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matttgx

Agent Team Orchestration 1.0.0

by Matttgx · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install agent-team-orchestration-1-0-0
Description
Orchestrate multi-agent teams with defined roles, task lifecycles, handoff protocols, and review workflows. Use when: (1) Setting up a team of 2+ agents with...
README (SKILL.md)

Agent Team Orchestration

Production playbook for running multi-agent teams with clear roles, structured task flow, and quality gates.

Quick Start: Minimal 2-Agent Team

A builder and a reviewer. The simplest useful team.

1. Define Roles

Orchestrator (you) — Route tasks, track state, report results
Builder agent     — Execute work, produce artifacts

2. Spawn a Task

1. Create task record (file, DB, or task board)
2. Spawn builder with:
   - Task ID and description
   - Output path for artifacts
   - Handoff instructions (what to produce, where to put it)
3. On completion: review artifacts, mark done, report

3. Add a Reviewer

Builder produces artifact → Reviewer checks it → Orchestrator ships or returns

That's the core loop. Everything below scales this pattern.

Core Concepts

Roles

Every agent has one primary role. Overlap causes confusion.

Role Purpose Model guidance
Orchestrator Route work, track state, make priority calls High-reasoning model (handles judgment)
Builder Produce artifacts — code, docs, configs Can use cost-effective models for mechanical work
Reviewer Verify quality, push back on gaps High-reasoning model (catches what builders miss)
Ops Cron jobs, standups, health checks, dispatching Cheapest model that's reliable

Read references/team-setup.md when defining a new team or adding agents.

Task States

Every task moves through a defined lifecycle:

Inbox → Assigned → In Progress → Review → Done | Failed

Rules:

  • Orchestrator owns state transitions — don't rely on agents to update their own status
  • Every transition gets a comment (who, what, why)
  • Failed is a valid end state — capture why and move on

Read references/task-lifecycle.md when designing task flows or debugging stuck tasks.

Handoffs

When work passes between agents, the handoff message includes:

  1. What was done — summary of changes/output
  2. Where artifacts are — exact file paths
  3. How to verify — test commands or acceptance criteria
  4. Known issues — anything incomplete or risky
  5. What's next — clear next action for the receiving agent

Bad handoff: "Done, check the files." Good handoff: "Built auth module at /shared/artifacts/auth/. Run npm test auth to verify. Known issue: rate limiting not implemented yet. Next: reviewer checks error handling edge cases."

Reviews

Cross-role reviews prevent quality drift:

  • Builders review specs — "Is this feasible? What's missing?"
  • Reviewers check builds — "Does this match the spec? Edge cases?"
  • Orchestrator reviews priorities — "Is this the right work right now?"

Skip the review step and quality degrades within 3-5 tasks. Every time.

Read references/communication.md when setting up agent communication channels.Read references/patterns.md for proven multi-step workflows.

Reference Files

File Read when...
team-setup.md Defining agents, roles, models, workspaces
task-lifecycle.md Designing task states, transitions, comments
communication.md Setting up async/sync communication, artifact paths
patterns.md Implementing specific workflows (spec→build→test, parallel research, escalation)

Common Pitfalls

Spawning without clear artifact output paths

Agent produces great work, but you can't find it. Always specify the exact output path in the spawn prompt. Use a shared artifacts directory with predictable structure.

No review step = quality drift

"It's a small change, skip review." Do this three times and you have compounding errors. Every artifact gets at least one set of eyes that didn't produce it.

Agents not commenting on task progress

Silent agents create coordination blind spots. Require comments at: start, blocker, handoff, completion. If an agent goes silent, assume it's stuck.

Not verifying agent capabilities before assigning

Assigning browser-based testing to an agent without browser access. Assigning image work to a text-only model. Check capabilities before routing.

Orchestrator doing execution work

The orchestrator routes and tracks — it doesn't build. The moment you start "just quickly doing this one thing," you've lost oversight of the rest of the team.

When NOT to Use This Skill

  • Single-agent setups — Just follow standard AGENTS.md conventions. Team orchestration adds overhead that solo agents don't need.
  • One-off task delegation — Use sessions_spawn directly. This skill is for sustained workflows with multiple handoffs.
  • Simple question routing — If you're just forwarding a question to a specialist, that's a message, not a workflow.

This skill is for sustained team workflows — recurring collaboration patterns where agents depend on each other's output over multiple tasks.

Usage Guidance
This skill is a textual playbook (no code) and appears to do what it says. Before installing/using it: 1) Verify your agent platform provides the shared/workspace directories and enforce access controls so sensitive data isn't exposed across agents. 2) Avoid allowing blind overwrites in /shared/ — enable versioning or require unique task directories to prevent data loss. 3) Limit who/which agent can read other agents' personal workspaces if that would expose secrets. 4) Start with a small pilot (2–3 tasks) to validate the conventions and permissions. If your runtime doesn't provide the sessions_spawn/sessions_send primitives or a secured shared filesystem, adapt the playbook or restrict its use.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: agent-team-orchestration-1-0-0 Version: 1.0.0 The skill bundle provides a structured framework for multi-agent orchestration, defining roles, task lifecycles, and communication protocols. All files, including SKILL.md and the reference documents in the references/ directory, contain purely instructional content focused on project management and coordination between AI agents. There is no evidence of malicious code, data exfiltration, or prompt injection attempts designed to compromise the system or access sensitive information.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name/description (multi-agent orchestration) match the contents: role definitions, task lifecycle, handoffs, review workflows and workspace conventions. No unexpected binaries, env vars, or external services are required.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md and reference files are detailed playbooks instructing agents to read/write shared directories (/shared/, /workspace/) and to spawn/send sessions. This is expected for orchestration, but the instructions assume the agent platform provides those filesystem and session primitives — confirm those capabilities and access controls before use.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files — lowest-risk form (instruction-only). Nothing is downloaded or written by the skill itself.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables, credentials, or config paths. It does recommend verifying access/capabilities (e.g., browser, API access) when assigning tasks, which is appropriate and proportional.
Persistence & Privilege
always:false (normal). The playbook mandates writing artifacts and decision logs to shared storage and instructs overwriting previous versions in place — this is coherent for team workflows but carries data-retention/overwrite and information-exposure risk depending on your environment's access controls and backup/versioning policies.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install agent-team-orchestration-1-0-0
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /agent-team-orchestration-1-0-0
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release: Enables structured orchestration of multi-agent teams with clear roles, task lifecycles, and review protocols. - Provides a playbook for running 2+ agent teams with builder, reviewer, and orchestrator roles - Defines a structured task lifecycle: Inbox → Assigned → In Progress → Review → Done/Failed - Establishes handoff and review protocols to ensure quality and accountability - Includes troubleshooting guidance and reference files for team setup and workflow patterns - Lists common pitfalls and scenarios where team orchestration is or isn't appropriate
Metadata
Slug agent-team-orchestration-1-0-0
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 4
Active Installs 4
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Agent Team Orchestration 1.0.0?

Orchestrate multi-agent teams with defined roles, task lifecycles, handoff protocols, and review workflows. Use when: (1) Setting up a team of 2+ agents with... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 179 downloads so far.

How do I install Agent Team Orchestration 1.0.0?

Run "/install agent-team-orchestration-1-0-0" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Agent Team Orchestration 1.0.0 free?

Yes, Agent Team Orchestration 1.0.0 is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Agent Team Orchestration 1.0.0 support?

Agent Team Orchestration 1.0.0 is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Agent Team Orchestration 1.0.0?

It is built and maintained by Matttgx (@matttgx); the current version is v1.0.0.

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