk Matrix
[Role clarity, company stability, manager/team fit, compensation risk, workload risk, location risk, growth risk]
### Life-Fit Matrix
[Weighted matrix with scores and notes]
### Career-Fit Analysis
[12-month, 2-3 year, skill, sponsorship, market narrative, exit-option comparison]
### Trade-Offs
- [Trade-off 1]
- [Trade-off 2]
- [Trade-off 3]
### Questions to Clarify
- [Question for recruiter/hiring manager]
- [Question for benefits contact]
- [Question for qualified professional if legal/tax/financial issues are involved]
### Decision Aid
[Summarize which offer leads each category and what remains uncertain. Remind the user the final decision is theirs.]