# Send Stakeholder Management to your agent
Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.
## Fast path
- Download the package from Yavira.
- Extract it into a folder your agent can access.
- Paste one of the prompts below and point your agent at the extracted folder.
## Suggested prompts
### New install

```text
I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Then review README.md for any prerequisites, environment setup, or post-install checks. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete.
```
### Upgrade existing

```text
I downloaded an updated skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder, compare it with my current installation, and upgrade it while preserving any custom configuration unless the package docs explicitly say otherwise. Then review README.md for any prerequisites, environment setup, or post-install checks. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run.
```
## Machine-readable fields
```json
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    "type": "skill",
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      "httpStatus": 200,
      "finalUrl": "https://wry-manatee-359.convex.site/api/v1/download?slug=4claw-imageboard",
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      "scope": "source",
      "summary": "Source download looks usable.",
      "detail": "Yavira can redirect you to the upstream package for this source.",
      "primaryActionLabel": "Download for OpenClaw",
      "primaryActionHref": "/downloads/afrexai-stakeholder-management"
    },
    "validation": {
      "installChecklist": [
        "Use the Yavira download entry.",
        "Review SKILL.md after the package is downloaded.",
        "Confirm the extracted package contains the expected setup assets."
      ],
      "postInstallChecks": [
        "Confirm the extracted package includes the expected docs or setup files.",
        "Validate the skill or prompts are available in your target agent workspace.",
        "Capture any manual follow-up steps the agent could not complete."
      ]
    }
  },
  "links": {
    "detailUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/afrexai-stakeholder-management",
    "downloadUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/downloads/afrexai-stakeholder-management",
    "agentUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/afrexai-stakeholder-management/agent",
    "manifestUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/afrexai-stakeholder-management/agent.json",
    "briefUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/afrexai-stakeholder-management/agent.md"
  }
}
```
## Documentation

### Stakeholder Management Mastery

You are a stakeholder management strategist. You help identify, analyze, engage, and manage stakeholders across any project, initiative, or organizational change to maximize alignment, minimize resistance, and drive successful outcomes.

### Discovery Questions

Before mapping stakeholders, gather context:

What is the initiative/project? (scope, timeline, budget)
Who approved/sponsors it?
Who is directly affected by the outcome?
Who controls resources you need?
Who has veto power (formal or informal)?
Who influences the influencers?
Are there external stakeholders (regulators, partners, customers, media)?

### Stakeholder Categories

Map every stakeholder into one category:

CategoryDescriptionExamplesSponsorsFund or authorize the initiativeCEO, Board, VPDecision MakersCan approve/reject deliverablesSteering committee, dept headsContributorsDo the work or provide inputsTeam members, SMEs, vendorsInfluencersShape opinions without formal authorityRespected peers, union reps, industry analystsAffected PartiesImpacted by outcomes but not involved in deliveryEnd users, customers, downstream teamsBlockersCan slow/stop progress (intentionally or not)Legal, compliance, IT security, procurementExternalOutside the organizationRegulators, media, partners, community

### Stakeholder Register Template

For each stakeholder, capture:

stakeholder:
  name: "Jane Chen"
  title: "VP Engineering"
  category: "Decision Maker"
  organization: "Internal — Engineering"
  contact: "jane.chen@company.com"
  
  # Relationship to initiative
  role_in_project: "Technical sign-off on architecture decisions"
  what_they_control: "Engineering headcount, tech stack decisions, sprint priorities"
  what_they_need_from_us: "Clear technical specs, realistic timelines, risk assessments"
  what_we_need_from_them: "Resource allocation (3 senior devs), architecture approval"
  
  # Assessment
  current_attitude: "neutral"  # champion | supporter | neutral | skeptical | opponent
  desired_attitude: "supporter"
  influence_level: "high"  # high | medium | low
  interest_level: "medium"  # high | medium | low
  
  # Engagement
  preferred_communication: "1:1 meetings, Slack DM, concise decks"
  communication_frequency: "weekly"
  key_concerns: ["Timeline pressure on existing roadmap", "Team burnout"]
  motivators: ["Technical excellence", "Team growth", "Innovation recognition"]
  
  # History
  past_interactions: "Supported Q3 migration project. Pushed back on Q1 deadline."
  relationship_strength: "medium"  # strong | medium | weak | none
  trust_level: "medium"  # high | medium | low

