
Capafy AI
Marketplace for agent skills users can run, install, or sell.
Tagline
Install expert workflows in one click
Ship once. Get paid every run.
The app store for agent skills.
Stop prompting from scratch.
The app store for agent skills, not the model underneath them.
The page repeatedly emphasizes discoverability, install links, and reusable expert Skills across Claude Code, Codex, and OpenClaw, which is a strong category-defining frame versus generic AI tooling.
Ship once, get paid every time someone runs your skill.
The publisher pitch is unusually clear: upload a skill and earn 24/7. That is a cleaner monetization story than selling prompts, templates, or one-off services.
Use specialized workflows instead of prompting from scratch.
The listings show concrete task-specific skills like Amazon image sequences, TikTok scripts, resume tailoring, and deep research reports. This lets Capafy position as the shortcut for high-friction, repetitive tasks.
Primary user
Independent AI agent builder or skill publisher looking to monetize reusable workflow assets
ICP #1
Solo AI workflow creator publishing skills on Claude Code and Codex
Pain
They can build useful agent routines, but they have no built-in distribution, payment rails, or incentive loop to get paid repeatedly for the same asset.
Why this solves
Capafy gives them a marketplace, a usage-based monetization model, and a public listing page so the skill itself becomes the product and the storefront.
ICP #2
E-commerce growth marketer managing Amazon, Shopify, and TikTok Shop listings
Pain
They constantly need platform-specific creative assets, but generic AI outputs waste time and often miss conversion structure or marketplace rules.
Why this solves
Capafy’s commerce skills are explicitly built around listing images, hero images, video ads, hook optimization, and SOPs with platform-aware constraints.
ICP #3
Research-heavy operator or analyst who needs auditable outputs
Pain
Chatbot summaries are too loose for decisions, and they spend too much time checking claims, formatting reports, and rewriting outputs for stakeholders.
Why this solves
Skills like Deep Research Pro and Best Data analysis promise sourced claims, per-sentence citations, and exportable HTML/PDF reports, which map directly to that workflow.
Strengths
- +The marketplace concept is immediately clear: discover, run, or publish skills.
- +The listings are concrete and niche-specific, which makes the product feel real instead of abstract.
- +The publisher monetization hook is strong and easy to understand.
Weaknesses
- −The homepage is crowded with categories and listings but lacks a crisp explanation of what a 'Skill' actually is in user terms.
- −The value prop is split between two audiences, buyers and publishers, without a strong primary path for either.
- −There is no visible trust layer: no quality standards, review system, guarantees, or vetting process for skills.
- −The page reads like a directory, not a conversion-focused homepage; it does not show a before/after workflow or outcome story.
- −The phrase 'AI agent store for Claude Code, Codex, and OpenClaw Skills' is jargon-heavy and may confuse non-builder buyers.
Fix these
- Split the homepage into two explicit entry flows: 'Use Skills' and 'Publish Skills,' each with its own headline, proof, and CTA.
- Add a simple explainer graphic showing how a skill is installed and run inside Claude Code, Codex, or OpenClaw.
- Introduce trust signals like verified publishers, usage ratings, refunds, or compliance badges for marketplace quality control.
- Feature one hero category per audience segment, such as commerce for sellers and research for analysts, instead of a generic mixed feed.
- Rewrite the headline to state the outcome, not the category, for example: 'Install expert agent workflows in one click.'
Drop-in replacement copy
Headline
Install expert workflows in one click
Run skills, publish skills, and get paid when people use them.
Use a skill instead of starting blank
Skip the prompt-writing loop. Pick a workflow built for a specific job and run it right away.
Install into your agent stack
Copy an install link into Claude Code, Codex, or OpenClaw and reuse the same skill across your workflow.
Publish once, earn on every run
Turn a useful workflow into a product. If people keep using it, you keep earning from it.
Find skills built for real outcomes
Browse commerce, research, writing, design, HR, and more. Each listing is focused on a specific result, not vague AI magic.
FAQ
What is a skill?
A skill is a reusable agent workflow for a specific job. Instead of prompting from scratch, you run a prebuilt task flow designed to get a repeatable outcome.
Can I use skills without installing anything?
Yes. You can run skills directly in the browser on Capafy, then copy the install link into your own agent workflow if you want to keep using it.
