shape-up
关于
This skill implements Basecamp's Shape Up methodology for product development, enabling teams to ship meaningful work in fixed 6-week cycles with variable scope. It helps developers escape endless backlogs and scope creep by providing clear time boundaries for feature development. Use it for product planning, team autonomy, and managing projects with limited resources.
快速安装
Claude Code
推荐npx skills add guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skillsgit clone https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills.git ~/.claude/skills/shape-up在 Claude Code 中复制并粘贴此命令以安装该技能
技能文档
Shape Up
Escape the build trap and endless backlogs. Use Basecamp's methodology to ship meaningful work in 6-week cycles with fixed time, variable scope.
When to Use This Skill
- Product planning to replace endless backlogs
- Feature development with clear time boundaries
- Team autonomy when you want self-directed teams
- Scope management when projects tend to balloon
- Startup development with limited resources
- Agency/consulting projects with fixed timelines
Methodology Foundation
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Source | Ryan Singer - Shape Up (2019), developed at Basecamp |
| Core Principle | "Fixed time, variable scope. Appetite, not estimates. Shape before you build." |
| Why This Matters | Traditional methods either micromanage (waterfall) or leave too much open (agile sprints without direction). Shape Up gives teams direction AND autonomy. |
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures production workflow | Final creative direction |
| Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices |
| Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards |
| Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions |
| Generates script outlines | Final script approval |
What This Skill Does
- Introduces shaping - Defining work at the right level of abstraction
- Sets appetites over estimates - How much time is this worth?
- Enables cycles - 6-week focused work, 2-week cooldown
- Empowers teams - Autonomy within boundaries
- Provides betting tables - Principled prioritization
- Manages scope dynamically - Must-haves vs. nice-to-haves
How to Use
Shape a Feature Idea
I want to shape this feature idea: [description]
Apply Shape Up methodology to define it at the right level.
Appetite: [2 weeks / 6 weeks]
Plan a Cycle
We have these potential projects for the next cycle:
[List of ideas]
Help me run a betting table to decide what to build.
Manage Scope During Build
We're in week 3 of a 6-week cycle building [feature].
We're running behind. Help me apply Shape Up scope hammering.
Instructions
Step 1: Understand the Shape Up Principles
## The Shape Up Philosophy
### Fixed Time, Variable Scope
**Traditional approach:**
"How long will this take?" → Estimate → Build → Deadline slips
**Shape Up approach:**
"How much time is this worth?" → Appetite → Shape to fit → Ship on time
**The mindset shift:**
Instead of estimating how long a feature will take,
decide how much time you're willing to spend.
Then shape the work to fit that time.
### Appetite, Not Estimates
**Appetite:** How much time is this problem WORTH solving?
- Small batch: 2 weeks or less
- Big batch: 6 weeks max
**Key insight:**
A feature can be built in 2 weeks OR 6 months.
The question is: What version fits your appetite?
**Example:**
"Auto-complete for search"
- 6-month version: ML-powered, personalized, learns preferences
- 6-week version: Pre-populated common searches, basic matching
- 2-week version: Static list of top searches
All solve the problem. Choose based on appetite.
### Shaping vs. Building
**Shaping (Senior people):**
- Define the problem
- Set boundaries
- Identify risks
- Rough solution direction
- Leave room for builder creativity
**Building (Teams):**
- Detailed implementation
- Technical decisions
- UX specifics
- Scope management within boundaries
Step 2: The Shaping Process
## How to Shape Work
### Step 1: Set the Appetite
Before anything else, decide:
- Is this a **small batch** (2 weeks) or **big batch** (6 weeks)?
- Is this worth doing at all at this appetite?
**Questions to ask:**
- What problem are we solving?
- How painful is this problem?
- What's the opportunity cost of not doing it?
- What's the opportunity cost of spending more time on it?
### Step 2: Narrow the Problem
Don't shape "improve search."
Shape "help new users find their first project template."
**Narrowing technique:**
1. Start with the raw idea
2. Ask: Who specifically has this problem?
3. Ask: In what specific situation?
4. Ask: What's the minimum viable solution?
### Step 3: Rough Out the Solution
**Fat marker sketches:**
Draw the solution with a thick marker (no detail).
