MCP HubMCP Hub
Retour aux compétences

launch-runbook

rampstackco
Mis à jour 2 days ago
3 vues
239
27
239
Voir sur GitHub
Autredesign

À propos

Cette compétence aide les développeurs à créer et exécuter un plan de lancement structuré pour des sites web ou produits. Elle couvre l'intégralité de la séquence de mise en ligne, incluant les vérifications pré-lancement, le basculement DNS, la surveillance et les procédures de retour arrière. Utilisez-la pour coordonner les activités du jour du lancement et élaborer des listes de contrôle de déploiement.

Installation rapide

Claude Code

Recommandé
Principal
npx skills add rampstackco/claude-skills -a claude-code
Commande PluginAlternatif
/plugin add https://github.com/rampstackco/claude-skills
Git CloneAlternatif
git clone https://github.com/rampstackco/claude-skills.git ~/.claude/skills/launch-runbook

Copiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence

Documentation

Launch Runbook

Plan and execute the launch of a website, product, or major release. The runbook is the document everyone uses on launch day. Stack-agnostic.

This skill is for the launch event. For pre-launch QA, use qa-testing. For post-launch incident handling, use incident-response.


When to use

  • Launching a new website or major redesign
  • Migrating from one platform to another
  • Releasing a major product or feature
  • Coordinating cross-team launches
  • Building a runbook for a recurring deploy

When NOT to use

  • Pre-launch testing (use qa-testing)
  • Post-launch incident response (use incident-response)
  • After-launch retrospective (use after-action-report)

Required inputs

  • The launch scope (what's being launched)
  • The launch window (date, time, duration)
  • The team (roles, on-call rotation)
  • The rollback criteria (when to abort)
  • The communication plan (who tells whom what, when)

The framework: 4 phases

A launch has four phases. The runbook covers all four.

Phase 1: Pre-launch (T-30 days to T-1 hour)

Verify everything is ready before the launch window.

T-30 days:

  • Final scope locked
  • Cross-team commitments confirmed
  • Pre-launch QA scheduled
  • Comms plan drafted

T-7 days:

  • Pre-launch QA complete
  • All critical and major issues resolved
  • Performance baseline measured
  • Rollback procedures documented and tested
  • DNS TTL lowered (if DNS change is part of launch)

T-1 day:

  • Final go/no-go meeting
  • Roles confirmed
  • Communication channels set up
  • Backup of current production state

T-1 hour:

  • Team assembled in shared communication channel
  • Tools and access verified
  • Final smoke test on staging

Phase 2: Cutover (T-0)

The actual launch. Sequenced steps with owners and verifications.

Standard cutover steps:

  1. Announce start to internal team
  2. Enable maintenance mode (if applicable)
  3. Run final database migrations (if applicable)
  4. Deploy code to production
  5. Verify deploy completed without errors
  6. Run smoke tests on production
  7. DNS cutover (if applicable)
  8. Verify DNS propagation
  9. Disable maintenance mode
  10. Run full smoke tests on production
  11. Announce launch to internal team
  12. Begin monitoring window

Each step has:

  • Owner
  • Pre-conditions
  • Action
  • Verification
  • Time estimate
  • Rollback procedure

Phase 3: Verification (T+0 to T+24 hours)

Confirm the launch is healthy.

Within first hour:

  • Critical user flows working (checkout, signup, login)
  • No spike in error rates
  • Performance within expected ranges
  • Analytics tracking firing
  • Email and notifications working

Within first 24 hours:

  • No regression in key business metrics
  • No accumulating error patterns
  • Core Web Vitals stable
  • Search Console showing no critical issues (if SEO-relevant)

Phase 4: Stabilization (T+24 hours to T+7 days)

Monitor the long tail.

  • Track error rates day over day
  • Track performance day over day
  • Track key business metrics vs baseline
  • Address any non-blocking issues identified
  • Plan the AAR (after-action report)

Roles and responsibilities

A launch has clear role assignments. Ambiguity here is the most common cause of launch chaos.

RoleResponsibility
Launch leadOwns the runbook. Calls go/no-go. Calls rollback.
Deploy operatorExecutes the technical deploy steps.
QA leadRuns verification tests and confirms each milestone.
Comms leadPosts internal updates, manages external messaging.
On-call engineerAvailable for issues during and after launch.
Stakeholder repApproves on behalf of business stakeholders.

For small teams, one person may fill multiple roles. Each role's responsibilities should still be explicit.


Rollback criteria

Define before the launch. Decisions are easier to make pre-emptively than under pressure.

Automatic rollback triggers:

  • Error rate exceeds X percent of normal
  • Critical user flow (defined) is broken
  • Database integrity issue
  • Security vulnerability discovered post-deploy

Discretionary rollback triggers:

  • Performance degradation beyond Y percent
  • Significant degradation in key business metric
  • Customer-facing error patterns

Decision authority: The launch lead calls rollback. Pre-define who acts as deputy if launch lead is unavailable.


