Zurück zu Fähigkeiten

tool-foundation-sprint-approach-options

product-on-purpose
Aktualisiert Yesterday
6 Ansichten
238
33
238
Auf GitHub ansehen
Metadesign

Über

Diese Fähigkeit ist ein strukturiertes Ideationstool für den Morgen von Tag 2 in einem Foundation Sprint, das die Erstellung von 3-7 einseitigen Lösungsansätzen erzwingt. Sie verhindert die First-Idea-Bias, indem sie mehrere Optionen vorschreibt, die jeweils das "Was", das "Warum" (gegenüber Differenzierungsmerkmalen) und eine einfache Visualisierung zusammenfassen. Verwenden Sie sie, nachdem Tag 1 abgeschlossen ist und bevor Sie zur Bewertung mit den "Magic Lenses" am Nachmittag übergehen.

Schnellinstallation

Claude Code

Empfohlen
Primär
npx skills add product-on-purpose/pm-skills -a claude-code
Plugin-BefehlAlternativ
/plugin add https://github.com/product-on-purpose/pm-skills
Git CloneAlternativ
git clone https://github.com/product-on-purpose/pm-skills.git ~/.claude/skills/tool-foundation-sprint-approach-options

Kopieren Sie diesen Befehl und fügen Sie ihn in Claude Code ein, um diese Fähigkeit zu installieren

Dokumentation

<!-- PM-Skills | https://github.com/product-on-purpose/pm-skills | Apache 2.0 -->

Foundation Sprint Approach Options

Day 2 morning of a Foundation Sprint. The team forces itself to generate multiple plausible approaches before committing to one. The skill enforces a minimum of 3 approaches; anchoring on a single approach is the most common Day 2 failure mode.

Family contract: docs/reference/skill-families/foundation-sprint-skills-contract.md. This skill is a member of foundation-sprint-skills.

When to Use

  • Day 2 morning of a Foundation Sprint.
  • Day 1 is signed; the Mini Manifesto, decision principles, and differentiation chart are committed.
  • The team is ready to generate candidate approaches before evaluating them through Magic Lenses in the afternoon.

When NOT to Use

  • Day 1 is unresolved. Approach Options without differentiation context produces approaches that miss the strategic position.
  • The team has only one approach in mind and is unwilling to generate alternatives. The skill forces minimum 3; if the team refuses, the issue is sprint discipline, not tooling.
  • More than 7 approaches are emerging organically. The skill caps generation at 7; beyond that the team is generating features, not strategic approaches.

What This Skill Produces

A single bundled artifact containing:

  1. 3 to 7 one-page approach summaries, each with:
    • Name and label (color, letter, ID)
    • One-sentence "what it is"
    • "Why it's a good idea" rationale (1 short paragraph)
    • Simple doodle or textual visual description
    • How the approach serves the two chosen differentiators
  2. Approach set summary table comparing all approaches at a glance (label, name, capture mechanism, recall mechanism, primary trade-off).

See references/TEMPLATE.md for the canonical structure and references/EXAMPLE.md for the Brainshelf example.

Sequence (75 minutes)

Step 1: Frame the approach space (5 min)

The facilitator restates the differentiation: "We are committing to [differentiator 1] and [differentiator 2]. Approaches that fail either of these are out of scope." This sets the boundary; the team generates inside it, not outside it.

Step 2: Silent ideation (15-20 min)

Each team member generates 2-4 candidate approaches silently. Cluster duplicates. Surface 8-12 candidates.

Step 3: Cluster and select 3-7 (15-25 min via Decider call)

The team clusters similar approaches and the Decider narrows to 3-7 candidates that will be one-page-summarized. The 3-minimum is enforced; if the team produces 2 candidates after clustering, push the team back to ideation to generate at least one more.

Step 4: One-page summarize each approach (25-40 min)

Each team member takes 1-2 approaches and writes the one-page summary. Each summary names:

  • Label: a color, letter, or short identifier (Yellow, Blue, Approach A, etc.)
  • What it is: one sentence the customer would understand
  • Why it's a good idea: short paragraph naming the customer value and the team's ability to deliver
  • Visual: a simple doodle or textual description of what the customer sees or does
  • How it serves the differentiators: one or two lines per chosen differentiator

Step 5: Cross-summary review (5-10 min)

The team reviews the full set, flagging summaries that don't fit the differentiators or that overlap so heavily with another approach that they're duplicates. The Decider approves the set advancing to Magic Lenses.

Approach Generation Discipline

The skill enforces five rules at decision-point:

  1. Minimum 3, maximum 7. Fewer than 3 means the team is anchored on one idea; more than 7 means the team is generating features.
  2. Each approach must be a strategic path, not a feature. "Add a settings screen" is a feature; "make capture the home screen" is a strategic path.
  3. Each approach must serve both chosen differentiators (not just one). An approach that wins on differentiator 1 but fails differentiator 2 should be either revised or dropped.
  4. Each approach must be visually describable. If the team can't draw it on a card, the approach is too abstract for the sprint.
  5. No first-idea bias. The first approach the team thought of should be included only if it survives the differentiation check; many teams find their initial idea is not the strongest after generating alternatives.

