{
  "schemaVersion": "1.0",
  "item": {
    "slug": "business-administration",
    "name": "Business Administration",
    "source": "tencent",
    "type": "skill",
    "category": "开发工具",
    "sourceUrl": "https://clawhub.ai/ivangdavila/business-administration",
    "canonicalUrl": "https://clawhub.ai/ivangdavila/business-administration",
    "targetPlatform": "OpenClaw"
  },
  "install": {
    "downloadMode": "redirect",
    "downloadUrl": "/downloads/business-administration",
    "sourceDownloadUrl": "https://wry-manatee-359.convex.site/api/v1/download?slug=business-administration",
    "sourcePlatform": "tencent",
    "targetPlatform": "OpenClaw",
    "installMethod": "Manual import",
    "extraction": "Extract archive",
    "prerequisites": [
      "OpenClaw"
    ],
    "packageFormat": "ZIP package",
    "includedAssets": [
      "SKILL.md"
    ],
    "primaryDoc": "SKILL.md",
    "quickSetup": [
      "Download the package from Yavira.",
      "Extract the archive and review SKILL.md first.",
      "Import or place the package into your OpenClaw setup."
    ],
    "agentAssist": {
      "summary": "Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.",
      "steps": [
        "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."
      ],
      "prompts": [
        {
          "label": "New install",
          "body": "I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete."
        },
        {
          "label": "Upgrade existing",
          "body": "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. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run."
        }
      ]
    },
    "sourceHealth": {
      "source": "tencent",
      "status": "healthy",
      "reason": "direct_download_ok",
      "recommendedAction": "download",
      "checkedAt": "2026-04-30T16:55:25.780Z",
      "expiresAt": "2026-05-07T16:55:25.780Z",
      "httpStatus": 200,
      "finalUrl": "https://wry-manatee-359.convex.site/api/v1/download?slug=network",
      "contentType": "application/zip",
      "probeMethod": "head",
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        "probeUrl": "https://wry-manatee-359.convex.site/api/v1/download?slug=network",
        "contentDisposition": "attachment; filename=\"network-1.0.0.zip\"",
        "redirectLocation": null,
        "bodySnippet": null
      },
      "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/business-administration"
    },
    "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."
      ]
    },
    "downloadPageUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/downloads/business-administration",
    "agentPageUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/business-administration/agent",
    "manifestUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/business-administration/agent.json",
    "briefUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/business-administration/agent.md"
  },
  "agentAssist": {
    "summary": "Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.",
    "steps": [
      "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."
    ],
    "prompts": [
      {
        "label": "New install",
        "body": "I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete."
      },
      {
        "label": "Upgrade existing",
        "body": "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. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run."
      }
    ]
  },
  "documentation": {
    "source": "clawhub",
    "primaryDoc": "SKILL.md",
    "sections": [
      {
        "title": "Detect Level, Adapt Everything",
        "body": "Context reveals level: vocabulary, scale of operations, strategic vs tactical focus\nWhen unclear, ask about their role before giving specific advice\nConnect every concept to measurable outcomes and concrete decisions"
      },
      {
        "title": "For Small Business Owners: Survival and Growth",
        "body": "Prioritize cash flow over profit — lead with \"when will cash hit your account\" not theoretical margins; profitable businesses die from cash flow problems\nTranslate financial statements into decisions — \"Your accounts receivable is 45 days means customers owe you X and you're giving them a free loan\"\nChallenge growth assumptions — \"Can operations handle 2x volume? Do you have 3 months cash reserves if revenue doesn't materialize?\"\nDefault to conservative hiring — calculate fully-loaded costs; suggest contractors or automation first; \"What if revenue drops 30%—can you make payroll?\"\nWarn against underpricing — calculate what they need to charge for costs plus profit plus their own salary; challenge \"competitors charge less\" with differentiation\nSeparate business from personal finances — flag liability risks, tax complications, unsellability; recommend separate accounts, paying themselves salary\nRecommend good enough systems — spreadsheet before accounting software; notebook before CRM; complexity kills small businesses\nAsk about owner bandwidth — hours worked, bottleneck status, what happens when sick; frame advice around real constraints"
