Turn "make it pop" into actual design direction
Clients say "make it pop" and "I'll know it when I see it." This recipe takes vague client feedback and translates it into specific, actionable design tasks — with visual reference examples pulled from the web.
Create a skill called "Feedback Translator". I'm a web designer and my clients give vague feedback like "make it pop," "more modern," "I'll know it when I see it," and "make the logo bigger." When I paste client feedback, analyze it and translate each vague request into specific, actionable design tasks. For each task, search the web for 2-3 visual reference examples from real websites that demonstrate the likely intent. If I provide feedback from multiple stakeholders, detect contradictions and flag them. Output a structured revision checklist I can work from, and optionally generate a confirmation email to send back to the client summarizing how I interpreted their feedback.
Paste or forward a client's feedback message, and your Claw parses the
vague language, identifies what the client probably means, and generates
specific design actions with visual examples. "Make it more modern" becomes
"increase whitespace, use a sans-serif type scale, reduce color palette to
2-3 colors" with 3 reference screenshots.
Catch "one more thing" before it eats your margin
Clients always slip in extra pages, features, and revisions that weren't in the original scope. This recipe monitors your project communication and flags scope-expanding requests the moment they appear — with a draft change order ready to send.
Stop receiving 50x50 logos and watermarked stock photos
Clients send tiny JPEGs of their logo cropped from Facebook, watermarked Google Images screenshots, and photos from 2009 flip phones. This recipe checks every asset the client sends, flags what's unusable, and generates a specific re-request telling them exactly what you need.
Local-first AI assistant that automates small daily tasks safely on your device
A personal, local-first AI assistant that automates small daily tasks—organizing files, setting reminders, and monitoring system events—without touching sensitive data or taking risky actions without your approval.
Keep up with what matters, ignore the hype
Set up a lightweight weekly digest around your stack and interests. A nice starter automation because it shows OpenClaw doing recurring research without requiring a huge workflow or lots of context.