Total 40,869 skills
Showing 12 of 40869 skills
Apply behavioral finance theory to identify systematic investor biases and their impact on asset prices. Use this skill when the user needs to analyze irrational market behavior, explain pricing anomalies through cognitive biases, diagnose investor decision errors, or when they ask 'why do investors hold losers too long', 'how does loss aversion affect pricing', or 'what biases drive this market pattern'.
Apply Bhaskar's critical realism to analyze phenomena through three ontological domains (real, actual, empirical), identify generative causal mechanisms via retroduction, and examine structure-agency interplay. Use this skill when the user needs to go beyond surface correlations to underlying causes, design research that distinguishes mechanisms from events from experiences, or when they ask 'what causes this beyond the observed pattern', 'what structures enable or constrain this behavior', or 'how do I move from correlation to causal explanation'.
Apply the Uppsala Internationalization Model to analyze gradual foreign market entry based on psychic distance and experiential learning. Use this skill when the user needs to plan a staged internationalization sequence, understand why firms enter culturally similar markets first, or evaluate whether a firm's international expansion follows the establishment chain from export to subsidiary.
Use historical analogies to inform strategic decisions by identifying structural similarities and differences between past and present situations. Use this skill when the user draws on historical precedent to justify a strategy, needs to evaluate whether a historical comparison is valid, or wants to learn from past events — even if they say 'this is like the dotcom bubble', 'history repeats itself', or 'what can we learn from how X handled this'.
Apply Bourdieu's field theory to analyze power relations through the interplay of field, capital, and habitus. Use this skill when the user needs to map positions and position-takings within a social field, analyze how different forms of capital (economic, cultural, social, symbolic) structure competition, explain why actors behave as they do within institutional settings, or when they ask 'why do people in this industry act this way', 'who has power and why', or 'how does this field reproduce inequality'.
Apply Cialdini's six principles of persuasion — Reciprocity, Commitment/Consistency, Social Proof, Liking, Authority, and Scarcity — to analyze or design influence strategies. Use this skill when the user needs to make messaging more persuasive, analyze why a campaign works or doesn't, design sales or marketing copy, or understand social influence tactics — even if they say 'how do we convince people', 'why is this ad effective', or 'make this more persuasive'.
Navigate Taiwan's tax system including corporate income tax (營所稅), business tax (營業稅), personal income tax, withholding obligations, and startup tax incentives. Use this skill when the user needs to understand Taiwan tax obligations, calculate tax liability, file taxes, or plan for tax efficiency — even if they say 'how much tax do we owe', 'what's the corporate tax rate in Taiwan', 'tax filing deadlines', or 'are there startup tax breaks'.
Implement LDA topic modeling to discover latent topics in document collections. Use this skill when the user needs to extract topics from a text corpus, categorize documents by theme, or explore thematic structure — even if they say 'what are the main topics', 'topic extraction', or 'document clustering by theme'.
Apply the Bass Diffusion Model (1969) to forecast innovation adoption using innovation and imitation coefficients. Use this skill when the user needs to forecast new product adoption curves, estimate market penetration timing, calibrate launch strategy based on diffusion dynamics, or when they ask 'how fast will this spread', 'when does adoption take off', or 'what is the expected S-curve'.
Apply the SERVQUAL model (Parasuraman, Zeithaml, and Berry, 1988) to measure service quality gaps across five dimensions. Use this skill when the user needs to diagnose service quality shortfalls, benchmark customer expectations against perceptions, design service improvement programs, or when they ask 'where is our service failing', 'what do customers expect vs experience', or 'how do we measure service quality'.
Apply organizational ecology (Hannan and Freeman) to analyze population-level dynamics of organizational founding, failure, and selection. Use this skill when the user needs to explain industry-level patterns of birth and death rates, analyze structural inertia and liabilities of newness or aging, evaluate why adaptation is rare relative to selection, or when they ask 'why do most startups fail', 'why is this industry dominated by old firms', or 'why do organizations resist change despite environmental pressure'.
Calculate text similarity using lexical and semantic methods for matching and deduplication. Use this skill when the user needs to find similar documents, detect near-duplicates, or measure semantic closeness between texts — even if they say 'how similar are these texts', 'find duplicates', or 'semantic matching'.