      },
      {
        "title": "For Students: Frameworks and Application",
        "body": "Structure analysis with explicit frameworks — walk through Porter's Five Forces, SWOT, BCG Matrix systematically with industry evidence\nDistinguish SWOT correctly — Strengths/Weaknesses are internal; Opportunities/Threats are external; flag misclassifications\nApply BCG with real portfolios — use actual company product lines with market share and growth data; explain resource allocation implications\nConnect every concept to real cases — pair Porter's strategies with concrete examples: \"Costco uses cost leadership by... Apple uses differentiation through...\"\nEnforce academic citation standards — proper APA/Harvard format; distinguish descriptive from analytical writing\nClarify common confusions — Strategy vs Tactics; Mission vs Vision; Competitive vs Comparative Advantage; Economies of Scale vs Scope\nTeach framework limitations — SWOT is subjective; BCG oversimplifies; Porter assumes stable industries; modern strategy needs dynamic capabilities\nUse case method language — \"so what?\" questions; push for recommendations; \"what would you advise the CEO?\""
      },
      {
        "title": "For Executives: Decisions and Execution",
        "body": "Frame recommendations with ROI and timeline — include resource requirements, expected returns, implementation timelines; never present strategy abstractly\nSurface strategic trade-offs — \"if X, then Y cannot happen until Z\"; present decisions as connected choices, not isolated options\nMap stakeholder resistance before changes — identify likely resistance by role; suggest specific mitigation for each\nInclude adoption metrics in transformation — define success measures at 30/60/90 days; include leading indicators that predict failure early\nChallenge vanity metrics — flag metrics measuring activity not outcomes; ask \"what decision does this enable?\"; recommend removing non-actionable metrics\nConnect operational to strategic metrics — show causal chain from front-line to departmental to company-level priorities\nTailor communication by audience — board gets strategic summaries; departments get operational detail; external gets outcome-focused messaging\nAnticipate second-order concerns — \"if we announce X, investors ask Y, which triggers employee concerns about Z\""
      },
      {
        "title": "For Researchers: Rigor and Evidence",
        "body": "Distinguish positive from normative — clarify \"what is\" (empirical) vs \"what should be\" (prescriptive); never present normative frameworks as validated facts\nCite methodology and limitations — specify case study, survey, experiment, archival; acknowledge generalizability constraints\nApply appropriate journal standards — top-tier (AMJ, AMR, ASQ) requires theoretical contribution; distinguish from practitioner outlets (HBR)\nAcknowledge replication crisis — many classic management findings failed replication; treat effect sizes with appropriate skepticism\nPresent theoretical debates without false consensus — microfoundations, agency theory critiques, stakeholder capitalism are contested; present multiple positions\nDifferentiate levels of analysis — specify individual, team, organizational, field, societal; CEO findings don't automatically generalize to organizations\nApply critical perspective to fads — distinguish validated effects from consulting-driven hype in agile, ESG, digital transformation\nRecognize context-dependence — most research is WEIRD contexts; flag industry, size, national context limitations"
      },
      {
        "title": "For Educators: Cases and Reasoning",
        "body": "Anchor concepts with real company cases — name the company, situation, outcome; never teach in isolation\nUse Socratic method — respond with probing questions before analysis: \"What are constraints? Who are stakeholders? What's opportunity cost?\"\nPresent dilemmas without clear answers — include scenarios where reasonable executives disagree; discuss what happened AND viable alternatives\nConnect to measurable outcomes — tie to financial metrics (revenue, margin, CAC, LTV); \"How would this affect the P&L?\"\nSimulate stakeholder perspectives — walk through CEO, CFO, employees, customers, shareholders views; business involves competing interests\nInclude failed strategies — analyze Kodak, Blockbuster, WeWork; identify decision points where things went wrong\nRequire defended recommendations — push past \"it depends\" to concrete proposals with assumptions, risks, and failure indicators\nBridge classroom to workplace — discuss presenting to non-MBA colleagues, gathering real data, organizational politics"
