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Rian O'Leary
Rian O'Leary

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There's a New Market Hiding in Plain Sight

Welcome to The Skill Economy. Market intelligence for the agent skills frontier, before the rest of the world figures it out.


Every few years a new market opens. Almost nobody notices.

Not because the data is hidden, the data is in plain sight. The people who should be writing about it are busy with whatever the last market was. Crypto. LLMs. The API economy. The app store boom before that. Each of these had a window, and during that window a handful of people figured out what was happening, worked out what to do about it, and got there early. Most people didn't.

We're in that window right now for the agent skills market. By reading this, you're already ahead of almost everyone else on the internet who doesn't know it exists. My job is to keep you there.

What Agent Skills Are

An AI agent is a program that takes goal-directed actions on your behalf. It uses a large language model as its reasoning engine and it can send emails, browse the web, write code, run commands, and dozens of other things you'd normally do yourself. The practical version of this has existed for about eighteen months, which is part of the reason most of the world hasn't caught up.

A skill is a reusable capability you install into an agent. Think of it as an app for your agent. Install a skill called "manage-calendar" and your agent suddenly knows how to check your diary, schedule meetings, and resolve conflicts. Install a skill called "review-invoices" and your agent can parse PDFs, extract line items, and log them to a ledger. Skills can be a single instruction file or a fully coded Python tool. They're distributed through registries, roughly the way apps are distributed through an app store.

The biggest public registry is ClawHub. It hosts almost 51,000 community-built skills as of today. Most are free. Some are useful. Some are broken, abandoned, or outright malicious. And right now, there is no trusted source of analysis on which ones to use, how to combine them, or what business models the ecosystem is actually producing.

That gap is why I'm writing.

Why This Is the Moment

Here's what I see happening that most people haven't clocked.

The economics of traditional service work just changed. Things that used to take a freelancer a week take a solo operator with the right skill stack a few hours. This isn't a speedup. It's a different ceiling for what one person can reach. The businesses you can run, the services you can sell, the problems you can profitably take on, all of that just shifted underneath everyone's feet, and almost nobody has looked down.

The data on the market is the part that should stop you. The Apple App Store took six months to reach 15,000 apps after its launch in July 2008, a growth curve the technology press described as unprecedented at the time. ClawHub reached the same number in four months. The wider agent skills ecosystem crossed 350,000 packages in approximately two months, a threshold the biggest software package registry on the internet took around eight years to reach. This is not a market that will form gradually over the next two years. It is forming right now, faster than the historical parallels, and the opportunities inside it are appearing and closing at the same speed.

The supply side is also thin in a way that matters. Most developers are chasing SaaS. Most consultants don't know what a skill is. Most small businesses that could benefit from agent automation have never heard of an agent. The demand side is unaware, the supply side is distracted, and the gap between the two is where every interesting early market in history has lived. The App Store in 2008. The early web. The shape is familiar. What's different is that almost nobody has started mapping the territory yet, and the window is closing faster than any of those comparisons suggest.

What You Get From Reading This

One post a week, every Tuesday, and every post is something I've read, tested, or built myself. The publication rotates through four formats so the feed reads as a publication with a worldview, not a review blog or a single-trick playbook. Each format exists because it gives you something specific you can use.

Analysis. You learn which parts of the market are actually moving and what to do about them. Which categories are opening up. Which niches are saturating. Which structural dynamics are about to become obvious. Some of these posts are data-led, grounded in ClawHub leaderboards and install metrics. Some are argument-led, making a case about where the market is going and what it means for the people operating inside it. Both kinds give you a frame for understanding the market that goes further than the numbers alone.

Teardowns. You find the skills worth installing out of almost 51,000 on the shelf. Every skill covered here gets installed and tested before a word is written about it. Last week's post reviewed the five most downloaded skills on ClawHub. Only one did anything useful. ClawHub also had a supply chain attack earlier this year in which over a thousand malicious skills were removed from the registry. The testing isn't just editorial diligence. It's what stands between a reader and a bad day.

Stack Plays. You get specific strategies for capturing specific opportunities. A solo operator running a local business web agency with four free skills. A freelancer replacing hundreds of dollars a month of SaaS with agent workflows that do the same job. A consultant opening a service line that didn't exist last year. Real workflows, real math, real pricing. The math has to work on the page or the post doesn't ship, and the strategies are the kind you can execute this week if they fit your market.

Explainers. You get from zero to operational. What a skill actually is, how ClawHub works, how skills differ from plugins or MCP tools, how to install your first one. If you arrived at this publication without knowing what any of the above meant, the Explainers are your on-ramp. By the time you've read three of them, you'll understand this market better than most of the people trying to build inside it.

The four formats rotate because the publication is doing a larger project, which is mapping an emerging market while it's still emerging and telling you what to do about it while doing so. Every post is one tool in that project. The project is what makes the publication worth subscribing to. The individual posts are how the project compounds.

Who This Is For

Anyone who suspects something interesting is happening at the edge of the AI market and wants to understand it, and act on it, before the rest of the world figures it out.

Developers looking for a new surface to build on. Founders hunting for unexplored angles. Consultants and agencies wondering how their work is about to change. Operators who want practical strategies for making money and saving money in a market most people haven't noticed. Curious outsiders who just want to know what the next wave looks like before it arrives. You might arrive here knowing nothing about this market. Three posts in, you'll have a clearer picture of it than most people on the internet will get this year.

The Invitation

The skills market is forming right now and most of the world is not paying attention. I am. Every week I'll tell you what's happening, what it means, and what to do about it before it stops being an opportunity. The posts will be honest, tested, and opinionated. The math will be real. The strategies will be ones I've worked through myself, with the caveats I actually found, not the ones that make for better copy.

By the time the wider world notices this market exists, you will already be acting on it. If you want to be one of the people who were early, subscribe.

View the Original article here: https://theskilleconomy.substack.com/p/theres-a-new-market-hiding-in-plain


The Skill Economy. Market intelligence for the agent skills frontier, before the rest of the world figures it out.


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