Claude Skills for Job Search, Explained (Prompts vs GPTs vs Skills)
Claude Skills are the quiet upgrade most Claude users haven't tried: packaged instructions and workflows that teach Claude how to do a specific job well, loading automatically when the task calls for them. For job seekers, that turns "paste a prompt you found on a blog" into "invoke a workflow that already knows the process": and since job searching is exactly the kind of multi-step, repeatable process skills were designed for, it's become one of their natural use cases. Here's what skills actually are, how they differ from prompts and GPTs, and how the job-search skill works in practice.
What a Claude Skill Actually Is
A skill is a folder of instructions, reference material, and optionally scripts that Claude loads when relevant: think of it as the difference between telling a new assistant what to do every morning (prompting) and handing them a documented procedure they follow every time (a skill). Three properties matter for job seekers: consistency (the workflow runs the same way every session: no re-explaining your situation and constraints), composition (skills combine with Claude's other capabilities: file uploads, MCP connections, web search: so a skill can orchestrate tools, not just phrase advice), and packaging (someone who's thought hard about a process: resume tailoring, application tracking, interview prep: can encode that thinking once, and you benefit without becoming a prompt engineer).
Skills vs Prompts vs GPTs: The Taxonomy
| Copy-paste prompts | Custom GPTs | Claude Skills | |
|---|---|---|---|
| What it is | Text you paste per session | A ChatGPT persona with instructions | A workflow package Claude loads on demand |
| Consistency | Depends on your discipline | Good, within one chat product | Good, and composes with tools/MCP |
| Best for | One-off tasks | Conversational assistants | Repeatable multi-step processes |
| Job-search fit | Prompt library | Best GPTs ranked | This post |
The Job-Search Skill in Practice
LoopCV publishes a Claude skill for job searching (setup and details on the skill pages: job search, job application, and job hunting flavors): the workflow layer that pairs with the LoopCV MCP connection. The division of labor: the skill encodes the process (how to structure a search, tailor materials against postings, review pipeline results, decide next actions) while the MCP provides the hands (actually creating loops, checking application statuses, driving the platform that applies across 30+ boards). Together, a Claude session stops being a very smart notepad and becomes an operator: "review this week's matches, tighten the loop that's producing mismatches, and draft follow-ups for anything stale" executes instead of just getting discussed. The prerequisite is a LoopCV account (free plan works) so the skill has a platform to drive.
What Skills Don't Change
Honesty section: a skill doesn't make Claude able to do things Claude can't do: no skill lets a chat session fill employer portals or submit applications by itself: that's the platform layer's job (how the applying actually happens). Skills also don't replace judgment: the tailoring guardrails ("real experience only") still need your review, and the de-slop rules apply to skill-assisted output exactly as much as to raw prompting. And the ecosystem is young: skill discovery is still maturing, which is why explainers like this one exist at all.
Should You Bother?
If you use Claude for your search more than once a week: yes: the setup is minutes, and the payoff is never re-explaining your process again. If you're a ChatGPT person, the equivalent stack is the ChatGPT MCP connection plus store GPTs: and if you're a developer, the terminal version is Claude Code as job-search command center. The model-agnostic core is the same everywhere: chat layer for thinking, skill/workflow layer for process, platform layer for the applying: pick your interface, keep the architecture.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are Claude Skills?
Packaged workflows: folders of instructions, reference material, and optionally scripts: that Claude loads automatically when a task calls for them. They turn repeatable processes (like running a job search) into documented procedures Claude follows consistently, instead of prompts you re-paste and re-explain every session, and they compose with Claude's tools and MCP connections.
Is there a Claude skill for job searching?
Yes: LoopCV publishes one, pairing with the LoopCV MCP connection: the skill encodes the search process (structuring loops, tailoring, pipeline review) while the MCP drives the actual platform: creating loops, checking statuses, and running automated applications across 30+ boards. A free LoopCV account is the prerequisite.
What's the difference between a Claude skill and a custom GPT?
A custom GPT is a ChatGPT persona: instructions wrapped in a chat assistant. A Claude skill is a workflow package that loads on demand and composes with tools, files, and MCP connections: better suited to multi-step repeatable processes than to conversational personas. Prompts, GPTs, and skills are escalating levels of the same idea: encoded expertise.
Can a Claude skill apply to jobs for me?
Not by itself: no skill gives a chat session the ability to fill employer portals. The skill orchestrates, and the applying happens through the connected platform: LoopCV's automated pipeline across 30+ boards: which the skill drives via MCP. Skill for process, MCP for hands, platform for execution.
How do I install the LoopCV Claude skill?
Setup instructions live on LoopCV's skill pages (claude-skill-for-job-search on the main site): the short version is connecting the LoopCV MCP to Claude, adding the skill, and having a LoopCV account for it to drive: minutes of setup, and the free plan is enough to run the whole stack.