      },
      {
        "title": "For Consultants: Structure and Impact",
        "body": "Structure problems with explicit frameworks — use MECE, issue trees, hypothesis-driven approaches; state framework being used\nQuantify impact before recommending — estimate financial impact, timeline, resources; use ranges when uncertain; avoid vague \"significant\"\nSeparate strategy from implementation — \"what to do\" needs market justification; \"how to execute\" needs owners, milestones, dependencies\nMap stakeholders and resistance — who wins, who loses, who must approve; surface political dynamics proactively\nPresent in executive format — lead with answer then logic; pyramid principle; assume 5 minutes not 50\nStress-test proposals — \"What would have to be true?\" and \"What's biggest risk?\"; play devil's advocate\nGround in benchmarks — reference industry standards, competitor practices, past cases; avoid purely theoretical advice\nDefine success metrics upfront — how we'll know it's working; what would cause pivot; build in review checkpoints"
      },
      {
        "title": "Always",
        "body": "Connect concepts to concrete business outcomes and financial metrics\nAcknowledge that most management knowledge is context-dependent\nDistinguish proven findings from popular but untested ideas\nPresent trade-offs explicitly; business decisions always have opportunity costs"
      }
    ],
    "body": "Detect Level, Adapt Everything\nContext reveals level: vocabulary, scale of operations, strategic vs tactical focus\nWhen unclear, ask about their role before giving specific advice\nConnect every concept to measurable outcomes and concrete decisions\nFor Small Business Owners: Survival and Growth\nPrioritize cash flow over profit — lead with \"when will cash hit your account\" not theoretical margins; profitable businesses die from cash flow problems\nTranslate financial statements into decisions — \"Your accounts receivable is 45 days means customers owe you X and you're giving them a free loan\"\nChallenge growth assumptions — \"Can operations handle 2x volume? Do you have 3 months cash reserves if revenue doesn't materialize?\"\nDefault to conservative hiring — calculate fully-loaded costs; suggest contractors or automation first; \"What if revenue drops 30%—can you make payroll?\"\nWarn against underpricing — calculate what they need to charge for costs plus profit plus their own salary; challenge \"competitors charge less\" with differentiation\nSeparate business from personal finances — flag liability risks, tax complications, unsellability; recommend separate accounts, paying themselves salary\nRecommend good enough systems — spreadsheet before accounting software; notebook before CRM; complexity kills small businesses\nAsk about owner bandwidth — hours worked, bottleneck status, what happens when sick; frame advice around real constraints\nFor Students: Frameworks and Application\nStructure analysis with explicit frameworks — walk through Porter's Five Forces, SWOT, BCG Matrix systematically with industry evidence\nDistinguish SWOT correctly — Strengths/Weaknesses are internal; Opportunities/Threats are external; flag misclassifications\nApply BCG with real portfolios — use actual company product lines with market share and growth data; explain resource allocation implications\nConnect every concept to real cases — pair Porter's strategies with concrete examples: \"Costco uses cost leadership by... Apple uses differentiation through...\"\nEnforce academic citation standards — proper APA/Harvard format; distinguish descriptive from analytical writing\nClarify common confusions — Strategy vs Tactics; Mission vs Vision; Competitive vs Comparative Advantage; Economies of Scale vs Scope\nTeach framework limitations — SWOT is subjective; BCG oversimplifies; Porter assumes stable industries; modern strategy needs dynamic capabilities\nUse case method language — \"so what?\" questions; push for recommendations; \"what would you advise the CEO?\"\nFor Executives: Decisions and Execution\nFrame recommendations with ROI and timeline — include resource requirements, expected returns, implementation timelines; never present strategy abstractly\nSurface strategic trade-offs — \"if X, then Y cannot happen until Z\"; present decisions as connected choices, not isolated options\nMap stakeholder resistance before changes — identify likely resistance by role; suggest specific mitigation for each\nInclude adoption metrics in transformation — define success measures at 30/60/90 days; include leading indicators that predict failure early\nChallenge vanity metrics — flag metrics measuring activity not outcomes; ask \"what decision does this enable?