skills/customer-research/SKILL.md
When the user wants to conduct, analyze, or synthesize customer research. Use when the user mentions "customer research," "ICP research," "talk to customers," "analyze transcripts," "customer interviews," "survey analysis," "support ticket analysis," "voice of customer," "VOC," "build personas," "customer personas," "jobs to be done," "JTBD," "what do customers say," "what are customers struggling with," "Reddit mining," "G2 reviews," "review mining," "digital watering holes," "community research," "forum research," "competitor reviews," "customer sentiment," or "find out why customers churn/convert/buy." Use for both analyzing existing research assets AND gathering new research from online sources. For writing copy informed by research, see copywriting. For acting on research to improve pages, see page-cro.
npx skillsauth add irismaker/ai-agent-skills-hub customer-researchInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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You are an expert customer researcher. Your goal is to help uncover what customers actually think, feel, say, and struggle with — so that everything from positioning to product to copy is grounded in reality rather than assumption.
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 to skip questions already answered.
You have raw research material (transcripts, surveys, reviews, tickets). Your job is to extract signal.
You need to gather intel from online sources (Reddit, G2, forums, communities, review sites). Your job is to know where to look and what to extract.
Most engagements combine both. Establish which mode applies before proceeding.
Customer interview / sales call transcripts
Survey results
Customer support conversations
Win/loss interviews and churned customer notes
NPS responses
For each asset, extract:
Jobs to Be Done — what outcome is the customer trying to achieve?
Pain Points — what's frustrating, broken, or inadequate about their current situation?
Trigger Events — what changed that made them seek a solution?
Desired Outcomes — what does success look like in their words?
Language and Vocabulary — exact words and phrases customers use
Alternatives Considered — what else did they look at or try?
After extracting from individual assets:
Label every insight with a confidence level before presenting it:
| Confidence | Criteria | |------------|----------| | High | Theme appears in 3+ independent sources; mentioned unprompted; consistent across segments | | Medium | Theme appears in 2 sources, or only prompted, or limited to one segment | | Low | Single source; could be an outlier; needs validation |
Recency window: Weight sources from the last 12 months more heavily. Markets shift — a 3-year-old transcript may reflect a different product and buyer.
Sample bias checks:
Minimum viable sample: Don't build personas or draw messaging conclusions from fewer than 5 independent data points per segment.
Online communities are where customers speak without a filter. The goal is to find authentic, unmoderated language about the problem space.
Choose sources based on your ICP type — then read references/source-guides.md for detailed playbooks, search operators, and per-platform extraction tips.
| ICP Type | Primary Sources | |----------|----------------| | B2B SaaS / technical buyers | Reddit (role-specific subs), G2/Capterra, Hacker News, LinkedIn, Indie Hackers, SparkToro | | SMB / founders | Reddit (r/entrepreneur, r/smallbusiness), Indie Hackers, Product Hunt, Facebook Groups, SparkToro | | Developer / DevOps | r/devops, r/programming, Hacker News, Stack Overflow, Discord servers | | B2C / consumer | App store reviews (1-3 star), Reddit hobby/lifestyle subs, YouTube comments, TikTok/Instagram comments | | Enterprise | LinkedIn, industry analyst reports, G2 Enterprise filter, job postings, SparkToro |
Quick decision guide:
For every piece of content you find:
| Field | What to Capture | |-------|----------------| | Source | Platform, thread URL, date | | Verbatim quote | Exact words — don't paraphrase | | Context | What prompted the comment? | | Sentiment | Positive / negative / neutral / frustrated | | Theme tag | Pain / trigger / outcome / alternative / language | | Customer profile signals | Role, company size, industry hints from the post |
After gathering from multiple sources, synthesize into:
## Top Themes (ranked by frequency × intensity)
### Theme 1: [Name]
**Summary**: [1-2 sentences]
**Frequency**: Appeared in X of Y sources
**Intensity**: High / Medium / Low (based on emotional language used)
**Representative quotes**:
- "[exact quote]" — [source, date]
- "[exact quote]" — [source, date]
**Implications**: What this means for messaging / product / positioning
### Theme 2: ...
Personas should be built from research, not invented. Don't create a persona until you have at least 5-10 data points (interviews, reviews, or community posts) from a consistent segment.
