Claude-code-plugins-plus-skills lindy-core-workflow-a

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/jeremylongshore/claude-code-plugins-plus-skills
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/jeremylongshore/claude-code-plugins-plus-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/plugins/saas-packs/lindy-pack/skills/lindy-core-workflow-a" ~/.claude/skills/jeremylongshore-claude-code-plugins-plus-skills-lindy-core-workflow-a && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: plugins/saas-packs/lindy-pack/skills/lindy-core-workflow-a/SKILL.md
source content

Lindy Core Workflow A: Agent Creation

Overview

Complete workflow for creating, configuring, and testing Lindy AI agents. Agents consist of four components: Prompt (behavioral instructions), Model (AI engine), Skills (available actions), and Exit Conditions (completion criteria).

Prerequisites

  • Lindy account at https://app.lindy.ai
  • Use case defined (support bot, email triage, data processor, etc.)
  • Required integrations identified (Slack, Gmail, Sheets, etc.)

Instructions

Step 1: Define Agent Specification

Before building, document:

  • Purpose: What the agent does (one sentence)
  • Trigger: What wakes it up (webhook, email, schedule, chat, etc.)
  • Actions: What it does (send email, update sheet, post to Slack, etc.)
  • Model: GPT-4 (smart, expensive), Claude Sonnet (balanced), Gemini Flash (fast, cheap)

Step 2: Create the Agent

Option A — Natural Language (recommended):

  1. Click New Agent at https://app.lindy.ai
  2. Describe your agent in plain English:
    When a customer emails support@company.com, classify the email as
    billing/technical/general, draft a response using our knowledge base,
    and post the classification to #support-triage in Slack
    
  3. Agent Builder auto-generates trigger + action nodes

Option B — Manual Build:

  1. Click New Agent > Start from scratch
  2. Add trigger: Click "+" > Select trigger type
  3. Add actions: Click "+" > Search for action
  4. Connect nodes by dragging arrows between steps

Step 3: Configure the Prompt

Open Settings > Prompt. Structure it with clear sections:

## Identity
You are a customer support classifier and responder for [Company].

## Instructions
1. Read the incoming email carefully
2. Classify into: billing, technical, or general
3. Search the knowledge base for relevant answers
4. Draft a professional response using the KB results
5. If no KB match found, escalate to human

## Constraints
- Never promise refunds or credits without human approval
- Keep responses under 200 words
- Always include ticket reference number

Prompt best practices (from Lindy docs):

  • Use action-oriented language (imperatives)
  • Break complex logic into numbered steps
  • Include few-shot examples for consistent formatting
  • Add constraints to prevent unwanted behavior

Step 4: Add Conditions (Branching Logic)

  1. Click "+" > Condition
  2. Write natural language condition:
    "Go down this path if the email is about billing"
  3. Add multiple branches for different classifications
  4. Enable "Force the agent to select a branch" for deterministic routing

Step 5: Configure Actions

For each action, set field modes:

Auto mode — Agent infers the value from all previous step data:

Best for: predictable mappings where field names align

AI Prompt mode — Give natural language instructions:

Summarize the email in 2 sentences, then include the classification.
Reference: {{email_received.body}}

Set Manually mode — Exact value, no AI:

Channel: #support-triage

Step 6: Add Knowledge Base (Optional)

  1. Go to Settings > Knowledge Base
  2. Add sources: PDF, DOCX, Google Drive, Notion, websites
  3. Configure search:
    • Max Results: 4 (default) to 10
    • Search Fuzziness: 0 (keyword) to 100 (semantic, recommended)
  4. Agent auto-searches KB when relevant to the task

Step 7: Test the Agent

  1. Use the Test button in the workflow editor
  2. Provide sample input matching your trigger type
  3. Review each step's output in the task detail view
  4. Iterate on prompt and action configuration

Trigger Types Reference

TriggerUse CaseConfiguration
Webhook ReceivedExternal API callsURL + secret key
Email ReceivedInbox automationGmail/Outlook + label filters
ScheduleRecurring tasksCron-style: daily, weekly, custom
Chat MessageInteractive botLindy Chat or Embed widget
Slack MessageTeam automationChannel + keyword filters
Agent MessageMulti-agent delegationReceives from other Lindies
Calendar EventMeeting automationMinutes offset (-30 = 30 min before)
Form SubmissionLead captureConnected form integration

Action Categories

CategoryActions
EmailSend Email, Draft Reply, Search Inbox, Add Label
SlackSend Channel Message, Send DM, Thread Reply
SheetsUpdate Spreadsheet, Get Document
CalendarCreate Event, Reschedule, Cancel
KnowledgeSearch Knowledge Base, Resync KB
CodeRun Code (Python/JS in E2B sandbox)
WebHTTP Request, Web Search, Website Crawler
MemoryRead/Create/Update/Delete Memory
PhoneMake Call, Transfer Call, End Call
AgentAgent Send Message (delegation)

Error Handling

ErrorCauseSolution
"No trigger configured"Agent has no triggerAdd at least one trigger node
Action fails silentlyWrong field modeSwitch to AI Prompt or Set Manually
KB returns no resultsFuzziness too lowIncrease to 100 (semantic search)
Condition always picks same pathAmbiguous promptMake conditions more specific
Agent loops indefinitelyNo exit conditionAdd measurable exit criteria

Resources

Next Steps

Proceed to

lindy-core-workflow-b
for triggers, automation, and multi-agent delegation.