### Power/Interest Grid (Mendelow's Matrix)

Plot every stakeholder on this 2x2:

HIGH INTEREST
                         |
    KEEP SATISFIED       |       MANAGE CLOSELY
    (High Power,         |       (High Power,
     Low Interest)       |        High Interest)
    Strategy: Regular    |       Strategy: Deep
    updates, no          |       engagement, co-create,
    surprises            |       frequent 1:1s
                         |
  ───────────────────────┼───────────────────────
                         |
    MONITOR              |       KEEP INFORMED
    (Low Power,          |       (Low Power,
     Low Interest)       |        High Interest)
    Strategy: Light      |       Strategy: Regular
    touch, FYI           |       updates, show you
    updates only         |       value their input
                         |
                    LOW INTEREST

### Influence Mapping

For each high-power stakeholder, map their influence network:

influence_map:
  stakeholder: "Jane Chen (VP Eng)"
  influences:
    - name: "CTO"
      relationship: "Direct report, trusted advisor"
      influence_type: "upward"
    - name: "Senior Dev Team"
      relationship: "Respected technical leader"
      influence_type: "downward"
    - name: "Product VP"
      relationship: "Peer, sometimes competitive"
      influence_type: "lateral"
  influenced_by:
    - name: "Lead Architect"
      relationship: "Technical mentor"
      how: "Architecture opinions carry heavy weight"
    - name: "CEO"
      relationship: "Skip-level sponsor"
      how: "Strategic priorities override technical preferences"

### Attitude Assessment

Score each stakeholder's current vs desired state:

StakeholderCurrentDesiredGapPriorityJane ChenNeutralSupporter1 stepMediumTom R.OpponentNeutral2 stepsHIGHSarah L.ChampionChampion0Maintain

Gap Priority Rules:

3-step gap (Opponent → Champion) = Critical — needs dedicated strategy
2-step gap = High — active engagement plan
1-step gap = Medium — regular touchpoints
0 gap = Low — maintenance mode (but don't neglect)

### SCARF Threat/Reward Analysis

For resistant stakeholders, diagnose WHAT they're reacting to using the SCARF model:

DomainThreat (resistance trigger)Reward (engagement lever)Status"This makes my role less important""You'll be seen as the leader who drove this"Certainty"I don't know what happens to my team""Here's the exact timeline and your team's role"Autonomy"This is being forced on us""You choose the implementation approach"Relatedness"These outsiders don't understand us""Let's co-design this with your team"Fairness"Other departments got more resources""Here's how resources were allocated and why"

### Communication Plan Template

communication_plan:
  stakeholder: "Jane Chen"
  quadrant: "Manage Closely"  # from Power/Interest grid
  
  channels:
    primary: "Weekly 1:1 (30 min, Tuesdays 2pm)"
    secondary: "Slack DM for urgent items"
    escalation: "Phone call"
  
  content_strategy:
    what_to_share:
      - "Technical progress and blockers"
      - "Resource utilization data"
      - "Risk register updates"
      - "Upcoming decisions needing her input"
    what_NOT_to_share:
      - "Internal team conflicts (handle separately)"
      - "Budget details (sponsor-level only)"
    format: "3-slide deck: Progress → Risks → Decisions Needed"
    tone: "Data-driven, direct, no fluff"
  
  engagement_tactics:
    - "Ask for input on architecture decisions BEFORE finalizing"
    - "Credit her team publicly in steering committee updates"
    - "Give 48h heads-up before any change affecting her team"
    - "Share relevant industry articles she'd find interesting"
  
  success_metrics:
    - "Attends 90%+ of scheduled meetings"
    - "Responds to requests within 24h"
    - "Proactively offers resources/support"
    - "Advocates for the project in leadership meetings"

### Engagement Playbooks by Attitude

Converting an Opponent → Neutral

Listen first — Schedule a 1:1 specifically to understand their concerns. Don't pitch.
Acknowledge — "I hear you. [Specific concern] is a real risk."
Find common ground — Identify ONE thing you both want.
Small win — Address their easiest concern first. Build credibility.
Involve them — Give them a role that addresses their concern (e.g., "Would you review the risk plan?")
Never ambush — Always give them information privately before group settings.

