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Found 5 Skills
Prepare for tomorrow's meetings and tasks. Pulls calendar from Outlook via WorkIQ, cross-references open tasks and workspace context, classifies meetings, detects conflicts and day-fit issues, finds learning and deep-work slots, and generates a structured HTML prep file with productivity recommendations.
Protect your deep work time. Calendar Audit scores every meeting on your calendar, calculates your deep work gap, and makes specific suggestions to reclaim focus time. Supports multiple calendar tools (screenshot, Google Calendar MCP, Apple Calendar, icalBuddy, gcalcli) and scoring frameworks (5-Dimension, Eisenhower, RACI, Value vs Effort, Custom). Value first — your first audit takes 2 minutes with just a screenshot. Just say "calendar-audit" to get going.
Balance the 4 types of professional time (Management, Creation, Consumption, Ideation). Use when discussing productivity, calendar management, time allocation, or work-life balance.
Manage time effectively as a solopreneur to maximize productivity and avoid burnout. Use when struggling with focus, feeling overwhelmed, context-switching too much, or wanting to optimize daily routines. Covers time-blocking, deep work, energy management, distraction elimination, and sustainable productivity systems. Trigger on "time management", "productivity", "focus", "get more done", "manage my time", "deep work", "avoid burnout", "daily routine".
Help a PhD student intentionally choose which cognitive mode to enter right now (deep production, wide reading, or collaborative engagement) and plan their day around these modes to minimize context-switching costs. Use this skill whenever the user is at the start of a day or work block and unsure what to focus on, feels scattered across too many activities, asks "what should I do right now", wants to plan their day, or feels frustrated by constant context-switching. Trigger on phrases like "plan my day", "what should I work on now", "I feel scattered", "context switching", "deep work", "can't focus", "I have X hours", or whenever the user is trying to decide between substantively different kinds of work (writing vs reading vs meetings).