You're defining spaces and flows, not buttons and fields.
**Breadboarding:**
For flows, use words not wireframes:
[Search box] → [Results page] → [Template detail] ↓ [No results] → [Suggest categories]
**Key principle:**
Leave room for the builders to be creative.
Define WHAT, not exactly HOW.
### Step 4: Identify Risks and Rabbit Holes
**Rabbit holes:** Technical or design problems that could explode in scope.
**For each potential rabbit hole:**
- Name it
- Decide: Solve it in shaping? Or declare it out of scope?
- Document the boundary
**Example:**
"If we build template search, what about user-generated templates?"
Decision: Out of scope. Only show official templates.
### Step 5: Write the Pitch
**Pitch elements:**
1. **Problem:** What are we solving?
2. **Appetite:** How long is this worth?
3. **Solution:** Fat marker sketch / breadboard
4. **Rabbit holes:** What we're explicitly NOT doing
5. **No-gos:** Boundaries and constraints
Step 3: The Cycle
## Six-Week Cycles
### The Rhythm
**6 weeks building:**
- Long enough for meaningful work
- Short enough to maintain urgency
- Teams own their projects completely
**2 weeks cooldown:**
- Bug fixes
- Technical debt
- Exploration
- Shaping for next cycle
- Recovery
### Why 6 Weeks?
**Shorter (2-week sprints):**
- Not enough time for real progress
- Constant planning overhead
- Work gets chopped up artificially
**Longer (quarters):**
- Deadlines feel far away
- Scope creeps
- No urgency until the end
**6 weeks:**
- Urgent from day one
- Room to figure things out
- Clean endpoint
### Team Structure
**Small teams:**
- 1-2 designers + 1-3 programmers
- Self-managed during the cycle
- No daily standups with managers
- Check-ins when THEY need help
**Circuit breaker:**
If work isn't done at 6 weeks, it doesn't automatically continue.
It goes back to the betting table. Maybe it gets another cycle.
Maybe it doesn't.
### What Teams Do in a Cycle
**Week 1-2: Figure it out**
- Understand the shaped work
- Spike on unknowns
- Get oriented
- Early integration
**Week 3-4: Build the core**
- Make vertical slices
- Connect the pieces
- Working software early
**Week 5-6: Polish and ship**
- Cut scope if needed
- Must-haves only
- Ship by end of cycle
Step 4: The Betting Table
## Choosing What to Build
### The Betting Table
**Who:** Senior people who can make commitments
**When:** During cooldown, before next cycle
**Input:** Shaped pitches
**Output:** Cycle bets
### The Process
**1. Review pitches**
Each pitch should be complete:
- Clear problem
- Shaped solution
- Identified risks
- Appetite set
**2. Consider each bet**
For each pitch, ask:
- Is this the right time?
- Do we have the right team?
- Are there dependencies?
- What's the opportunity cost?
**3. Make decisions**
Options:
- **Bet:** Assign to next cycle
- **Park:** Good but not now
- **Kill:** Not worth doing
**No backlog:**
If you don't bet on something, it goes away.
Good ideas come back. Bad ideas don't.
### Betting Criteria
**1. Strategic fit**
Does this support current company goals?
**2. Problem significance**
How painful is this for customers?
**3. Appetite match**
Can this actually be done in the proposed time?
**4. Team availability**
Who would work on this?
**5. Dependencies**
What else needs to be true?
### Anti-Patterns
**Carry-over:**
"We didn't finish last cycle, so we'll continue."
No. Circuit breaker. Re-evaluate. Maybe it's not worth it.
**Backlog grooming:**
"Let's go through the 200 ideas and prioritize."
No. Only consider shaped pitches. Unshaped ideas aren't real options.
**Consensus:**
"Let's vote on what to build."
No. Decision-makers decide. Not democracy.
Step 5: Managing Scope
## Scope Hammering
### The Principle
Scope grows naturally. Left unchecked, projects expand to fill time.
Your job is to constantly hammer scope back to what matters.
### Must-Haves vs. Nice-to-Haves
**Must-haves:**
- Core value delivery
- Without this, the feature doesn't work
- Absolutely required for ship
**Nice-to-haves:**
- Polish
- Edge cases
- Delighters
- "While we're at it..."