How do publishers get paid?
Publishers upload a skill and earn when people use it. The idea is simple: build once, distribute through the marketplace, and get paid on usage.
What kinds of skills are on Capafy?
Commerce workflows, research and analysis, resume tailoring, writing, marketing, design, and other repeatable tasks where a specialized process beats a generic chat.
Why not just use prompts or GPTs?
Prompts are hard to package, hard to trust, and easy to lose. Capafy is built around installable workflows, attribution, usage counts, and a marketplace model for discovery.
Built Capafy AI: a marketplace for agent skills you can run, install, or sell. If you make useful workflows for Claude Code, Codex, or OpenClaw, they should make money every time someone uses them. Ship once. Earn 24/7.
People keep asking what a 'skill' is. Simple: it's a reusable workflow an agent can run. Instead of prompting from scratch, you install a proven task flow for things like Amazon images, TikTok scripts, deep research, or resume tailoring.
Prompting from scratch is the worst part of using AI. You waste 10 minutes writing instructions, get a mediocre output, then rewrite it anyway. Capafy lets you run a skill built for the task instead of babysitting a chatbot.
Watch how Capafy works: 1. Find a skill 2. Run it in the browser 3. Copy the install link into Claude Code, Codex, or OpenClaw That's it. No setup theater. No prompt archaeology.
The best AI builders don't need more praise. They need distribution and a way to get paid repeatedly for the same asset. Capafy turns one good workflow into a product people can discover, run, and buy.
Capafy AI is live. Browse specialized agent skills, run them in the browser, or install them into your own workflow. If you build good workflows, publish them and earn whenever someone uses them.
Marketplace lesson: categories alone don't sell. People want proof that a skill works, who built it, how many times it's been used, and what outcome it gets them. So that's what we're putting on every listing.
Generic AI is fine for drafts. It's bad for Amazon images, TikTok ads, resume tailoring, and research reports where structure matters. Capafy packages those workflows into skills built for one job, not everything.
The best part of Capafy is the install flow. A publisher uploads a skill. A user clicks install. The skill drops into their agent workflow. No copy-paste chaos. No prompt hoarding.
The App Store worked because people wanted outcomes, not frameworks. Capafy is doing that for agent skills. Buy a workflow. Run it. If it's good, keep using it. If you made it, get paid.
Angle: marketplace positioning for builders
Most AI products are selling access to a model. That’s useful, but it’s not where the real value is. The real value is in the workflow. A good agent skill is not just a prompt. It’s a repeatable way to get a specific job done: write the Amazon listing images, draft the TikTok script, synthesize the research, tailor the resume. That’s why we built Capafy AI. It’s a marketplace for agent skills you can run in the browser, install into Claude Code / Codex / OpenClaw, or publish and monetize. If you’re a builder, this matters because distribution is the bottleneck. You can build something useful and still have no clean way to get paid for it more than once. We think that should change. Ship the skill once. Let people discover it. Let them run it. Let them pay for it. Let you earn every time it gets used. That’s the product.
Angle: value prop for operators and marketers
AI is great until the output has to be right. That’s the pattern I keep seeing with operators, marketers, and solo teams. You ask a general chatbot for a result, get a decent draft, then spend another 30 minutes fixing structure, constraints, tone, formatting, and platform rules. That’s not automation. That’s assisted rewriting. Capafy AI is built around a different idea: specialized skills for specific jobs. Need commerce assets? Use workflows designed for listing images, hero creative, hooks, and ad variants. Need research? Use skills that produce structured outputs with citations and exportable reports. Need career help? Use skills that tailor resumes and applications instead of vague “optimize my resume” prompts. The goal is simple: stop starting from a blank prompt. Use a skill that already knows the shape of the work.
Angle: publisher monetization story
The best part of building small software is that one good asset can be reused forever. The worst part is that most people don’t have a clean way to monetize that asset. That’s the gap Capafy AI is trying to close. If you build a useful agent workflow, you should be able to publish it once and keep earning when other people run it. Not sell a one-off template. Not hope someone DMs you. Not hide the asset inside your own service business. Just list the skill, let users discover it, let them install or run it, and let usage turn into revenue. That’s a better model for independent builders because it rewards actual utility, not marketing noise. If a skill saves someone time or makes them money, they already understand why they should pay for it. We’re shipping Capafy around that idea.
