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Claude Cowork Has Five Moving Parts. Most People Only Use One.

Anthropic's Claude Cowork platform offers five core components—skills, connectors, plugins, projects, and artifacts—but most users only leverage one. The system requires a paid plan and the Claude Desktop app, enabling automated tasks like deck reviews, invoice generation, and email sorting through reusable skills and OAuth-based connectors. Projects provide persistent memory across tasks, though they remain local and unsharable.

read6 min views3 publishedJul 19, 2026

Cowork is the rest of the house: skills, connectors, plugins, projects, artifacts, and dispatch. Here’s the fast tour.

Before you start: Cowork needs a paid plan (Pro, Max, Team, or Enterprise) and the Claude Desktop app, kept open while a task runs. Close the app, the session stops.

A skill is a how-to file Claude reads automatically when a task matches it. You don’t run it like a command, you just ask, and if a matching skill is installed, Claude uses it.

Case: the deck you send every month.Before, you’d manually check every PowerPoint for the right fonts, brand colors, and slide density before sending it out, every single time. You install a “deck review” skill once. Now you just ask:“Check this PowerPoint for consistency before I send it.”You get a list of exactly what’s off, no re-explaining your standards.

Case: the invoice you dread writing.Before, a freelancer retyped the same invoice format, tax rate, and line items every month from scratch. They install an “invoice generator” skill once. Now they just say:“Generate this month’s invoice for [client].”They get a finished invoice in the right format, every time, without describing it again.

You can stack several at once. If you have a data-analysis skill and a branded-deck skill, asking “turn this CSV into a deck for leadership” uses both in one go, no need to name either.

Finding and up a skill that’s not in the built-in directory:

skills.sh is a third-party directory, not built or vetted by Anthropic. The security badges help, but they're automated scans, not a guarantee. Skim the SKILL.md and any bundled scripts yourself before up, since skills can run code. If you'd rather start somewhere Anthropic maintains directly, its own collection lives at github.com/anthropics/skills.

A connector gives Claude access to a real service, Gmail, Drive, Slack, through OAuth. It acts as you, with your existing permissions, and you can scope exactly what it’s allowed to do (read your email, say, but never send it).

Case: the Monday morning inbox panic.Before, you’d open your inbox to 80 unread emails and spend 30 minutes just figuring out what’s urgent. You connect Gmail once, then ask:“Sort this week’s unread emails into urgent, needs-reply, and FYI. Draft replies for anything that just needs a confirmation, don’t send.”You get a sorted inbox and a folder of draft replies waiting for your final yes, in under a minute, with nothing sent without your approval.

A plugin bundles skills and connectors into one package for a role, Sales, Legal, Finance. It’s the fastest way to get something useful before you understand the individual pieces. Customize it once you know what’s missing, it’s a starting point, not a fixed setup.

Case: the new hire on a sales team.Before, getting Claude useful for sales work meant manually connecting a CRM, then writing skills for call prep and follow-ups from scratch. You install the Sales plugin instead. It arrives with a CRM connector already wired up, plus skills for call prep and follow-up emails, all in one click. You get to ask“prep me for tomorrow’s call with [client]”on day one, with zero setup of your own.

A standalone task forgets everything when it ends. A Project doesn’t, it’s tied to a folder, with its own files, instructions, and memory that carries across every task inside it.

Case: the weekly report that starts from zero, every week.Before, you’d re-explain your report’s format, your folder location, and your standards to Claude in every new conversation. You create a “Weekly Reporting” Project once, pointed at a folder with your template and past reports, and tell it once:“Pull from active files, flag anything overdue by 2+ days, output as a one-page .docx.”You get a Claude that remembers all of that weeks later, no re-explaining, just“do this week’s report.”

Worth knowing: Projects are local to one computer, no cloud sync, and can’t be shared with teammates yet.

Not a chat reply, a deliverable: a working spreadsheet, a slide deck, real code, a formatted doc.

Case: the budget you keep meaning to set up.Before, you’d ask an AI for budgeting advice and get a paragraph explaining how a tracker should work, leaving you to build it yourself. You ask:“Build me a budget tracker.”You get an actual spreadsheet, with formulas that already calculate your monthly totals, ready to open and use.

Case: the vendor decision you’re stuck on.Before, comparing three vendor quotes meant three open tabs and a notes app full of half-finished bullet points. You ask:“Compare these three vendor quotes side by side.”You get an actual table, not a paragraph, that you can drop straight into a report or email.

If you need something to keep or hand off, name the deliverable directly instead of asking a question. Dispatch is for one-off big jobs. Brief it from your phone, walk away, your desktop does the work while you’re out.

Scheduled Tasks are for anything recurring. Type /schedule once, Claude runs it on a cadence as long as your computer's on.

One-off but big → Dispatch. Same thing every Friday → Scheduled Task.

Case: the research you keep postponing.Before, a topic needing real research sat on your to-do list because you never had an uninterrupted hour to dig in. Before bed, you Dispatch it from your phone:“Research X and draft a brief.”You wake up to a finished brief, the work done overnight while you slept.

Case: the daily inbox check you do manually anyway.Before, “checking my email summary” meant actually doing it yourself, every single morning. You set up a Scheduled Task once:“Summarize my inbox every morning at 8am.”You get the summary waiting for you each day, automatically, without asking again.

One real risk worth naming: dispatching from your phone means instructions from your phone can trigger real actions on your desktop. Don’t dispatch into a folder or permission set you wouldn’t hand a new, unsupervised hire.

Piece What it is Use it when Skill A how-to file Claude reads automatically A task you repeat often Connector OAuth access to a real service You need your actual data, not a description of it Plugin A bundle of skills + connectors for a role You want a working setup fast Project A persistent workspace with memory Anything recurring Artifact The finished deliverable You need something to keep or hand off Dispatch A one-off task, briefed remotely Big, but you won’t need it twice Scheduled Task The same job, repeating Every week, automatically

Start with one connector and one real task. Everything else makes more sense once you’ve felt the gap it solves, not before.

Claude Cowork Has Five Moving Parts. Most People Only Use One. was originally published in Towards AI on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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