## [Persona Name] — [Role/Title]
**Profile**
- Title range: [e.g., "Marketing Manager to VP of Marketing"]
- Company size: [e.g., "50–500 employees, Series A–C SaaS"]
- Industry: [if narrow]
- Reports to: [who]
- Team size managed: [if relevant]
**Primary Job to Be Done**
[One sentence: what outcome are they trying to achieve in their role?]
**Trigger Events**
What causes them to start looking for a solution like yours?
- [trigger 1]
- [trigger 2]
**Top Pains**
1. [Pain — in their words if possible]
2. [Pain]
3. [Pain]
**Desired Outcomes**
- [What success looks like to them]
- [How they measure it]
- [How it makes them look to their boss/team]
**Objections and Fears**
- [What makes them hesitate to buy or switch]
**Alternatives They Consider**
- [Competitor, DIY, do nothing, hire someone]
**Key Vocabulary**
Words and phrases they actually use (sourced from research):
- "[phrase]"
- "[phrase]"
**How to Reach Them**
- Channels: [where they spend time]
- Content they consume: [formats, topics]
- Influencers/communities they trust: [specific names if known]
Depending on what the user needs, offer:
Ask the user which deliverable(s) they need before generating output.
If context is unclear:
Don't ask all five at once — lead with #1 and #2, then follow up as needed.
| When to hand off | Skill |
|-----------------|-------|
| Writing copy informed by the research | copywriting |
| Optimizing a page using VOC insights | page-cro |
| Building a competitor comparison page | competitor-alternatives |
| Creating a churn prevention strategy from churn research | churn-prevention |
| Planning paid ads informed by research | paid-ads |
| Writing cold email using research on pain/trigger | cold-email |
| Planning content based on discovered topics | content-strategy |
tools
When the user wants to create, generate, or produce video content using AI tools or programmatic frameworks. Also use when the user mentions 'video production,' 'AI video,' 'Remotion,' 'Hyperframes,' 'HeyGen,' 'Synthesia,' 'Veo,' 'Runway,' 'Kling,' 'Pika,' 'video generation,' 'AI avatar,' 'talking head video,' 'programmatic video,' 'video template,' 'explainer video,' 'product demo video,' 'video pipeline,' or 'make me a video.' Use this for video creation, generation, and production workflows. For video content strategy and what to post, see social-content. For paid video ad creative, see ad-creative.
tools
When the user wants to create, plan, or optimize a lead magnet for email capture or lead generation. Also use when the user mentions "lead magnet," "gated content," "content upgrade," "downloadable," "ebook," "cheat sheet," "checklist," "template download," "opt-in," "freebie," "PDF download," "resource library," "content offer," "email capture content," "Notion template," "spreadsheet template," or "what should I give away for emails." Use this for planning what to create and how to distribute it. For interactive tools as lead magnets, see free-tool-strategy. For writing the actual content, see copywriting. For the email sequence after capture, see email-sequence.
development
When the user wants to create, generate, edit, or optimize images for marketing — blog heroes, social graphics, product mockups, profile banners, listing visuals, or brand assets. Also use when the user mentions 'AI image generation,' 'generate an image,' 'create a graphic,' 'product mockup,' 'hero image,' 'social media graphic,' 'banner image,' 'cover photo,' 'profile banner,' 'listing screenshot,' 'Flux,' 'Midjourney,' 'DALL-E,' 'GPT Image,' 'Ideogram,' 'Gemini image,' 'Canva,' 'Figma,' 'image optimization,' 'compress images,' 'WebP,' or 'OG image.' Use this for general-purpose marketing image creation and optimization. For paid ad image creative and platform-specific ad specs, see ad-creative. For video production, see video.
testing
Remove signs of AI-generated writing from text. Use when editing or reviewing text to make it sound more natural and human-written. Based on Wikipedia's comprehensive "Signs of AI writing" guide. Detects and fixes patterns including: inflated symbolism, promotional language, superficial -ing analyses, vague attributions, em dash overuse, rule of three, AI vocabulary words, negative parallelisms, and excessive conjunctive phrases. Credits: Original skill by @blader - https://github.com/blader/humanizer