**Rule:** Identify nice-to-haves early. Cut them first.
### The Scope Hammer
**When you're behind (week 3+):**
1. **List all remaining work**
2. **Classify each item:**
- Must-have for THIS version
- Nice-to-have (cut or defer)
3. **Cut aggressively:**
- What's the smallest version that still delivers value?
- What can be a follow-up?
- What can we not do at all?
### Scope Hammering Questions
- "Is this necessary for launch, or is it polish?"
- "What's the simplest version that still solves the problem?"
- "Can this be a fast-follow?"
- "What would happen if we just... didn't do this?"
- "Are we building for the 80% case or the edge case?"
### Hill Charts
**Track progress visually:**
┌─────────────────────────────────┐
│ ↗ Feature C │
│ ↗ Feature B │
│ ↗ Feature A ↘ Feature D
└─────────────────────────────────┘
Figuring it out Making it happen
- **Uphill:** Still figuring it out (risky)
- **Downhill:** Know what to do, just executing (safe)
**Use for:**
- Early warning when something is stuck uphill
- Identifying where help is needed
- Manager visibility without micromanagement
Examples
Example 1: Shaping a Feature
Input:
"We want to add notifications to our project management app. Can you help me shape this using Shape Up?"
Output:
Shaped Pitch: Project Notifications
Problem
Users miss important updates because they only check the app occasionally. When they do check, they see a firehose of activity with no way to know what actually matters.
Specific situation: A project manager logs in after a day away and can't quickly tell what needs their attention.
Appetite
6 weeks (Big Batch)
Notifications are foundational. Worth investing in properly. But not worth 3 months. We'll scope to fit 6 weeks.
Solution
Breadboard:
[Activity happens] → [Notification created] → [Notification center]
↓
[Settings: what to notify]
Fat marker sketch:
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 🔔 (3) │ ← Bell in header with count
├─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ ┌─────────────────────────────────┐ │
│ │ ● @you in Project Alpha │ │ ← Unread notifications
│ │ Sarah mentioned you in a... │ │
│ │ 2 hours ago │ │
│ ├─────────────────────────────────┤ │
│ │ ○ Task completed │ │ ← Read notifications
│ │ Build specs was marked done │ │
│ │ Yesterday │ │
│ └─────────────────────────────────┘ │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
What we're building:
- In-app notification center (bell icon, dropdown)
- Notifications for: @mentions, task assignments, due dates
- Basic settings (on/off per type)
Rabbit Holes (Explicitly OUT of Scope)
Email notifications: This is a whole separate system (deliverability, unsubscribes, formatting). Out of scope. Potential future small batch.
Mobile push notifications: Requires native app work. Out of scope.
Notification grouping: "5 comments on Project Alpha" instead of 5 separate notifications. Nice-to-have. Cut if we need time.
Real-time updates: WebSockets for instant notifications. Nice-to-have. Polling every 60 seconds is fine for V1.
Customization per project: "Only notify me for Project X." Too complex. Start with global settings only.
No-Gos
- No email notifications
- No mobile push
- No notification sounds
- No digest/summary views
- No team-level settings
Risks
Risk 1: Database load Many notifications could be created. Need efficient queries. Mitigation: Tech lead should spike on notification storage approach in first 2 days of cycle.
Risk 2: UX complexity Settings can get complicated fast. Mitigation: Start with just 3 toggles. No per-project settings.
Example 2: Scope Hammering Mid-Cycle
Input:
"We're in week 4 of a 6-week cycle building a reporting dashboard. We're behind. We have: (1) 5 chart types planned, only 2 done, (2) Export to PDF not started, (3) Date filters mostly done, (4) Real-time refresh not started. Help me scope hammer."
Output:
Scope Hammer: Reporting Dashboard
Current Status (Week 4 of 6)
| Item | Status | Time Needed |
|---|---|---|
| Chart types (5 planned) | 2 done | 1.5 weeks for remaining 3 |
| Export to PDF | Not started | 1 week |
| Date filters | 80% done | 2 days |
| Real-time refresh | Not started | 1 week |
Total remaining work: ~4 weeks Time available: ~2 weeks
Classification
Must-Have (Core value delivery):
- At least 3 chart types (line, bar, pie) - most common use cases
- Date filters - useless without filtering
- View/load reports - basic functionality
Nice-to-Have (Cut or defer):
- 4th and 5th chart types (table, area)
- Export to PDF
- Real-time refresh
Recommendation
Cut now:
- Real-time refresh → V2. Manual refresh button is fine.
