For practitioners

Claim your role.

If you're doing the work described in the Atlas — and most practitioners doing it aren't classified that way yet — claim your role. You become part of the pool I route to companies hiring for the specific work you do. No exclusivity. No obligation. Free.

  • Practitioner-defined taxonomy
  • Real humans, not algorithms
  • Free, always

Takes about 4–6 minutes. Your claim goes straight to Thomas for review.

Your identity

Where to find your work

At least one URL helps me find your work. None of these are required, but the more public proof you can point to, the faster vetting goes.

Which Atlas role(s) describe you?

Multi-select. If you do work across multiple roles, claim all that fit. The bar is: you've actually shipped this work, not that you could in theory.

0 selected

Cluster A — Implementation & Deployment
Cluster B — Reliability & Operations
Cluster C — Governance, Risk & Compliance
Cluster D — Design & Architecture
Cluster E — Translation & Enablement
Part II — Operators

Vertical specialization (optional)

Select any verticals where you've shipped substantial work.

Vertical specialization

Domain practitioner with integrated AI (optional)

This is a distinct supply category in the Atlas. Domain expertise plus AI integration is structurally undersupplied and commands premium engagements.

Proof of work

Describe 1–5 specific things you've shipped. Include links wherever possible. Public case studies, GitHub repos, conference talks, named-company case studies. The more specific and verifiable, the faster vetting goes.

0/3000 — need at least 100 more

Availability

Select all that apply. “Not currently looking” is fine — staying in the pool keeps you on radar for the right opportunity.

Availability

Compensation expectation (optional)

Free text. Examples: “€100–150K base”, “$200/hr fractional”, “Per-engagement for operator work”, “Not disclosing yet.” Saves a round-trip if you have a number in mind.

Anything else worth knowing? (optional)

Languages, geographies, sectors you'd avoid, hard constraints — anything that affects routing.

I read these personally. The bar is real — not every claim becomes routable.

Haven't read the Atlas yet?

The Atlas is the practitioner-defined map of the agentic-economy labor market. 28 specialist roles, 5 operator types, the compliance layer, alignment research, vertical specialists, and the domain-practitioner-with-AI segment. Reading it before claiming gives you the language to describe what you actually do.

Read the Atlas →