skills/scoping-cutting/SKILL.md
Help users scope projects and cut features effectively. Use when someone is defining an MVP, dealing with scope creep, trying to ship faster, or needs to make tradeoffs about what to build.
npx skillsauth add cvillamarp-lgtm/skillspodcast scoping-cuttingInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Help the user scope projects and cut features effectively using frameworks from 15 product leaders.
When the user asks for help with scoping:
Ryan Singer: "We're going to go the other way around and we're going to say, what is the maximum amount of time we're willing to go before we actually finish something?" Set a fixed time budget (appetite) and design a version of the solution that fits within it. Vary scope, not deadlines.
Eric Ries: "MVP is simply for whatever the hypothesis is that we're trying to test, what is the most efficient way to get the validation we need about whether a hypothesis is true or not?" An MVP is not a low-quality product - it's the most efficient way to test a specific hypothesis.
Eric Ries: "Write out the list of features that are necessary in your MVP. Cut it in half and cut it in half again and build that." Founders consistently overestimate what's "minimum." Aggressive cutting is required to reach a true baseline.
Jason Fried: "Our appetite for any individual feature is no more than six weeks... So we have to figure out the simplest, most effective version of that to get that done within six weeks and get it done by two people." Constraints force creative solutions. Limit team size to maintain focus.
Eeke de Milliano: "If you're trying to build the minimum viable product for a car, don't build just the wheels and the axle, build the scooter first." An MVP should be a functional, end-to-end version of a smaller value proposition, not an incomplete piece of a larger one.
Crystal W: "It's really this Wizard of Oz experience. We don't have to build anything. I coordinated with a bunch of interns and we were able to validate some of the value prop." Validate value propositions manually before investing in engineering. Use humans to simulate automated features.
Jason Fried: "If there's any work that's left over that's still on the left side of the hill, meaning we're still pushing it up, we don't know how we're going to do it and we're at our time limit, it almost certainly dies." Let projects die if they aren't completed within their allotted time to prevent never-ending work.
Paige Costello: "We added into our product process a notion that we might pivot or cut from stuff that we put on our roadmap because it felt like once it was on the roadmap, it had to be done." Formalize the ability to cut or pivot from roadmap items to avoid the sunk cost fallacy.
For all 19 insights from 15 guests, see references/guest-insights.md
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