Tagline
Run, install, and sell agent skills
Description
Capafy is a marketplace for AI agent skills. Run them in the browser, install them into Claude Code, Codex, or OpenClaw, or publish your own and earn whenever people use it.
Maker's first comment
I built Capafy because I kept seeing the same thing: people make genuinely useful agent workflows, then those workflows disappear into private chats, personal folders, or one-off client work. The value is there, but the distribution and monetization are missing. Capafy is our attempt to fix that. It’s a marketplace where skills are the product. A skill can be run in the browser, installed into your agent workflow, or published so other people can use it and pay for it. We want builders to have a way to ship once and get paid every time their workflow gets used. We started with practical use cases instead of abstract AI demos: commerce workflows, research workflows, resume tailoring, and other repeatable jobs where a specialized skill beats a blank prompt. Would love feedback on two things: whether the “run/install/sell” loop is obvious enough for first-time visitors, and which trust signals matter most for a skills marketplace.
Pinned maker comment
Feedback I want most: is the use-vs-publish split obvious, and what would make you trust a skill enough to pay for it?
Meta
Selling AI prompts is a dead end
Hypothesis: solo AI builders and workflow creators want recurring revenue from reusable assets, not one-off prompt sales. Capafy lets you publish agent skills, let people run them, and get paid every time they use them. Built for Claude Code, Codex, and OpenClaw.
Google Search
agent skills marketplace
Search intent hypothesis: people looking for Claude Code skills, Codex skills, or AI workflow templates want something installable, not another prompt pack. Capafy is a marketplace where you can run skills in-browser or copy an install link into your agent workflow.
Reddit Promoted
Most AI work gets redone anyway
Hypothesis: makers in AI and indie hacking communities are frustrated that their workflows are useful once, then vanish into private chats. Capafy turns agent skills into reusable assets you can publish, distribute, and monetize. If you build workflows, this is the cleaner path.
Subreddits
r/indiehackers
Publish a maker story about turning reusable agent workflows into a marketplace asset
Rules: No pure self-promo. Share the build process, lesson learned, and ask for feedback.
r/SideProject
Show the actual product and the install/run flow with a short demo
Rules: Show what you built, include a screenshot or video, and keep the post factual.
r/microsaas
Position Capafy as a monetization layer for small AI workflow products
Rules: Focus on the business model and product mechanics, not hype.
r/ClaudeAI
Share how Claude Code users can install and run specialized skills
Rules: Be useful to Claude users first; avoid spammy links and ask for product feedback.
r/OpenAI
Show how skill-based workflows beat generic prompting for repeatable tasks
Rules: No low-effort promo. Frame it as a workflow/product discussion and keep it technical.
Communities
Post build logs, pricing tests, and marketplace lessons. Comment on other founders' launch threads before posting your own.
Claude Code Discord
Share one useful skill per week and ask for workflow feedback. Focus on how it saves time inside real coding tasks.
Participate in implementation threads, then mention Capafy only when it directly helps with reusable agent workflows.
Cold outreach template
{firstName} - saw your {context} and thought of Capafy. If you have reusable agent workflows, you can publish them as skills and get paid when people run them. If you're open, I'd love to show you how the install/run flow works and get your take on what builders would actually pay for. Can I send a 2-minute demo?
Product Hunt timing
Launch on Tuesday at 12:01 AM PT. That gives you the full U.S. workday for maker traffic, catches Europe early, and fits the ICP because AI builders and solo founders check Product Hunt during the morning and late evening rather than on weekends.
Indie Hackers post ideas
- 01How we turned agent workflows into a marketplace instead of another prompt library
- 02What people actually need to trust a skill enough to pay for it
- 03Ship once, earn every run: early lessons from launching a skills marketplace
Competitor alternatives
Current tone of voice
Practical, maker-friendly, and mildly hype-driven; the page uses lines like "Expert Agents, ready for your task" and "Publish your skill, earn 24/7."
Your kit is ready. Sign up free to unlock, takes 10 seconds.
7 more X posts · 2 LinkedIn · Product Hunt copy · ad hooks · 100-user playbook · landing critique