skills/user-interviews/SKILL.md
Help users run effective customer discovery conversations and extract actionable insights. Use when someone is preparing for user research, planning discovery interviews, writing interview questions, analyzing findings, validating problems, understanding customer behavior, or trying to learn what customers actually want. Triggers include mentions of "customer interviews", "user research", "discovery calls", "talking to customers", "validating ideas", "customer conversations", "problem validation", or questions about what to ask customers.
npx skillsauth add adnaanmhd/pretty-awesome-skills user-interviewsInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Help the user run better discovery conversations and extract real insights using techniques from renowned product leaders. Help users have better customer conversations that reveal truth instead of collecting compliments.
When the user asks for help with user interviews:
Not too overly formal, not too long. 15 min casual > 1hr formal meeting.
Know what commitment you'll push for at the end. Commitment can come in the following forms (in order of value):
Never incinuate/hint/force something through the questions.
Avoid questions that invite compliments, fluff, hypotheticals, and idea/feature requests. Ask about the customers' life, not the idea.
If you're not collecting rich stories, you won't identify opportunities. Don't ask "What do you like?" Ask "Tell me about the last time you..."
People who haven't tried to solve a problem won't buy the solution.
The best way to understand problem intensity isn't asking—it's watching. Get direct exposure. Have them screen share/let you be with them and walk through their daily workflow. Look for pain they've normalized.
Don't start with 'Hi, I'm the CEO of X, we do Y, let me show you a demo.' What a wasted opportunity. Listen first. Use silence to let them open up. You're doing it wrong if you're talking more than the customers.
A researcher who asks customers what they want is a bad researcher. Focus on understanding behaviors and problems—not having users design your solution.
The goal is to feel bad the same way customers feel bad. Dig deep to find the underlying negative emotion motivating it.
Rigid guides prevent you from following meaningful threads. Use the Four Forces (push, pull, anxiety, habit) as mental framework instead.
The most insightful conversations are with non-users. Ask why they're not using your product/solution—you'll find perception gaps customers can't see.
Work with 10 'lighthouse' customers over months.
For detailed guidance, see the reference files:
testing
Design and document bespoke, high-quality user journeys for digital products. Use this skill whenever the user wants to map out, critique, redesign, or create a user journey, onboarding flow, feature walkthrough, or any end-to-end experience within an app or product. Trigger on phrases like "design the user journey", "map out the onboarding", "how should the user flow work", "create a journey for", "user journey for [feature/persona]", "review my onboarding flow", "what's the ideal journey for", or any time a user wants to think through how a person moves through a product — from first touch to repeated value. Also trigger when the user is working on retention flows, activation steps, aha moments, or progressive disclosure design.
testing
When the user wants to write, rewrite, or improve marketing copy for any page — including homepage, landing pages, pricing pages, feature pages, about pages, or product pages. Also use when the user says "write copy for," "improve this copy," "rewrite this page," "marketing copy," "headline help," or "CTA copy." For email copy, see email-sequence. For popup copy, see popup-cro.
tools
Use this skill whenever the user asks to evaluate, compare, or recommend between real-world options — devices, tools, vendors, services, platforms, or any category where the right choice depends on market data, specs, and target-user fit. Trigger on phrases like "recommend a...", "which X should I buy/use/choose", "compare these options", "find the best...", "top N choices for...", "compare these for me...", "comparative research for...", or any time the user needs a structured, evidence-backed selection decision. Use this skill even if the user's question seems quick or casual — e.g. "which phone should I get?" — because proper candidate selection requires a structured process to avoid bias. This skill is critical any time data availability might otherwise skew the recommendation toward well-documented options over better-fit options.
research
コーディング前の調査ワークフロー。カスタムコードを書く前に既存のツール、ライブラリ、パターンを検索します。researcher エージェントを呼び出します。