Northlight Advisory Services has three MCP skills listed on MCP Market: Morning Briefing Pro ($19), Strategic Voice Framework ($29), and MCP Market Publisher ($29). None of them were designed to be products. Each one started as something I built to make running a one-person advisory practice more manageable — wearing 72 hats, needing to be skilled in a lot of topics, needing to produce real work every day. They worked well enough that it felt wrong not to share them.
Why did we list on MCP Market?
Honestly? It was easy.
I had downloaded something from MCP Market before and they sent an email saying Market was opening for sellers. They handled the infrastructure — Stripe integration, listing pages, discovery. I didn't have to build a payment system or a seller portal. They have a good reputation in the MCP community and they're a real place where people already go to find skills. For tools this specific, being where people are already looking matters more than owning the transaction layer.
So we listed.
What does each skill actually do?
Prepares you for the day before work starts — what's happening, what needs to happen, what's urgent. The goal is to be centred and ready before the first task, not scrambling to orient yourself at 10am.
Running a solo advisory practice means there's no team meeting to sync you up in the morning, no ops person handling the queue, no EA filtering what needs your attention. You're it. Morning Briefing Pro does the orientation work so I don't have to do it manually every morning — I start the day already knowing what it holds.
Captures your specific brand voice and applies it consistently when Claude drafts posts, blog content, or anything else you write. Also holds you to it: if you write something off-brand, it flags the drift and brings you back.
This one solves the problem I had before it existed: Claude would draft content in a competent, professional voice. Just not mine. And then I'd spend time editing it back toward how I actually sound. The bigger problem is what happens if you don't catch it — you publish content that reads like everyone else using the same AI prompt templates. The internet is already full of that. I don't want to add to it.
Strategic Voice Framework means Claude drafts in my voice from the start. And if I have a day where I'm rushing and I write something that doesn't sound like me, the framework flags it. That guardrail is worth a lot when you're stressed and moving fast.
Standardizes the process of preparing and listing a skill on MCP Market — what's required, in what format, in what order. Came directly from the friction of doing it the first time without a template.
The first time you do something, you figure it out. The second time, you shouldn't have to figure it out again. MCP Market Publisher is the standardized process that came out of learning the hard way what listing a skill actually requires. Why make it difficult when you can make it repeatable?
What did the iterative process actually look like?
None of these skills shipped in their final form the first time. What made them good — actually useful, not just functional — was the iteration:
- Starting with good skills and good prompts
- Really spending time to get them right, not just good enough
- Coming back after using them in real work and adjusting based on what wasn't working
- Repeating that cycle until the tool was doing what it was supposed to do without friction
That iterative process takes time. It also takes a willingness to go back and change something you already thought was done. Most people stop at "functional." The gap between functional and genuinely useful is where the real work happens.
The honest version: I didn't know these tools were good enough to sell until I'd been using them long enough to notice what life was like without them. That's usually when something becomes worth sharing — not when it's built, but when you've felt the absence of it.
Who are these skills for?
They're for solo operators, consultants, and fractional professionals who are doing a lot of different things at once and can't afford to spend cognitive energy on orientation, consistency, or process every single day.
If you have a team handling your morning briefings, a brand strategist managing your voice, and an ops person building your publishing workflows — you probably don't need these. But if you're wearing those hats yourself, along with the other 69, these are the tools that give them back some of their time.
What's next for the Northlight Skills Market?
We listed these three because they were ready. More will follow as we build tools for ourselves that turn out to be worth sharing. The Skills Market isn't a product roadmap with planned releases — it's what happens when something we use internally becomes good enough that keeping it to ourselves feels like a waste.
You can browse the current listings at mcpmarket.com/sellers/northlight-skills. The full case study on how the Skills Market was built is on the Work page.