- 5th chart type (area) → V2. Rarely used.
- Export to PDF → V2. Users can screenshot or we do fast-follow.
Keep:
- Date filters (finish in 2 days)
- 3 chart types (line, bar, pie - 3-4 days for remaining 1)
- 4th chart type (table) - useful for data review (3 days)
Revised Scope
Week 5:
- Day 1-2: Finish date filters
- Day 3-4: Build pie chart (3rd type)
- Day 5: Build table view (4th type)
Week 6:
- Day 1-3: Polish, bug fixes, edge cases
- Day 4: Internal testing
- Day 5: Ship
What to Tell Stakeholders
"We're shipping a fully functional dashboard with 4 chart types (line, bar, pie, table) and date filters. Export and real-time refresh will be fast-follows in the next small batch cycle.
This gives users 90% of the value. The remaining features are polish, not core functionality."
Post-Cycle Small Batch Candidates
- Export to PDF (2-week batch)
- Real-time refresh (2-week batch)
- Area chart type (1-week add-on)
Example 3: Running a Betting Table
Input:
"We have these 5 pitches for the next cycle. How do I run a betting table to decide? (1) Improved search, (2) Team permissions, (3) Mobile app redesign, (4) API for integrations, (5) Onboarding improvements"
Output:
Betting Table: Next Cycle
Pre-Work: Pitch Review
Each pitch should be shaped with:
- Clear problem statement
- Appetite (2-week or 6-week)
- Rough solution
- Rabbit holes identified
- No-gos defined
Assessment:
| Pitch | Shaped? | Appetite | Team Needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Improved search | ✓ Yes | 6 weeks | 1D + 2E |
| Team permissions | ✓ Yes | 6 weeks | 1D + 2E |
| Mobile app redesign | ✗ Too vague | ? | ? |
| API for integrations | ✓ Yes | 6 weeks | 0D + 3E |
| Onboarding improvements | ✓ Yes | 2 weeks | 1D + 1E |
Mobile app redesign: Not ready for betting. Needs shaping. Send back. Consider for future cycle.
Betting Criteria Evaluation
1. Improved Search (6-week)
| Criteria | Score | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Strategic fit | 4/5 | Supports growth, user requests |
| Problem significance | 3/5 | Pain for power users mainly |
| Appetite match | 4/5 | Well-scoped |
| Team availability | ✓ | Team A available |
| Dependencies | None |
Verdict: CANDIDATE
2. Team Permissions (6-week)
| Criteria | Score | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Strategic fit | 5/5 | Required for enterprise deals |
| Problem significance | 5/5 | Blocking sales |
| Appetite match | 3/5 | Could expand, needs discipline |
| Team availability | ✓ | Team B available |
| Dependencies | None |
Verdict: STRONG CANDIDATE
3. API for Integrations (6-week)
| Criteria | Score | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Strategic fit | 4/5 | Opens partner ecosystem |
| Problem significance | 3/5 | Important but not urgent |
| Appetite match | 4/5 | Scoped to read-only first |
| Team availability | ✓ | Team C available |
| Dependencies | None |
Verdict: CANDIDATE
4. Onboarding Improvements (2-week)
| Criteria | Score | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Strategic fit | 5/5 | Direct impact on activation |
| Problem significance | 4/5 | 40% drop-off in onboarding |
| Appetite match | 5/5 | Small, focused scope |
| Team availability | ✓ | Fits in any team's cycle |
| Dependencies | None |
Verdict: STRONG CANDIDATE (small batch)
The Bet
Available capacity:
- 2 teams for 6-week bets
- 1 team has room for 2-week addition
Decision:
| Bet | Team | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Team Permissions | Team B | Enterprise blocker, highest urgency |
| API for Integrations | Team C | Opens strategic opportunities |
| Onboarding Improvements | Team A (week 1-2) | High impact, small investment |
| Improved Search | Parked | Good but not highest priority now |
What's NOT bet:
- Mobile app redesign: Not shaped. Needs work.
