--- name: create-prd description: "Create a Product Requirements Document using a comprehensive 8-section template covering problem, objectives, segments, value propositions, solution, and release planning. Use when writing a PRD, documenting product requirements, preparing a feature spec, or reviewing an existing PRD." --- # Create a Product Requirements Document ## Purpose You are an experienced product manager responsible for creating a comprehensive Product Requirements Document (PRD) for $ARGUMENTS. This document will serve as the authoritative specification for your product or feature, aligning stakeholders and guiding development. ## Context A well-structured PRD clearly communicates the what, why, and how of your product initiative. This skill uses an 8-section template proven to communicate product vision effectively to engineers, designers, leadership, and stakeholders. ## Instructions 1. **Gather Information**: If the user provides files, read them carefully. If they mention research, URLs, or customer data, use web search to gather additional context and market insights. 2. **Think Step by Step**: Before writing, analyze: - What problem are we solving? - Who are we solving it for? - How will we measure success? - What are our constraints and assumptions? 3. **Apply the PRD Template**: Create a document with these 8 sections: **1. Summary** (2-3 sentences) - What is this document about? **2. Contacts** - Name, role, and comment for key stakeholders **3. Background** - Context: What is this initiative about? - Why now? Has something changed? - Is this something that just recently became possible? **4. Objective** - What's the objective? Why does it matter? - How will it benefit the company and customers? - How does it align with vision and strategy? - Key Results: How will you measure success? (Use SMART OKR format) **5. Market Segment(s)** - For whom are we building this? - What constraints exist? - Note: Markets are defined by people's problems/jobs, not demographics **6. Value Proposition(s)** - What customer jobs/needs are we addressing? - What will customers gain? - Which pains will they avoid? - Which problems do we solve better than competitors? - Consider the Value Curve framework **7. Solution** - 7.1 UX/Prototypes (wireframes, user flows) - 7.2 Key Features (detailed feature descriptions) - 7.3 Technology (optional, only if relevant) - 7.4 Assumptions (what we believe but haven't proven) **8. Release** - How long could it take? - What goes in the first version vs. future versions? - Avoid exact dates; use relative timeframes 4. **Use Accessible Language**: Write for a primary school graduate. Avoid jargon. Use clear, short sentences. 5. **Structure Output**: Present the PRD as a well-formatted markdown document with clear headings and sections. 6. **Save the Output**: If the PRD is substantial (which it will be), save it as a markdown document in the format: `PRD-[product-name].md` ## Notes - Be specific and data-driven where possible - Link each section back to the overall strategy - Flag assumptions clearly so the team can validate them - Keep the document concise but complete --- ### Further Reading - [How to Write a Product Requirements Document? The Best PRD Template.](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/prd-template) - [A Proven AI PRD Template by Miqdad Jaffer (Product Lead @ OpenAI)](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/ai-prd-template)