一键导入
employer-brand
When the user needs to create or improve content that shapes how candidates and the public perceive the company as a place to work.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
菜单
When the user needs to create or improve content that shapes how candidates and the public perceive the company as a place to work.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
基于 SOC 职业分类
When the user wants to apply to startup accelerators, incubators, or fellowship programs. Also use when the user mentions "YC application", "Techstars", "accelerator", or "apply to programs".
When the user needs to design or evaluate system architecture — service boundaries, data models, API contracts, infrastructure topology, database selection, or dependency analysis. Also activate for "design the system", "how should I architect this", "monolith vs microservices", or architecture decision records.
When the user needs to write a monthly or quarterly investor update, prepare a board deck, or communicate company progress to stakeholders.
When the user needs to identify at-risk accounts, understand why customers are leaving, reduce churn rate, build health scores, design save plays, or create win-back campaigns.
When the user needs to set up or improve CI/CD pipelines — GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, deployment automation, or says "set up CI", "automate deployment", "add tests to pipeline", "fix my build".
When the user asks for a code review, shares code for feedback, or says "review this", "check my code", "what's wrong with this". Also activate when reviewing a pull request or diff.
| name | employer-brand |
| description | When the user needs to create or improve content that shapes how candidates and the public perceive the company as a place to work. |
| related | ["job-description","content-strategy"] |
| reads | ["startup-context"] |
Activate when the user asks to write careers page copy, create a culture document, draft an engineering blog post, build "day in the life" content, document company values, or generally improve how the company presents itself to prospective hires. Also activate when the user is struggling to differentiate their startup from competitors in the talent market.
The deliverable depends on the content type:
Every employer brand claim needs three layers:
A high-converting careers page follows this arc:
Strong values have four properties:
Example:
## Ship and Iterate
We choose progress over perfection. We'd rather learn from a live
feature than debate a hypothetical one.
What this looks like:
- Shipping an MVP to 10 customers before building the "full" version
- Writing a quick RFC instead of scheduling a meeting
- Celebrating a launched experiment that failed, because we learned
What this does NOT look like:
- Shipping broken code that erodes customer trust
- Skipping testing because "we move fast"
- Ignoring feedback because "we already shipped it"
Engineering blog posts serve dual duty as employer brand and thought leadership.
job-description — Every JD is an employer brand touchpoint. Ensure JD voice matches the careers page.content-strategy — Employer brand content (blog posts, social) should integrate into the broader content calendar and distribution plan.Prompt: "Write careers page copy for our developer tools startup. We're 20 people, Series A, remote-first."
Good output snippet:
# Build tools that developers actually love
We're a team of 20 building [product] — and we're looking for people
who care about developer experience as much as we do.
## Why engineers join us
**You'll ship to thousands of developers weekly.** Our CLI has 50K+
monthly active users. The feature you build on Monday gets feedback
in Slack by Thursday.
**You'll own entire systems.** We don't have ticket jockeys. Each
engineer owns a domain — from design through production monitoring.
Your last PR won't need four approvals to merge.
**You'll work with people who write well.** We're remote-first and
async-heavy. That means clear writing, thoughtful RFCs, and Loom
videos instead of status meetings.
Prompt: "Help us write our company values. We keep saying we have them but haven't documented anything."
Good output snippet:
Let's start by identifying what's actually true about how you operate
today — not what sounds good on a poster. I'll ask a few questions:
1. When your team disagrees on a decision, how does it get resolved?
2. What behavior have you praised in the last month?
3. What's something your team does that an outsider might find unusual?
4. When has the team made a hard trade-off, and which side did you land on?
Your answers will reveal the real values. Then we'll name them, define
them with behavioral examples, and pressure-test them with counter-
examples to make sure they're genuinely opinionated.