Back to Skills

cost-model

avelikiy
Updated 2 days ago
8 views
30
6
30
View on GitHub
Designaiapidesign

About

This skill provides a standardized cost-estimation framework for technical plans, requiring explicit breakdowns of LLM, infrastructure, and human supervision costs. It enforces a specific parsable output format for integration with the board's API and is used when writing plans, forecasting LLM usage, or making savings claims. The framework ensures all cost estimates are auditable and defensible.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Primary
npx skills add avelikiy/great_cto -a claude-code
Plugin CommandAlternative
/plugin add https://github.com/avelikiy/great_cto
Git CloneAlternative
git clone https://github.com/avelikiy/great_cto.git ~/.claude/skills/cost-model

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

Documentation

Cost model — make cost claims defensible

great_cto reports cost numbers on the board. Those numbers MUST be auditable, because a wrong "7,638×" claim killed credibility (see docs/blog/cost-dashboard-rebuild.md). This skill defines the format.

The 4-line cost section

Every PLAN-.md and ARCH-.md cost section follows this exact template:

## Cost estimate

**LLM**: $<low>–<high> (<N> calls × $<per-call avg>)
**Human equiv**: $<low>–<high> (<hours> × $<rate>/h)
**Infra delta**: $<low>–<high>/month
**Time to ship**: <hours> agent-time, <hours> wall-clock

> Methodology: <one-sentence rationale for each range>

Why this exact format?

The board's getCostHistory() parser anchors on line-start "LLM" and "Human" labels. Mid-line references are ignored to prevent the $240-trap regression. Stick to the template.

How to estimate each line

LLM cost

For each agent in the pipeline, estimate:

  • Prompt tokens = (system prompt size) + (context the agent receives)
  • Completion tokens = (typical output for that agent type)

Quick reference for Sonnet 4 ($3/M in, $15/M out):

AgentTypical promptTypical outputPer-call cost
architect14k1.5k~$0.06
pm6k0.6k~$0.03
senior-dev8k0.8k~$0.04
qa-engineer11k0.5k~$0.04
reviewer (avg)8-12k0.6k~$0.04
security-officer12k1k~$0.05
devops9k0.8k~$0.04

For Haiku ($0.80/M / $4/M), divide by ~4. For Opus 4 ($15/M / $75/M), multiply by ~5.

Sum across the pipeline stages that actually fire (use gatesFor() and reviewersFor() from archetypes.ts to know the count).

Human equiv

The human cost to do the SAME work without agents. This is the "if I hired a senior engineer, how long would this task take, at what rate?"

  • Senior engineer: $120-180/hour (mid-market US/EU)
  • Staff engineer / specialist: $200-300/hour
  • Domain expert (security, compliance): $250-400/hour

Estimate hours conservatively. A "small feature" the LLM does in 15 minutes might take a human 2-4 hours (it's never just the typing).

Infra delta

Only count what's NEW. If the feature adds a Redis instance, count Redis. If it adds 10MB/month of S3 storage, that's noise — don't list.

Time to ship

Two numbers — both useful:

  • Agent-time: wall-clock of LLM calls (typically 5-30 min)
  • Wall-clock: actual elapsed including human gates (typically hours to days)

Sanity check before writing

Before committing the section to the plan, verify:

ratio = human_equiv / llm_cost

If ratio > 1000, something is wrong. Common bugs:

BugHow to detectFix
Wrong unit ($ vs ¢)LLM cost ends in /M tokens not $Convert: tokens / 1M × price
Counting savings not spend"Human time saved" not "Human cost"Use cost of doing it, not value of skipping
Mid-line label pollutionPlan has "$X LLM$Y human" on one line
Forecast vs actual mixedLLM forecast counts toward total_llmSeparate forecast section if needed

Cost gates

For AI archetypes (mlops, ai-system, agent-product), the pipeline opens gate:cost after architect's forecast. CTO must approve the projected monthly burn before senior-dev starts.

Use the GATE template:

## Gate:cost forecast

| Production volume | Monthly LLM cost |
|---|---|
| 1K req/day | $X |
| 10K req/day | $Y |
| 100K req/day | $Z |

Recommended monthly cap: $<cap>
Triggers above cap: <what alerts fire, who gets paged>

Anti-patterns

Round-number theatre. "$0.50 LLM | $7,500 human" — looks suspicious. Use realistic ranges: "$0.50–1.20 | $225–360".

Single point estimates. Always provide a range. Single numbers hide uncertainty.

No methodology line. Just numbers without rationale is unverifiable.

Hand-waved infra. "Some hosting cost" is not a number. Either give $, or say "infra: no change."

Example — good

## Cost estimate

**LLM**: $0.75–1.85 (3 tasks × $0.25–0.62 per Sonnet call)
**Human equiv**: $225–300 (1.5–2h × $150/h, mid-market senior)
**Infra delta**: $0/month (uses existing Express + Postgres)
**Time to ship**: ~15min agent-time, ~3h wall-clock (1 human gate)

> Methodology: tasks sized by line-count estimate; per-call cost from
> historical Sonnet 4 averages on this archetype's plans.

Ratio = 300/1.85 = 162×. Plausible. Defensible.

GitHub Repository

avelikiy/great_cto
Path: skills/cost-model
0
agentic-codingclaude-code-pluginclaude-code-skillsclaude-code-subagentscode-reviewcto

Related Skills

executing-plans

Design

Use the executing-plans skill when you have a complete implementation plan to execute in controlled batches with review checkpoints. It loads and critically reviews the plan, then executes tasks in small batches (default 3 tasks) while reporting progress between each batch for architect review. This ensures systematic implementation with built-in quality control checkpoints.

View skill

requesting-code-review

Design

This skill dispatches a code-reviewer subagent to analyze code changes against requirements before proceeding. It should be used after completing tasks, implementing major features, or before merging to main. The review helps catch issues early by comparing the current implementation with the original plan.

View skill

connect-mcp-server

Design

This skill provides a comprehensive guide for developers to connect MCP servers to Claude Code using HTTP, stdio, or SSE transports. It covers installation, configuration, authentication, and security for integrating external services like GitHub, Notion, and custom APIs. Use it when setting up MCP integrations, configuring external tools, or working with Claude's Model Context Protocol.

View skill

web-cli-teleport

Design

This skill helps developers choose between Claude Code Web and CLI interfaces based on task analysis, then enables seamless session teleportation between these environments. It optimizes workflow by managing session state and context when switching between web, CLI, or mobile. Use it for complex projects requiring different tools at various stages.

View skill