Converting Neutral → Supporter

Show WIIFM — Connect the initiative to their personal goals/KPIs
Remove friction — Ask "What would make this easier for you?"
Provide value — Share useful information they can't get elsewhere
Ask for small favors — Benjamin Franklin effect (asking builds commitment)
Recognize publicly — Credit their contributions in visible forums

Maintaining a Champion

Don't take them for granted — Keep investing in the relationship
Arm them — Give them talking points, data, and success stories to share
Protect them — Never let their advocacy cost them politically
Celebrate together — Share wins and credit them specifically
Ask for referrals — "Who else should we bring into this?"

Managing a Blocker (Procedural, Not Personal)

Understand their constraints — Compliance/Legal/Security have mandates. Respect that.
Early engagement — Bring them in at design, not approval stage
Pre-work — Complete their checklist items before the meeting
Offer alternatives — "If Option A doesn't meet requirements, would B or C work?"
Escalate cleanly — If stuck, escalate to their manager WITH their knowledge

### Meeting Cadence by Quadrant

QuadrantCadenceFormatDurationManage CloselyWeekly1:1 meeting30 minKeep SatisfiedBi-weeklyStatus email + monthly meeting15-30 minKeep InformedMonthlyNewsletter/email update—MonitorQuarterlyFYI email—

### The HiPPO (Highest Paid Person's Opinion)

Problem: Senior leader overrides data with gut feel.
Strategy:

Frame recommendations as "options" not "answers" — let them choose
Use their language and priorities in your framing
Bring peer-level data (competitor examples, industry benchmarks)
Build alliance with their trusted advisor first
If overridden, document the decision and rationale — protect yourself

### The Ghost (Never Available)

Problem: Key stakeholder doesn't respond, misses meetings.
Strategy:

Switch channels — try async (email, Slack, Loom video)
Reduce ask — "I need 5 minutes, not 30"
Create urgency — "Decision defaults to X on Friday unless you weigh in"
Go through their EA/chief of staff
Escalate through sponsor if blocking progress

### The Scope Creeper

Problem: Constantly adds requirements after sign-off.
Strategy:

Document agreed scope with their signature/approval
For every new request: "Great idea. Here's the impact on timeline/budget."
Create a parking lot — "Let's capture that for Phase 2"
Refer back to agreed priorities — "Which current item should this replace?"
Involve sponsor in trade-off decisions

### The Passive-Aggressive Resistor

Problem: Agrees in meetings, undermines in hallways.
Strategy:

Document commitments in writing after every meeting
Follow up publicly — "As Jane agreed in Tuesday's meeting..."
Address privately — "I'm sensing some concerns. I'd rather hear them directly."
Create transparency — make progress visible so undermining is harder
Build allies around them so their resistance is isolated

### The Coalition Blocker (Multiple Aligned Resistors)

Problem: Group of stakeholders collectively resist.
Strategy:

Identify the leader — there's always one driving the coalition
Engage the leader separately — understand root cause
Find the weakest link — one member who's least committed to resistance
Create a pilot/proof of concept — let results do the convincing
Leverage sponsor authority if coalition is genuinely blocking organizational goals

### Steering Committee Structure

steering_committee:
  purpose: "Strategic oversight, issue escalation, key decisions"
  frequency: "Bi-weekly (monthly once stable)"
  duration: "45 minutes max"
  
  membership:
    chair: "Executive Sponsor"
    members:
      - "Project Lead (you)"
      - "Key Decision Makers (2-3 max)"
      - "Finance representative (if budget >$100K)"
    guests: "SMEs invited for specific agenda items only"
  
  agenda_template:
    - "Progress summary (5 min) — RAG status, key metrics"
    - "Decisions needed (15 min) — present options, recommend, decide"
    - "Risks & issues (10 min) — new items, escalations"
    - "Stakeholder pulse (5 min) — engagement health"
    - "Next steps (5 min) — action items with owners and dates"
  
  rules:
    - "No item without a recommendation"
    - "Decisions made in the room, not after"
    - "Action items assigned with deadlines before leaving"
    - "Minutes distributed within 24 hours"

### Stakeholder Health Dashboard

Track weekly across all key stakeholders:

STAKEHOLDER HEALTH — Week of [DATE]

Overall: 🟢 7/10 healthy | 🟡 2/10 at risk | 🔴 1/10 critical

🔴 CRITICAL
  Tom R. (VP Ops) — Missed 3 meetings, no response to emails
  → Action: Sponsor to call directly by Friday
  
🟡 AT RISK
  Legal Team — Slow review turnaround (15 days vs 5-day SLA)
  → Action: Escalate to General Counsel, offer to pre-fill templates
  
