plugins/executive/skills/platform-strategist/SKILL.md
Analyzes platform business models by distinguishing Aggregators from Platforms, mapping network effects, and identifying when to externalize internal primitives as ecosystem growth engines. Use when evaluating platform dynamics, designing marketplace strategy, or analyzing aggregation and network effects.
npx skillsauth add joellewis/skill-library platform-strategistInstall 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.
Platform strategy is the art of building foundational systems that facilitate value creation by third parties. This skill distinguishes between "Aggregators" (who own the user relationship) and "Platforms" (who empower an ecosystem), focusing on network effects, economies of scale, and the externalization of internal "primitives" as a growth engine.
A true platform's value is defined by the economic value created by third parties exceeding the value of the platform itself. If you capture all the value, you aren't a platform; you're a vertical silo.
A platform wins by enabling its suppliers to differentiate themselves and acquire their own customers. Aggregators commoditize supply; Platforms empower supply. (Example: Shopify vs. Amazon Marketplace).
Identify the fundamental "building blocks" of your business (storage, compute, logistics, payments). Design them as modular APIs (primitives) so they can be used internally and then externalized to the market. (Source: Bryar, Working Backwards).
Platform value scales with network density. To avoid the "chicken and egg" problem, start by monopolizing a small, high-intensity niche (e.g., Harvard for Facebook) before expanding to the broader market.
In a two-sided platform, one side is usually harder to acquire. Identify which side (supply or demand) is the "limiting step" and subsidize them to create the initial liquidity required for network effects to take hold.
Determine if the strategic goal is to be a Platform or an Aggregator. (Source: Stratechery, "The Bill Gates Line")
Identify the reinforcing loops that drive platform growth. (Source: Bryar, Ch. 1)
Audit internal infrastructure for platform potential. (Source: Stratechery, "The Amazon Tax")
Design the entry strategy to overcome the "chicken and egg" problem. (Source: Gil, Ch. 8)
Set the rules for participation to prevent ecosystem decay. (Source: Gil, Ch. 8)
A platform must be 10x better in at least one dimension to trigger a platform shift:
strategy-clarity — To ensure the platform model aligns with the "Winning Aspiration."market-context — To identify structural shifts (Aggregation/Unbundling).operational-excellence — To build the "Mechanisms" for platform governance.databases
Use when a deliverable needs structured stakeholder sign-off before finalization—runs the pre-read, feedback-type alignment, and conflict-resolution protocol.
development
Use when you need to map who has power, who will be affected, and what motivates each party — produces a stakeholder map as an analytical artifact. This skill identifies and categorizes stakeholders; it does not persuade or influence them (use influence-architect for that).
testing
Use when beginning analytical or strategic tasks, facing undefined problems, or facing analysis paralysis—requires explicit problem definition before proceeding.
testing
Use when translating a product vision into engineering requirements—enforces the Working Backwards PR/FAQ method, requiring a customer-facing press release before any technical spec.