| name | talent-stack-builder |
| description | Help users identify and build their unique talent stack using Scott Adams' methodology. Use when someone says 'what's my talent stack', 'how do I stand out', 'I'm not the best at anything', 'what skills should I develop', 'career strategy', 'how to become valuable', 'I'm mediocre at everything', or 'help me find my competitive advantage.' Walks through talent stack identification and gap analysis. |
Talent Stack Builder
Walk the user through identifying their existing talent stack and designing additions that would make their combination rare and valuable, using Scott Adams' talent stack framework from Coffee with Scott Adams and his books.
The Core Insight
Adams's career thesis: you do not need to be the best in the world at any one thing. You need to be "good enough" at a combination of things where the intersection is rare. Adams himself is not the world's best artist, not the world's best writer, not the world's best comedian, and not the world's best business strategist. But the combination of "pretty good artist + pretty good writer + above-average business knowledge + decent sense of humor" produced Dilbert — which made him one of the most successful cartoonists in history.
As Adams frames it: "If you want an extraordinary life, you have two paths. Become the best at one specific thing — which is nearly impossible — or become very good (top 25%) at two or more things. The second strategy is much easier."
The talent stack is Adams's answer to the question every mediocre person asks: "How do I compete when I'm not the best at anything?"
How to Run This
Step 1: Skills Inventory
Ask: "List every skill you have where you'd rate yourself above average — not world-class, just better than most people you know. Include soft skills, technical skills, domain knowledge, personality traits, and unusual experiences."
Guide them to think beyond resume skills:
- Communication (writing, speaking, presenting)
- Technical (coding, design, data, tools)
- Domain expertise (industry knowledge, regulatory, scientific)
- Social (networking, reading people, negotiation, empathy)
- Creative (humor, visual thinking, storytelling, music)
- Personality traits (risk tolerance, persistence, curiosity, calm under pressure)
- Unusual experiences (lived abroad, military, unusual hobby, survived something)
Adams specifically calls out that PERSONALITY TRAITS count. His own talent stack includes "above-average risk tolerance" — most cartoonists would not have bet their career on a daily comic strip about office workers.
Step 2: Combination Analysis
Once you have their skills list, analyze:
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Rarity test: How many people share this exact combination? The fewer, the better. "Good writer + knows Python" is common. "Good writer + knows Python + spent 5 years in medical devices + fluent in Mandarin" is extremely rare.
-
Value test: Does this combination solve a problem someone will pay for? Rare is useless without value. "Juggling + underwater basket weaving + yodeling" is rare but worthless.
-
Credibility test: Can you demonstrate competence in each skill? Adams: "Every skill you add to your talent stack doubles your value — but only if people believe you have it."
Present their current stack visually:
[Skill A] + [Skill B] + [Skill C] = [Current Intersection]
Rarity: How many people share this combination?
Value: What problem does this combination solve?
Missing: What one addition would 10x the rarity or value?
Step 3: Gap Identification
This is where the real value is. Ask:
"Looking at your stack, what ONE skill — if you got to top 25% in it — would make your combination dramatically more rare or valuable?"
Adams's rules for choosing the next skill:
- Favor skills that multiply (public speaking multiplies everything; filing does not)
- Favor skills that are rare in your field (a programmer who can sell is rarer than a programmer who knows another language)
- Favor skills with compounding returns (writing, speaking, and networking get better with practice AND create more opportunities to practice)
- Avoid skills that are table stakes (everyone in your field already has them — they don't differentiate)
Adams's recommended "always valuable" additions (from multiple episodes):
- Public speaking — multiplies every other skill
- Writing — "The written word is the basis for most human persuasion"
- Psychology / persuasion — understanding what motivates people
- Basic business knowledge — P&L, negotiation, sales basics
- Technology literacy — not coding necessarily, but understanding what technology can do
Step 4: The 25% Plan
For the gap skill they choose, build a concrete plan to reach top 25%. Adams's principle: top 25% in any skill is achievable by almost anyone in 6-12 months of focused practice. You don't need to be great. You need to be noticeably better than average.
Outline:
- What does top 25% look like in this skill? (Define the bar)
- What's the fastest path to get there? (Course, practice routine, mentor)
- How will you demonstrate it? (Portfolio, credential, public work)
- Timeline: realistic months to reach 25th percentile
Step 5: Stack Projection
Show them what their talent stack looks like after the addition:
CURRENT: [Skill A] + [Skill B] + [Skill C]
Rarity: 1 in X people
PROJECTED: [Skill A] + [Skill B] + [Skill C] + [New Skill]
Rarity: 1 in X*10 people
New opportunities this unlocks: [specific roles, businesses, or projects]
Adams's Own Talent Stack (Reference Example)
Use this as an illustration when explaining the concept:
| Skill | Level | Not World-Class Because |
|---|
| Drawing | Good | Thousands of better artists |
| Writing | Good | Not a literary talent |
| Business knowledge | Above average | MBA-level, not CEO-level |
| Humor | Good | Not a stand-up comedian |
| Marketing | Good | Understood positioning and branding |
| Risk tolerance | High | Personality trait, not a learned skill |
| Understanding office culture | Deep | Years as a cubicle worker |
Result: Dilbert — the most commercially successful office comic strip in history. No single skill was exceptional. The combination was one-of-a-kind.
Common Traps to Flag
- "I need to be the best at something first" — No. That's goals thinking. The talent stack IS the strategy for people who aren't #1.
- "My skills are too common" — The skills individually might be common. The combination rarely is. Dig deeper into unusual experiences and personality traits.
- "I should specialize more" — Adams explicitly argues against this for most people. Specialization is high-risk (one injury ends an athlete's career). Stacking is resilient.
- "Soft skills don't count" — Adams considers them the highest-leverage additions. "A programmer who can communicate is 10x more valuable than a programmer who can't."
Related Skills
- systems-designer — Once you know WHAT skills to develop, use the systems designer to build daily systems for developing each one.
- reframe-engine — If you feel outclassed by competition, Lens 5 (talent stack) reframes the problem from "I can't win" to "I need a different combination."
Related Frameworks
talent-stack.md — The full framework article with Adams's examples and methodology