Designing meeting schedulers and booking experiences that qualify leads, set up calls well, and convert at higher rates than a generic Calendly link. Availability logic, qualification gating, prep automation, follow-up sequencing. Honest about any-time-friction (no qualification, just a booking link), interrogation-gate (so much qualification it scares users off), and qualified-fast-path (just enough qualification to set up the call well) patterns. Triggers on scheduler design, meeting booking, demo scheduling, sales call scheduling, calendar tool, booking page, qualification flow. Also triggers when sales team complains about cold demos, when booking conversion is poor, or when scheduler is being scoped for the first time.
53
60%
Does it follow best practices?
Impact
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No eval scenarios have been run
Advisory
Suggest reviewing before use
Optimize this skill with Tessl
npx tessl skill review --optimize ./skills/scheduler-and-booking-design/SKILL.mdSecurity
1 medium severity finding. This skill can be installed but you should review these findings before use.
The skill exposes the agent to untrusted, user-generated content from public third-party sources, creating a risk of indirect prompt injection. This includes browsing arbitrary URLs, reading social media posts or forum comments, and analyzing content from unknown websites.
Third-party content exposure detected (high risk: 0.70). The skill's prep-automation guidance (see SKILL.md and references/prep-automation-patterns.md) explicitly calls for automated account research such as "recent news search" and "social media check" (and vendor lookups like Clearbit/ZoomInfo), which requires fetching and ingesting public, user-generated third‑party content that the agent is expected to read and use to influence routing/prep decisions.
8e70d03
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