📊 Full opportunity report: The Skills Marketplace, Six Months Later: Predicted vs Actual on ThorstenMeyerAI.com — validation score, market gap, and execution plan.
TL;DR
Six months after initial predictions, the skills marketplace has grown to over 4,200 skills and 120,000 monthly visitors. However, it remains fragmented with multiple platforms and structural lock-ins, impacting monetization and consolidation.
Six months after predictions of a skills marketplace becoming a structural shift, the ecosystem has materialized with over 4,200 skills and 120,000 monthly visitors, confirming the predicted emergence but revealing a more complex landscape than initially envisioned.
The directory at claudemarketplaces.com reports 4,200+ active skills, 770+ MCP servers, and over 2,500 marketplaces, indicating rapid growth since late 2025. The number of skills aligns with early estimates, which predicted 1,000-3,000 skills by mid-2026, now surpassed, with growth slowing but remaining substantial.
Platform proliferation is evident, with at least five major competing marketplaces—such as Agensi and Agent37—each offering different monetization models. Agensi operates as a paid-skills marketplace with an 80% creator revenue share, while Agent37 provides hosted access with integrated payments and iteration tools. Despite these developments, no dominant platform has emerged, leading to a fragmented landscape.
Structural challenges include surface fragmentation: skills uploaded to Claude.ai do not sync with API-based skills, creating a form of internal lock-in that was not anticipated. Additionally, the long tail of less popular skills monetizes poorly, with the top skills capturing the majority of revenue, confirming a winner-takes-most dynamic.
The marketplace emerged.
Five of six predictions confirmed. Three structural facts the original analysis didn’t anticipate.
Six months after the original prediction: 4,200+ skills, 770+ MCP servers, 2,500+ marketplaces, 120K monthly visitors. Hosted-access monetization beat file-sales decisively. Cross-agent portability is real (Claude Code, OpenClaw, Codex, Cursor). But surface fragmentation persists. Platform consolidation has not happened. Winner-takes-most economics dominate within categories.
Six predictions. Six outcomes.
The November 2025 prediction said the skills marketplace would emerge as a structural shift. Five of six predictions confirmed empirically. One partial. Plus three structural facts the original analysis did not anticipate.
AI skills marketplace tools
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Five-plus platforms. No clear winner yet.
The marketplace emerged across multiple competing platforms with different distribution and monetization models. The 24-36 month consolidation window has begun. The winner integrates runtime + payments + entitlements + iteration + vendor-neutral distribution.

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Three models. One scales.
The original prediction said hosted-access would beat file-sales. The empirical data confirms decisively. Roughly 10× revenue advantage for hosted access over file-sales. Median creator on Agent37: $300-1,500/mo. Top decile: $5-25K/mo. Top percentile: $50K+/mo.
IP given away at first download. Customer redistributes within team. “Objectively a terrible business model.” Default in GitHub-based distribution.
Returns to hourly consulting economics. Doesn’t scale beyond creator’s individual time. Pre-productization model. The trap skills were supposed to escape.
80%+ margins after $80/mo delivery cost. Iteration enabled by real usage data. Top decile $5-25K/mo. The model that wins.
The directional bet on the marketplace was right. Which platforms, which creators, and which enterprises capture the disproportionate share of the value — the answers will resolve over 2026-2028.

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Four assignments. By role.
Pick a subdomain, not a top category.
The category-leading window is closing. Top categories (AWS tooling, db tooling, marketing automation) have established leaders. Target hosted-access (Agent37, Agensi). Test cross-agent on at least two agents. Price on outcomes ($99-499/mo for domain expertise). Plan for median ($300-1,500/mo). Treat top-decile ($5-25K/mo) as upside, not base case.
Ship cross-surface skill sync.
Current friction (Claude.ai vs API vs Claude Code separate deployments) is the largest structural barrier to marketplace growth. Fix is technically straightforward; strategic value substantial. Doing this in 2026 captures more of the marketplace value the company is enabling. Surface-fragmentation is the unfinished business of the skills launch.
Add the dimension you currently lack.
24-36 month consolidation window has begun. Agent37 needs Agensi’s economic clarity. Agensi needs Agent37’s integration breadth. Platform that integrates runtime + payments + entitlements + iteration + vendor-neutral distribution wins. Less integrated platforms become acquisition targets. Move fast.
Audit for reliability, not features.
Reliability premium is real. Pay for documented production track records, not feature breadth. Choose deployment surface deliberately (Claude Code dev / API prod / Claude.ai ad-hoc). Build internal MCP server portfolio for proprietary integrations — this is the integration moat. Cross-agent portable skills are the vendor-concentration hedge.

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Impacts of Fragmentation and Platform Competition
The emergence of a sizable skills marketplace confirms the initial prediction of a shift toward an agent-driven economy. However, the fragmentation across multiple platforms and the internal lock-in within Anthropic’s ecosystem complicate the landscape, potentially affecting creator monetization, platform loyalty, and the pace of consolidation. For enterprises and creators, this environment offers both opportunities for specialization and risks related to vendor lock-in and inconsistent access.
Evolution of the Skills Marketplace Ecosystem
The original prediction in late 2025 envisioned a burgeoning marketplace driven by the SKILL.md standard, with cross-agent portability and monetization paths for creators. Early indicators showed rapid growth, with the directory at claudemarketplaces.com tracking over 4,200 skills and 120,000 monthly visitors by May 2026. The ecosystem has since diversified into multiple platforms, each addressing different distribution and monetization needs, but without a clear dominant player.
Structural issues such as surface fragmentation—skills uploaded to Claude.ai not syncing with API—have introduced internal lock-in, contradicting expectations of vendor-light portability. The proliferation of competing marketplaces, including Agensi, Agent37, and others, has created a fragmented environment with winner-takes-most economics for top skills, leaving the long tail under-monetized.
“The marketplace is real, profitable for the top participants, but structurally messier than initially predicted.”
— Thorsten Meyer
Unresolved Issues and Future Risks
It remains unclear how the marketplace will evolve in terms of platform consolidation, whether a dominant platform will emerge, and how monetization will develop for the long tail of skills. The impact of internal lock-in and fragmentation on creator incentives and enterprise adoption is still being observed, and the pace of consolidation remains uncertain.
Next Steps for Ecosystem Development and Industry Impact
Monitoring platform consolidation efforts, potential standardization of skills, and changes in monetization models will be key. Industry stakeholders expect continued fragmentation in the short term, with possible consolidation as top platforms gain dominance. Further analysis will focus on how internal lock-in evolves and whether new standards or interoperability solutions emerge.
Key Questions
Will a dominant skills marketplace platform emerge?
It is still uncertain. While some platforms are gaining traction, no clear leader has emerged as of May 2026.
How does surface fragmentation affect creators and enterprises?
It creates internal lock-in within Anthropic’s ecosystem, potentially limiting portability and complicating monetization and platform loyalty.
Are monetization strategies evolving for smaller skills?
Currently, the top skills dominate revenue, while the long tail monetizes poorly. The landscape may shift if new models or standards develop.
What is the role of cross-agent portability moving forward?
It remains a key feature, but internal lock-in challenges may limit its effectiveness unless addressed through standardization or platform cooperation.
Source: ThorstenMeyerAI.com