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problem-statement

deanpeters
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Esta Skill de Claude genera enunciados de problemas centrados en el usuario, definiendo quién está bloqueado, qué intenta hacer, por qué es importante y cómo se siente. Se utiliza para alinear a las partes interesadas durante la fase de descubrimiento, priorización o definición del PRD, antes de pasar a las soluciones. El componente se enfoca en los resultados para el usuario y la empatía, en lugar de en las especificaciones de funcionalidades.

Instalación rápida

Claude Code

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Principal
npx skills add deanpeters/Product-Manager-Skills -a claude-code
Comando PluginAlternativo
/plugin add https://github.com/deanpeters/Product-Manager-Skills
Git CloneAlternativo
git clone https://github.com/deanpeters/Product-Manager-Skills.git ~/.claude/skills/problem-statement

Copia y pega este comando en Claude Code para instalar esta habilidad

Documentación

Purpose

Articulate a problem from the user's perspective using an empathy-driven framework that captures who they are, what they're trying to do, what's blocking them, why, and how it makes them feel. Use this to align stakeholders on the problem before jumping to solutions, and to frame product work around user outcomes rather than feature requests.

This is not a requirements doc—it's a human-centered problem narrative that ensures you're solving a problem worth solving.

Key Concepts

The Problem Framing Framework

Based on Jobs-to-be-Done and empathy mapping, the framework structures problems as:

Problem Framing Narrative:

  • I am: [Describe the persona experiencing the problem]
  • Trying to: [Desired outcomes the persona cares about]
  • But: [Barriers preventing the outcomes]
  • Because: [Root cause of the problem]
  • Which makes me feel: [Emotional impact]

Context & Constraints:

  • [Geographic, technological, time-based, demographic factors]

Final Problem Statement:

  • [Single, concise, empathetic summary]

Why This Structure Works

  • Persona-centric: Forces you to see the problem through the user's eyes
  • Outcome-focused: "Trying to" emphasizes desired results, not tasks
  • Root cause analysis: "Because" pushes past symptoms to underlying issues
  • Emotional validation: "Makes me feel" humanizes the problem and builds empathy
  • Contextual: Constraints acknowledge real-world limitations

Anti-Patterns (What This Is NOT)

  • Not a solution in disguise: "The problem is we lack AI-powered analytics" = sneaking in a solution
  • Not a business problem: "Our revenue is down" isn't a user problem (it's a symptom)
  • Not a feature request: "Users need a dashboard" isn't a problem (what are they trying to do?)
  • Not generic: "Users want better UX" is too vague to be actionable

When to Use This

  • Kicking off discovery or problem validation work
  • Aligning stakeholders before solutioning
  • Socializing a problem with engineering, design, or exec teams
  • When you have feature requests but unclear underlying problems
  • Pitching why a problem is worth solving

When NOT to Use This

  • When you haven't done any user research yet (don't guess—interview first)
  • For internal operational problems (this is for user-facing problems)
  • As a substitute for a PRD (this frames the problem; PRD defines the solution)

Application

Use template.md for the full fill-in structure.

Step 1: Gather User Context

Before drafting, ensure you have:

  • User interviews or research: Direct quotes, observed behaviors, pain points
  • Jobs-to-be-Done insights: What users are "hiring" your product to do (reference skills/jobs-to-be-done/SKILL.md)
  • Persona clarity: Who specifically experiences this problem (reference skills/proto-persona/SKILL.md)
  • Constraints data: Geographic, tech, time, demographic limitations

If missing context: Run discovery interviews, contextual inquiries, or user shadowing. Don't fabricate problems.


Step 2: Draft the Problem Framing Narrative

Fill in the template from the persona's point of view:

## Problem Framing Narrative

**I am:** [Describe the key persona, highlighting 3-4 key characteristics]
- [Key pain point or characteristic 1]
- [Key pain point or characteristic 2]
- [Key pain point or characteristic 3]

**Trying to:**
- [Single sentence listing the desired outcomes the persona cares most about]

**But:**
- [Describe the barriers preventing the persona from achieving outcomes]
- [Job-to-be-done or outcome obstruction 1]
- [Job-to-be-done or outcome obstruction 2]
- [Job-to-be-done or outcome obstruction 3]

**Because:**
- [Describe the root cause empathetically]

**Which makes me feel:**
- [Describe the emotions from the persona's perspective]

Quality checks:

  • "I am" specificity: Can you picture this person? Or is it generic ("busy professionals")?
  • "Trying to" clarity: Is this an outcome (measurable) or a task (activity)?
  • "But" depth: Are these real barriers or just inconveniences?
  • "Because" honesty: Is this the root cause or just a symptom?
  • "Makes me feel" authenticity: Do these emotions come from research or assumptions?

