Reach the right people without sounding desperate
Draft short, specific outreach messages that feel personal instead of transactional.
I want to reach out to someone for my job search. Research this person using public information and craft a personalized outreach message. Find, if available: their current role, recent public activity or posts, any common ground, and other details that make the message more specific. Then write a message under 100 words that: opens with a specific reference to their work or a shared connection, briefly states why I'm reaching out, makes a clear and low-commitment ask (15-minute call, a question, or a referral), and closes warmly. Also draft a follow-up message for 5-7 days later if there is no response. Keep the tone warm and respectful — not desperate, not transactional. Person: [name and LinkedIn URL or email] Why I'm reaching out: [job interest, informational interview, referral, etc.] My background: [brief context so the message can reference your relevant experience]
Tell your Claw who you want to reach and why. It researches the person,
finds a genuine connection point, and drafts a short, respectful message
that doesn't read like a mass template. Works for hiring managers,
recruiters, potential mentors, and informational interview requests.
Apply smarter, not just more
Mass-applying with the same resume gets mass-rejected. This skill builds a tracking system, tailored resume modules, cover letter templates, and weekly quotas so you stay consistent without burning out.
10 contacts, 3 conversations, one system
Networking feels awkward until you have a system. This skill identifies 10 contacts, drafts cold and warm outreach messages, prepares a question set for informational interviews, and tracks everything so follow-ups don't fall through.
Turn every "no" into usable data for your next "yes"
Turn rejection patterns into useful signal so you can adjust your search instead of guessing.
A professional portfolio site from your resume in 10 minutes
Generate a simple portfolio site from your resume and projects — especially useful for developers, designers, writers, and other portfolio-driven roles.