---
title: "AI Skills: explain recurring tasks once, use them permanently"
description: "What AI Skills are, which processes are suitable for them, and how to teach your AI once how your company works."
type: "wissen"
product: "assist"
slug: "ai-skills-recurring-tasks"
source_language: "de"
target_languages: ["de", "en", "es", "pl", "tr"]
published: "2026-06-10"
status: "publish"
faq_json: [{"q":"What is an AI Skill?","a":"An ability that you teach your AI: a recurring process, a rule, or a task pattern of your company – defined once, then usable without explaining again."}, {"q":"Which tasks are suitable as a Skill?","a":"Anything you regularly explain the same way: how you write quotes, how you answer complaints, how a weekly report is structured."}, {"q":"Do Skills apply only to me or to the whole team?","a":"Both make sense: there are personal Skills and organization Skills that apply to the whole team – so everyone works according to the same patterns."}, {"q":"How does a Skill differ from a good prompt?","a":"A prompt applies to one conversation, a Skill permanently. You don't have to repeat the explanation – the knowledge is stored and maintained in one place."}]
language: "en"
source_id: "wissen/ki-skills-wiederkehrende-aufgaben"
source_hash: "f52ad4eae0fe1d9a889a710f17626b76998e47e9b7f028bb5448efdd7aac3e4c"
---

AI Skills are abilities that you teach an AI once: recurring processes, rules, or task patterns of your company – such as "This is how we write quotes" or "This is how we respond to complaints". Once stored as a Skill, no one has to repeat the explanation: neither you nor your colleagues, and the AI doesn't keep asking for the same basics in every conversation.

## The problem: good prompts get lost

Anyone who works with AI regularly knows the pattern: for one task, after some trial and error, a really good instruction emerges – tone, structure, rules, examples. The next time it's gone, buried in an old chat history or in a text file that only one person on the team knows about. The result: the same explanatory work happens again and again, and the quality varies depending on who's asking.

Skills solve exactly that: they turn a fleeting prompt into a permanent, maintained ability.

## How a Skill is structured

In [webRichtung assist](https://www.webrichtung.de/module/assist/), a Skill has a clear structure:

- a **name** and a **type**
- an **area** it belongs to (e.g. strategy, technology)
- a **priority** and a **status** (e.g. Active)

Added to this is the distinction between **your own Skills** and the **Skills of your organization**: personal Skills reflect your way of working, organization Skills apply to the whole team. This way the assistant answers a complaint for the new colleague according to the same rules as for the owner.

## Which tasks are good Skill candidates

The rule of thumb: good candidates are things you regularly explain the same way. For example:

- **Texts with fixed rules:** quotes, rejections, payment reminders, reply emails to typical inquiries
- **Processes with steps:** how a complaint is recorded, how an order is documented
- **Formats:** how a weekly report, a protocol, or a handover is structured
- **House rules:** form of address, tone, what may not be promised, when a human has to take over

Unsuitable are one-off special cases – you explain those faster in a conversation than you maintain a Skill.

## How to build a good Skill

1. **Observe:** Which explanation are you giving for the third time? That's your candidate.
2. **Be specific:** Not "write good quotes", but structure, mandatory details, tone, and a good example.
3. **Name the boundaries:** What the Skill may not decide – such as discounts or legal commitments.
4. **Test and refine:** Check the results, write deviations back into the Skill.
5. **Share:** Turn proven Skills into an organization ability so the whole team benefits.

## Why the effort pays off

A Skill costs a one-time half hour of care – and afterwards saves explanation time with every use. More importantly: it preserves knowledge that otherwise depends on individuals. How your company writes quotes is then no longer only in the head of the most experienced colleague, but a maintained ability in the system – a building block of what distinguishes an [AI chat with company knowledge](/en/wissen/ki-chat-mit-firmenwissen.html) from a generic chatbot. How to create Skills is shown in the documentation at [docs.webrichtung.de/assist/](https://docs.webrichtung.de/assist/).