Step 3: Document Context & Constraints

## Context & Constraints

- [Enumerate geographic, technological, time-based, or demographic factors]
- [e.g., "Must work offline in rural areas with limited connectivity"]
- [e.g., "Used by non-technical users unfamiliar with complex software"]
- [e.g., "Time-sensitive: decisions must be made within 24 hours"]

Quality checks:

  • Relevance: Do these constraints directly impact the problem?
  • Specificity: Are they concrete enough to inform design decisions?

Step 4: Craft the Final Problem Statement

Synthesize the narrative into one powerful sentence:

## Final Problem Statement

[Single, concise statement that provides a powerful and empathetic summary]

Formula: [Persona] needs a way to [desired outcome] because [root cause], which currently [emotional/practical impact].

Example: "Enterprise IT admins need a way to provision user accounts in under 5 minutes because current processes take 2+ hours with manual approvals, which causes project delays and frustrated end-users."

Quality checks:

  • One sentence: If it requires multiple sentences, the problem isn't crisp yet
  • Measurable: Can you tell if you've solved it?
  • Empathetic: Does it resonate emotionally?
  • Shareable: Could you say this in a meeting and have stakeholders nod?

Step 5: Validate and Socialize

  • Test with users: Read it aloud to people who experience the problem. Do they say "Yes, exactly!"?
  • Share with stakeholders: Product, engineering, design, exec. Does it align everyone?
  • Iterate based on feedback: If anyone says "I don't think that's the real problem," dig deeper.

Examples

See examples/sample.md for full examples (good and bad problem statements).

Mini example excerpt:

**I am:** A software developer on a distributed team
**Trying to:** Communicate in real-time with my team without losing context
**But:** Email is too slow and IM is ephemeral
**Because:** No tool combines real-time chat with searchable history
**Which makes me feel:** Frustrated and disconnected

Common Pitfalls

Pitfall 1: Solution Smuggling

Symptom: "The problem is we don't have [specific feature]"

Consequence: You've predetermined the solution without validating the problem.

Fix: Reframe around the user's desired outcome, not the feature. Ask "What are they trying to achieve?"


Pitfall 2: Business Problem Disguised as User Problem

Symptom: "Users want to increase our revenue" or "The problem is our churn rate"

Consequence: These are company problems, not user problems. Users don't care about your metrics.

Fix: Dig into why users churn or what would make them spend more. Frame it from their perspective.


Pitfall 3: Generic Personas

Symptom: "I am a busy professional trying to be more productive"

Consequence: Too broad to be actionable. Every product claims to help "busy professionals."

Fix: Get specific. "I am a sales rep managing 50+ leads manually in spreadsheets, trying to prioritize follow-ups without missing high-value opportunities."


Pitfall 4: Symptom Instead of Root Cause

Symptom: "Because the UI is confusing"

Consequence: You're describing a symptom, not the underlying issue.

Fix: Ask "Why is the UI confusing?" Keep asking "why" until you hit the root cause (e.g., "Because users have no mental model for how the system works").


Pitfall 5: Fabricated Emotions

Symptom: "Which makes me feel empowered and delighted"

Consequence: These sound like marketing copy, not real user emotions.

Fix: Use actual quotes from user interviews. Real emotions: "frustrated," "overwhelmed," "anxious," "stuck."


References

Related Skills

  • skills/jobs-to-be-done/SKILL.md — Informs the "Trying to" and "But" sections
  • skills/proto-persona/SKILL.md — Defines the "I am" persona
  • skills/positioning-statement/SKILL.md — Problem statement informs positioning
  • skills/user-story/SKILL.md — Problem statement guides story prioritization

External Frameworks

  • Clayton Christensen, Jobs to Be Done — Origin of outcome-focused problem framing
  • Osterwalder & Pigneur, Value Proposition Canvas — Customer pains/gains/jobs
  • Dave Gray, Empathy Mapping — Emotional framing techniques

Dean's Work

  • [Link to relevant Dean Peters' Substack articles if applicable]

Provenance

  • Adapted from prompts/framing-the-problem-statement.md in the https://github.com/deanpeters/product-manager-prompts repo.

Skill type: Component Suggested filename: problem-statement.md Suggested placement: /skills/components/ Dependencies: References skills/jobs-to-be-done/SKILL.md, skills/proto-persona/SKILL.md

Repositorio GitHub

deanpeters/Product-Manager-Skills
Ruta: skills/problem-statement
0
ai-agentsai-product-managementclaude-skillspm-frameworksproduct-management

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