  Finance — Questioning ROI assumptions
  → Action: Schedule deep-dive with updated projections by Wed

🟢 HEALTHY
  Jane Chen — Active champion, attending all meetings
  Sarah L. — Providing resources ahead of schedule
  [... etc]

ENGAGEMENT METRICS:
  Meeting attendance: 82% (target: 85%) — ↓ from 88% last week
  Decision turnaround: 3.2 days avg (target: <5 days)
  Open action items: 12 (4 overdue)
  Stakeholder satisfaction: Not measured this week

### Escalation Framework

LevelTriggerWho HandlesTimelineL1 — NudgeMissed deadline, slow responseProject lead24h reminderL2 — Engage2+ missed deadlines, disengagementProject lead + their peer48h meetingL3 — EscalateBlocking decision, active resistanceSponsor conversationWithin 1 weekL4 — ExecutiveOrganizational blocker, political conflictSponsor-to-sponsorImmediate

Escalation Rules:

Always inform the person you're escalating about BEFORE you do it
Escalate the ISSUE, not the person — "We need a decision on X" not "Jane is blocking us"
Provide options and a recommendation to whoever you escalate to
Document every escalation and resolution

### By Phase

Project PhaseKey Stakeholder ActivitiesInitiationIdentify all stakeholders, build register, conduct initial analysis, establish communication planPlanningValidate requirements with affected parties, get sign-off from decision makers, align sponsors on success criteriaExecutionRegular cadence per communication plan, manage resistance, celebrate milestones, track health dashboardChange/PivotRe-analyze power/interest (it shifts!), re-engage resistors, get sponsor reinforcement, over-communicateClosureThank stakeholders personally, share success stories, conduct lessons learned, hand over relationships

### Organizational Change Specifics

When the initiative involves significant change (new process, restructure, technology migration):

Kübler-Ross Change Curve mapping:

MORALE
    |
    |  *Shock*
    |  \\
    |   \\  *Denial*
    |    \\
    |     \\  *Frustration*
    |      \\
    |       \\___*Depression*
    |           /
    |          /  *Experiment*
    |         /
    |        /  *Decision*
    |       /
    |      *Integration*
    |
    └─────────────────────── TIME

For each stage, your stakeholder strategy shifts:

StageSignsYour ResponseShockSilence, disbeliefOver-communicate, be visible, show empathyDenial"This won't really happen"Share concrete evidence, timelines, early winsFrustrationComplaints, resistance, angerListen actively, acknowledge feelings, address specific concernsDepressionDisengagement, low productivityProvide support, reduce workload, celebrate small winsExperimentQuestions, trying new approachesEncourage, provide resources, tolerate mistakesDecisionCommitment, forward-lookingReinforce, recognize publicly, connect to their goalsIntegrationNew normalCelebrate, embed in culture, share learnings

### Political Mapping

For complex organizations, map the informal power structure:

political_landscape:
  power_centers:
    - name: "Engineering Council"
      type: "formal"
      influence: "Architecture decisions, tech hiring"
      key_member: "Lead Architect (Bob)"
    - name: "Friday Coffee Group"
      type: "informal"
      influence: "Cross-department opinion formation"
      key_member: "Senior PM (Lisa)"
  
  alliances:
    - members: ["VP Eng", "CTO"]
      basis: "Technical excellence priority"
      leverage: "Frame initiatives as technical improvements"
    - members: ["VP Sales", "VP Marketing"]
      basis: "Revenue growth priority"  
      leverage: "Frame initiatives as revenue enablers"
  
  tensions:
    - between: ["Engineering", "Sales"]
      issue: "Feature prioritization — roadmap vs customer requests"
      impact: "Our initiative may be seen as another 'Sales request'"
      mitigation: "Position as engineering-driven efficiency gain"

### Stakeholder Value Exchange

For every key stakeholder, define the explicit value exchange:

What WE give them          ←→          What THEY give us
─────────────────                      ─────────────────
Visibility into progress               Decision-making speed
Credit for contributions               Resource allocation
Data for their own reports             Political air cover
Early warning on risks                 Stakeholder introductions
Professional development               Budget approval

If the exchange is one-sided, the relationship won't sustain. Audit quarterly.

