skills/by-role/pm/product-discovery/SKILL.md
Run product discovery to identify what to build. Use when the user says "product discovery", "how do I know what to build", "validate this idea", "talk to customers", "are we building the right thing", "discovery process", or wants to reduce the risk of building something users don't want - even if they don't say "discovery".
npx skillsauth add qa-aman/claude-skills product-discoveryInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Based on Inspired by Marty Cagan (Silicon Valley Product Group). Cagan's central argument: the biggest risk in product is not execution risk - it's value risk (will users buy it?), usability risk (can users figure it out?), feasibility risk (can we build it?), and business viability risk (does it work for the business?). Discovery is how you tackle all four before writing a line of code.
The best product teams run discovery and delivery in parallel. Discovery is not a phase - it's a continuous habit.
For the idea or problem at hand, assess:
Rate each: High / Medium / Low. Focus discovery on High risks.
State the problem as an opportunity: "Users struggle to [X], which causes [Y impact]." Avoid framing as a solution at this stage. Mocking up a solution before validating the problem is the most common discovery failure.
Goal: understand the problem deeply, not validate your solution.
With a prototype (even paper):
Before committing: one-hour spike with the tech lead.
Based on discovery findings:
1. Validating solutions instead of discovering problems Bad: "We showed users our mockup and they said they liked it." Good: Users are polite. Test behavior, not opinion. "5 out of 5 users completed the task without prompting" is evidence. "They said it looked great" is not.
2. Discovery as a one-time phase Bad: "We did discovery in Q1, now we're in delivery mode." Good: Discovery never stops. Run continuous weekly interviews even during delivery.
3. PMs doing discovery alone Bad: PM interviews customers, reports findings to the team. Good: Cagan's "product trio" - PM, designer, and tech lead attend discovery together. Shared understanding beats written summaries.
4. Skipping feasibility until spec is written Bad: Beautiful PRD handed to engineering that has a fundamental technical blocker. Good: 1-hour feasibility spike before any spec writing.
development
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development
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development
Plan a monthly content calendar across channels using the Content Marketing Matrix (Dave Chaffey, Smart Insights) - Entertain/Inspire/Educate/Convince. Every post gets a quadrant label. The monthly calendar must hit 40% Educate, 40% Inspire+Convince, 20% Entertain. Produces a week-by-week posting schedule with topics, formats, channels, and asset links. Use when the user says "content calendar", "social calendar", "plan next month's content", "what should we post", "content plan", "editorial calendar", "schedule posts for the month", or wants a structured posting plan for LinkedIn, Twitter, email, or blog. Reads brand voice, ICP, and past learnings from knowledge/.
development
Write SEO-optimized long-form articles targeting specific keywords using the They Ask You Answer Big 5 framework (Marcus Sheridan). Articles are categorized by Big 5 type (Cost, Problems, Versus, Best/Reviews, How-To) and structured accordingly. The "answer first" rule applies to every article. Use when the user asks for an SEO article, blog post for ranking, "rank for keyword X", organic content, search-optimized post, pillar page, or content for organic traffic. Includes keyword targeting, search intent matching, internal linking suggestions, and meta tags.