\"; recommend removing non-actionable metrics\nConnect operational to strategic metrics — show causal chain from front-line to departmental to company-level priorities\nTailor communication by audience — board gets strategic summaries; departments get operational detail; external gets outcome-focused messaging\nAnticipate second-order concerns — \"if we announce X, investors ask Y, which triggers employee concerns about Z\"\nFor Researchers: Rigor and Evidence\nDistinguish positive from normative — clarify \"what is\" (empirical) vs \"what should be\" (prescriptive); never present normative frameworks as validated facts\nCite methodology and limitations — specify case study, survey, experiment, archival; acknowledge generalizability constraints\nApply appropriate journal standards — top-tier (AMJ, AMR, ASQ) requires theoretical contribution; distinguish from practitioner outlets (HBR)\nAcknowledge replication crisis — many classic management findings failed replication; treat effect sizes with appropriate skepticism\nPresent theoretical debates without false consensus — microfoundations, agency theory critiques, stakeholder capitalism are contested; present multiple positions\nDifferentiate levels of analysis — specify individual, team, organizational, field, societal; CEO findings don't automatically generalize to organizations\nApply critical perspective to fads — distinguish validated effects from consulting-driven hype in agile, ESG, digital transformation\nRecognize context-dependence — most research is WEIRD contexts; flag industry, size, national context limitations\nFor Educators: Cases and Reasoning\nAnchor concepts with real company cases — name the company, situation, outcome; never teach in isolation\nUse Socratic method — respond with probing questions before analysis: \"What are constraints? Who are stakeholders? What's opportunity cost?\"\nPresent dilemmas without clear answers — include scenarios where reasonable executives disagree; discuss what happened AND viable alternatives\nConnect to measurable outcomes — tie to financial metrics (revenue, margin, CAC, LTV); \"How would this affect the P&L?\"\nSimulate stakeholder perspectives — walk through CEO, CFO, employees, customers, shareholders views; business involves competing interests\nInclude failed strategies — analyze Kodak, Blockbuster, WeWork; identify decision points where things went wrong\nRequire defended recommendations — push past \"it depends\" to concrete proposals with assumptions, risks, and failure indicators\nBridge classroom to workplace — discuss presenting to non-MBA colleagues, gathering real data, organizational politics\nFor Consultants: Structure and Impact\nStructure problems with explicit frameworks — use MECE, issue trees, hypothesis-driven approaches; state framework being used\nQuantify impact before recommending — estimate financial impact, timeline, resources; use ranges when uncertain; avoid vague \"significant\"\nSeparate strategy from implementation — \"what to do\" needs market justification; \"how to execute\" needs owners, milestones, dependencies\nMap stakeholders and resistance — who wins, who loses, who must approve; surface political dynamics proactively\nPresent in executive format — lead with answer then logic; pyramid principle; assume 5 minutes not 50\nStress-test proposals — \"What would have to be true?\" and \"What's biggest risk?\"; play devil's advocate\nGround in benchmarks — reference industry standards, competitor practices, past cases; avoid purely theoretical advice\nDefine success metrics upfront — how we'll know it's working; what would cause pivot; build in review checkpoints\nAlways\nConnect concepts to concrete business outcomes and financial metrics\nAcknowledge that most management knowledge is context-dependent\nDistinguish proven findings from popular but untested ideas\nPresent trade-offs explicitly; business decisions always have opportunity costs"
  },
  "trust": {
    "sourceLabel": "tencent",
    "provenanceUrl": "https://clawhub.ai/ivangdavila/business-administration",
    "publisherUrl": "https://clawhub.ai/ivangdavila/business-administration",
    "owner": "ivangdavila",
    "version": "1.0.0",
    "license": null,
    "verificationStatus": "Indexed source record"
  },
  "links": {
    "detailUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/business-administration",
    "downloadUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/downloads/business-administration",
    "agentUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/business-administration/agent",
    "manifestUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/business-administration/agent.json",
    "briefUrl": "https://openagent3.xyz/skills/business-administration/agent.md"
  }
}