- Improved search: Good pitch, wrong timing. Save for next cycle.
Post-Betting Communication
"Next cycle:
- Team B: Team Permissions (6 weeks)
- Team C: API v1 (6 weeks)
- Team A: Onboarding improvements (2 weeks), then cooldown tasks
Search is a strong pitch. We're parking it for the following cycle. Mobile app redesign needs more shaping before it's ready to bet."
Checklists & Templates
Pitch Template
## Pitch: [Feature Name]
### Problem
[What problem are we solving? Who has it? When?]
### Appetite
[2 weeks / 6 weeks]
### Solution
**Breadboard:**
[Flow diagram with words]
**Fat Marker Sketch:**
[Rough visual layout - no details]
### Rabbit Holes
[What could explode in scope? How are we preventing it?]
### No-Gos
[What are we explicitly NOT building?]
### Risks
[What could go wrong? How will we mitigate?]
Betting Table Checklist
## Betting Table: [Cycle Name]
### Before the Meeting
□ All pitches reviewed for completeness
□ Incomplete pitches sent back for shaping
□ Team availability mapped
□ Strategic priorities clear
### During the Meeting
□ Review each complete pitch
□ Assess against betting criteria
□ Discuss dependencies and timing
□ Make binary decisions (bet / don't bet)
□ Assign teams to bets
### After the Meeting
□ Communicate decisions to teams
□ Archive or park unbetted pitches
□ Schedule cycle kickoffs
□ Clear any dependencies
Skill Boundaries
What This Skill Does Well
- Structuring audio production workflows
- Providing technical guidance
- Creating quality checklists
- Suggesting creative approaches
What This Skill Cannot Do
- Replace audio engineering expertise
- Make subjective creative decisions
- Access or edit audio files directly
- Guarantee commercial success
References
- Singer, Ryan. "Shape Up: Stop Running in Circles and Ship Work that Matters" (2019)
- Basecamp methodology documentation
- 37signals (Basecamp) blog posts
- Shape Up podcast appearances
Related Skills
- product-discovery - Discovery before shaping
- design-sprint - Alternative sprint format
- lean-canvas - Business model context
- first-principles - Problem definition
Skill Metadata
- Mode: cyborg
name: shape-up
category: product
subcategory: methodology
version: 1.0
author: MKTG Skills
source_expert: Ryan Singer
source_work: Shape Up
difficulty: intermediate
estimated_value: $5,000+ process consulting
tags: [product, process, Basecamp, cycles, shaping, scope, betting, development]
created: 2026-01-25
updated: 2026-01-25
GitHub 仓库
相关推荐技能
content-collections
元Content Collections 是一个 TypeScript 优先的构建工具,可将本地 Markdown/MDX 文件转换为类型安全的数据集合。它专为构建博客、文档站和内容密集型 Vite+React 应用而设计,提供基于 Zod 的自动模式验证。该工具涵盖从 Vite 插件配置、MDX 编译到生产环境部署的完整工作流。
polymarket
元这个Claude Skill为开发者提供完整的Polymarket预测市场开发支持,涵盖API调用、交易执行和市场数据分析。关键特性包括实时WebSocket数据流,可监控实时交易、订单和市场动态。开发者可用它构建预测市场应用、实施交易策略并集成实时市场预测功能。
creating-opencode-plugins
元该Skill帮助开发者创建OpenCode插件,用于接入命令、文件、LSP等25+种事件。它提供了插件结构、事件API规范和JavaScript/TypeScript实现模式,适合需要拦截操作、扩展功能或自定义事件处理的场景。开发者可通过它快速构建响应式模块来增强OpenCode AI助手的能力。
sglang
元SGLang是一个专为LLM设计的高性能推理框架,特别适用于需要结构化输出的场景。它通过RadixAttention前缀缓存技术,在处理JSON、正则表达式、工具调用等具有重复前缀的复杂工作流时,能实现极速生成。如果你正在构建智能体或多轮对话系统,并追求远超vLLM的推理性能,SGLang是理想选择。