Inference Inputs

InputWhat the skill does with it
Basics bundled artifactReads target customer to ensure approaches are designed for them, not for an adjacent customer
Differentiation bundled artifactReads the 2 chosen differentiators and the 2x2 position; flags approaches that miss either differentiator
Approach candidates (optional)If pre-supplied, pre-populates the silent ideation board; team adds and refines rather than starting cold

Common Pitfalls

  • Generating features instead of approaches. "Add notifications" is not an approach; it's a feature. The skill enforces strategic-path framing.
  • Too few options. Stopping at 2 approaches because "those are obviously the choices" anchors the team. Force a third even if it's intentionally weaker; it surfaces the trade-offs.
  • Approaches that fail one differentiator. An approach that beats differentiator 1 but loses differentiator 2 has rejected the Day 1 strategic commitment. Either drop it or revise it.
  • Skipping the visual. "I can describe it in prose" defeats the purpose. The visual forces concreteness.
  • Overlap masquerading as distinct approaches. Two summaries that differ only in implementation detail are one approach. Cluster them.

Decider Role

The Decider's job during Approach Options:

  1. Restate the differentiation boundary at the start.
  2. Narrow the clustered candidates to 3-7 for one-page summary.
  3. Approve the final set advancing to Magic Lenses; reject summaries that drift from the differentiation.

The Decider does NOT pick a top approach in this skill. Magic Lenses produces the top bet; Approach Options produces the candidates Magic Lenses will evaluate.

Canonical Sources

  • Character Capital. "Foundation Sprint guide." Approach generation agenda.
  • Knapp, J., and Zeratsky, J. Click. Day 2 morning sequence.

Cross-Skill Usage

Prerequisites: tool-foundation-sprint-differentiation. The Day 1 strategic position is the load-bearing input.

Next invocation: tool-foundation-sprint-magic-lenses in the afternoon. The approach set produced here is the input to Magic Lenses scoring.

Decider Checkpoint

This skill ends with a Decider Checkpoint in references/TEMPLATE.md. The Decider signs off on the set of approaches advancing to Magic Lenses, confirming none are out-of-scope and none are duplicates. Without sign-off, Magic Lenses begins with an unstable candidate set.

GitHub Repository

product-on-purpose/pm-skills
Pfad: skills/tool-foundation-sprint-approach-options
0
agent-skillsai-skillsclaude-codeclaude-desktopdesign-sprintfoundation-sprint

Verwandte Skills

content-collections

Meta

Diese Skill bietet eine produktionsgetestete Einrichtung für Content Collections – ein TypeScript-first-Tool, das Markdown/MDX-Dateien in typsichere Datensammlungen mit Zod-Validierung umwandelt. Verwenden Sie ihn beim Erstellen von Blogs, Dokumentationsseiten oder inhaltsstarken Vite + React-Anwendungen, um Typsicherheit und automatische Inhaltsvalidierung zu gewährleisten. Er behandelt alles von der Vite-Plugin-Konfiguration und MDX-Kompilierung bis hin zur Deployment-Optimierung und Schema-Validierung.

Skill ansehen

polymarket

Meta

Diese Fähigkeit ermöglicht es Entwicklern, Anwendungen mit der Polymarket-Prognosemärkte-Plattform zu erstellen, einschließlich API-Integration für Handel und Marktdaten. Sie bietet außerdem Echtzeit-Datenstreaming über WebSocket, um Live-Trades und Marktaktivitäten zu überwachen. Nutzen Sie sie zur Implementierung von Handelsstrategien oder zur Erstellung von Tools, die Live-Marktaktualisierungen verarbeiten.

Skill ansehen

creating-opencode-plugins

Meta

Diese Fähigkeit unterstützt Entwickler dabei, OpenCode-Plugins zu erstellen, die in über 25 Ereignistypen wie Befehle, Dateien und LSP-Operationen eingreifen. Sie bietet die Plugin-Struktur, Event-API-Spezifikationen und Implementierungsmuster für JavaScript/TypeScript-Module. Nutzen Sie sie, wenn Sie den Lebenszyklus des OpenCode KI-Assistenten mit benutzerdefinierter ereignisgesteuerter Logik abfangen, überwachen oder erweitern müssen.

Skill ansehen

sglang

Meta

SGLang ist ein hochperformantes LLM-Serving-Framework, das sich auf schnelle, strukturierte Generierung für JSON, Regex und agentenbasierte Workflows unter Verwendung seines RadixAttention-Prefix-Cachings spezialisiert. Es bietet deutlich schnellere Inferenz, insbesondere für Aufgaben mit wiederholten Präfixen, was es ideal für komplexe, strukturierte Ausgaben und Mehrfachdialoge macht. Wählen Sie SGLang gegenüber Alternativen wie vLLM, wenn Sie constrained decoding benötigen oder Anwendungen mit umfangreicher Präfix-Weitergabe entwickeln.

Skill ansehen