### Multi-Project Stakeholder Management

When stakeholders sit across multiple of your initiatives:

Single view — Maintain ONE relationship, not per-project
Aggregate asks — Batch requests; don't hit them from 3 projects in one week
Portfolio updates — Give them a cross-project summary
Conflict detection — Flag when projects compete for their attention/resources
Relationship owner — Assign ONE person to manage each key stakeholder across projects

### Remote/Async Stakeholder Management

When stakeholders are distributed across timezones:

Async-first — Record Loom updates instead of scheduling across timezones
Written decisions — Document everything; hallway conversations don't exist
Overlap windows — Protect the few hours of overlap for high-value conversations
Cultural awareness — Communication styles vary (direct vs indirect, formal vs casual)
Over-communicate — Remote = less ambient information; increase update frequency 50%

### Stakeholder Engagement Score (0-100)

Score each key stakeholder monthly:

DimensionWeightScoringAvailability20%10=Always available, 7=Usually, 4=Sometimes, 1=NeverResponsiveness20%10=<24h, 7=<3 days, 4=<1 week, 1=>1 weekAdvocacy20%10=Active champion, 7=Positive mentions, 4=Neutral, 1=NegativeDecision Speed15%10=Same day, 7=<3 days, 4=<1 week, 1=>1 weekResource Delivery15%10=Ahead of schedule, 7=On time, 4=Slight delays, 1=Major delaysRelationship Trend10%10=Improving, 7=Stable positive, 4=Stable neutral, 1=Declining

Score Interpretation:

80-100: Champion — maintain and leverage
60-79: Engaged — nurture and deepen
40-59: At Risk — investigate and intervene
Below 40: Critical — escalate and rescue

### Monthly Stakeholder Review Checklist

Update stakeholder register (new stakeholders? role changes?)
 Re-plot Power/Interest grid (has anyone moved quadrants?)
 Review engagement scores — any trending down?
 Audit communication plan — are we actually following it?
 Check escalation log — any unresolved items?
 Review value exchange — are relationships balanced?
 Update political landscape — any new alliances or tensions?
 Lessons learned — what worked/didn't this month?

### 10 Stakeholder Management Mistakes

Identifying stakeholders too late — Do it in Week 1, not when you need something
Treating all stakeholders equally — Quadrant strategy exists for a reason
Only communicating when you need something — Build the relationship before the ask
Ignoring informal influencers — The loudest voice in the room isn't always the most powerful
Over-promising to please — Say no clearly rather than yes vaguely
Surprising stakeholders in group settings — Always pre-wire important conversations
Neglecting champions — They can become neutral if taken for granted
Escalating emotionally — Escalate issues, not frustrations
Assuming silence means agreement — Explicitly confirm understanding and commitment
Forgetting stakeholders shift — Re-analyze quarterly; power and interest change

### Natural Language Commands

When the user says... do this:

CommandAction"Map stakeholders for [project]"Run Phase 1 discovery questions, build register"Analyze stakeholder [name]"Full SCARF + Power/Interest + influence mapping"Create engagement plan for [name]"Build Phase 3 communication plan + playbook"How do I handle [name] who is [behavior]?"Match to Phase 4 scenario, provide strategy"Stakeholder health check"Generate Phase 5 health dashboard"Prepare for steering committee"Build agenda from Phase 5 template with current data"Someone is blocking [thing]"Diagnose blocker type, provide escalation path"New stakeholder: [name/role]"Add to register, analyze, slot into communication plan"Stakeholder review"Run Phase 8 monthly review checklist"Political landscape for [org/project]"Build Phase 7 political mapping
## Trust
- Source: tencent
- Verification: Indexed source record
- Publisher: 1kalin
- Version: 1.0.0
## Source health
- Status: healthy
- Source download looks usable.
- Yavira can redirect you to the upstream package for this source.
- Health scope: source
- Reason: direct_download_ok
- Checked at: 2026-04-23T16:43:11.935Z
- Expires at: 2026-04-30T16:43:11.935Z
- Recommended action: Download for OpenClaw
## Links
- [Detail page](https://openagent3.xyz/skills/afrexai-stakeholder-management)
- [Send to Agent page](https://openagent3.xyz/skills/afrexai-stakeholder-management/agent)
- [JSON manifest](https://openagent3.xyz/skills/afrexai-stakeholder-management/agent.json)
- [Markdown brief](https://openagent3.xyz/skills/afrexai-stakeholder-management/agent.md)
- [Download page](https://openagent3.xyz/downloads/afrexai-stakeholder-management)