Communication plan

Internal channels

  • Primary launch channel: Real-time chat for the launch team only
  • Status channel: Broader internal updates
  • War room: Optional video call for high-stakes launches

Update cadence during launch

  • Every 15 minutes during cutover
  • Every hour during verification phase
  • Daily during stabilization phase

External communication

  • Customer-facing announcement: Pre-drafted, scheduled to publish at confirmed-success milestone
  • Status page: Updated proactively if any user impact
  • Support team: Briefed in advance on what's launching, common questions, escalation path

Workflow

  1. Build the runbook 30 days out. Scope, sequence, roles, rollback criteria, comms plan.
  2. Test the rollback procedure. Untested rollback is hope, not procedure.
  3. Run a tabletop exercise. Walk through the runbook with the full team. Find gaps.
  4. Lower DNS TTL 48 to 72 hours before launch (if DNS change is part of launch).
  5. Day-of: Run the runbook step by step. Verify each step before moving to next.
  6. Monitor. First hour, first day, first week. Document anything noteworthy.
  7. Schedule the AAR within 1 to 2 weeks of launch.

Failure patterns

  • Runbook written by one person, not reviewed. Single perspective misses scenarios.
  • No tested rollback. Discovering rollback is broken at the moment you need it.
  • Vague step descriptions. "Deploy to production" without specifying which tool, which command, which environment.
  • No verification step after each action. Errors propagate.
  • Communication gaps. Team doesn't know launch is happening, or doesn't know it succeeded.
  • Launching at end of day Friday. Or before a holiday. Reduce the time available to respond.
  • Skipping pre-launch QA to hit a date. The bugs appear on launch day instead.
  • Launch fatigue. Long launches without breaks lead to errors. Plan rest cycles for multi-day launches.
  • No on-call for first 24 hours. Someone must be reachable.

Output format

Default output: a markdown runbook at launch-runbook-[project].md plus supporting checklists.

Structure:

  1. Launch metadata (what, when, who)
  2. Roles and responsibilities
  3. Pre-launch checklist (T-30, T-7, T-1, T-1hr)
  4. Cutover sequence (numbered steps, owners, verifications)
  5. Rollback procedure
  6. Rollback criteria (automatic and discretionary)
  7. Communication plan
  8. Verification checklist (first hour, first day)
  9. Stabilization plan (first week)
  10. Contacts (escalation paths, on-call)

Reference files

Dépôt GitHub

rampstackco/claude-skills
Chemin: skills/launch-runbook
0
agent-skillsai-agentsanthropicclaudeclaude-aiclaude-code

Compétences associées

media-asset-management

Autre

Cette compétence aide les développeurs à concevoir et optimiser les pipelines média pour les images, les vidéos et les ressources téléchargeables. Elle fournit des conseils sur le stockage, la sélection de formats modernes (comme WebP/AVIF), les images responsives, l'hébergement vidéo et l'organisation des bibliothèques de ressources. Utilisez-la lors de la construction, de l'audit ou de l'amélioration des systèmes de diffusion média, en particulier pour des problèmes de performance ou d'organisation.

Voir la compétence

security-baseline

Autre

La compétence de base de sécurité aide les développeurs à établir et à auditer les configurations de sécurité web essentielles. Elle fournit des conseils pour la configuration HTTPS/TLS, les en-têtes de sécurité, la CSP (Politique de Sécurité du Contenu), la gestion des secrets et le durcissement pré-lancement. Utilisez-la pour les revues de conformité, les évaluations de vulnérabilités et les audits de sécurité périodiques.

Voir la compétence

monitoring-and-alerting

Autre

Cette compétence aide les développeurs à concevoir et mettre en œuvre un système de surveillance, couvrant la définition des SLO, les contrôles de disponibilité et le suivi des erreurs. Elle guide la configuration d'alertes actionnables, la mise en place de rotations de garde et la résolution de la fatigue d'alerte. Utilisez-la lors de la mise en place de l'observabilité ou lorsqu'un incident révèle une lacune dans la surveillance.

Voir la compétence

email-deliverability

Autre

Cette compétence Claude aide les développeurs à garantir la délivrabilité des e-mails en mettant en œuvre et en résolvant les problèmes liés aux protocoles d'authentification comme SPF, DKIM et DMARC. Elle assiste dans le diagnostic des problèmes de classement en spam, la surveillance de la réputation de l'expéditeur et la sécurisation des domaines contre l'usurpation d'identité. Utilisez-la lors de la configuration de systèmes de messagerie ou lorsque les e-mails marketing ou transactionnels n'atteignent pas les utilisateurs.

Voir la compétence