skills/onboarding-cro/SKILL.md
When the user wants to optimize post-signup onboarding, user activation, first-run experience, or time-to-value. Also use when the user mentions "onboarding flow," "activation rate," "user activation," "first-run experience," "empty states," "onboarding checklist," "aha moment," "new user experience," "users aren't activating," "nobody completes setup," "low activation rate," "users sign up but don't use the product," "time to value," or "first session experience." Use this whenever users are signing up but not sticking around. For signup/registration optimization, see signup-flow-cro. For ongoing email sequences, see email-sequence.
npx skillsauth add MileniumTick/skills onboarding-croInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
You are an expert in user onboarding and activation. Your goal is to help users reach their "aha moment" as quickly as possible and establish habits that lead to long-term retention.
Check for product marketing context first:
If .agents/product-marketing-context.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing-context.md in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.
Before providing recommendations, understand:
Remove every step between signup and experiencing core value.
Focus first session on one successful outcome. Save advanced features for later.
Interactive > Tutorial. Doing the thing > Learning about the thing.
Show advancement. Celebrate completions. Make the path visible.
The action that correlates most strongly with retention:
Examples by product type:
| Approach | Best For | Risk | |----------|----------|------| | Product-first | Simple products, B2C, mobile | Blank slate overwhelm | | Guided setup | Products needing personalization | Adds friction before value | | Value-first | Products with demo data | May not feel "real" |
Whatever you choose:
When to use:
Best practices:
Empty states are onboarding opportunities, not dead ends.
Good empty state:
When to use: Complex UI, features that aren't self-evident, power features users might miss
Best practices:
Trigger-based emails:
Email should:
Define "stalled" criteria (X days inactive, incomplete setup)
| Metric | Description | |--------|-------------| | Activation rate | % reaching activation event | | Time to activation | How long to first value | | Onboarding completion | % completing setup | | Day 1/7/30 retention | Return rate by timeframe |
Track drop-off at each step:
Signup → Step 1 → Step 2 → Activation → Retention
100% 80% 60% 40% 25%
Identify biggest drops and focus there.
For each issue: Finding → Impact → Recommendation → Priority
| Product Type | Key Steps | |--------------|-----------| | B2B SaaS | Setup wizard → First value action → Team invite → Deep setup | | Marketplace | Complete profile → Browse → First transaction → Repeat loop | | Mobile App | Permissions → Quick win → Push setup → Habit loop | | Content Platform | Follow/customize → Consume → Create → Engage |
When recommending experiments, consider tests for:
For comprehensive experiment ideas: See references/experiments.md
development
Writes, reviews, and debugs idiomatic Rust code with memory safety and zero-cost abstractions. Implements ownership patterns, manages lifetimes, designs trait hierarchies, builds async applications with tokio, and structures error handling with Result/Option. Use when building Rust applications, solving ownership or borrowing issues, designing trait-based APIs, implementing async/await concurrency, creating FFI bindings, or optimizing for performance and memory safety. Invoke for Rust, Cargo, ownership, borrowing, lifetimes, async Rust, tokio, zero-cost abstractions, memory safety, systems programming.
development
Guide for writing idiomatic Rust code based on Apollo GraphQL's best practices handbook. Use this skill when: (1) writing new Rust code or functions, (2) reviewing or refactoring existing Rust code, (3) deciding between borrowing vs cloning or ownership patterns, (4) implementing error handling with Result types, (5) optimizing Rust code for performance, (6) writing tests or documentation for Rust projects.
development
Master Rust async programming with Tokio, async traits, error handling, and concurrent patterns. Use when building async Rust applications, implementing concurrent systems, or debugging async code.
tools
When the user wants help with revenue operations, lead lifecycle management, or marketing-to-sales handoff processes. Also use when the user mentions 'RevOps,' 'revenue operations,' 'lead scoring,' 'lead routing,' 'MQL,' 'SQL,' 'pipeline stages,' 'deal desk,' 'CRM automation,' 'marketing-to-sales handoff,' 'data hygiene,' 'leads aren't getting to sales,' 'pipeline management,' 'lead qualification,' or 'when should marketing hand off to sales.' Use this for anything involving the systems and processes that connect marketing to revenue. For cold outreach emails, see cold-email. For email drip campaigns, see email-sequence. For pricing decisions, see pricing-strategy.