--- name: write-spec description: Write a feature spec or PRD from a problem statement or feature idea. Use when turning a vague idea or user request into a structured document, scoping a feature with goals and non-goals, defining success metrics and acceptance criteria, or breaking a big ask into a phased spec. argument-hint: "" --- # Write Spec > If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see [CONNECTORS.md](../../CONNECTORS.md). Write a feature specification or product requirements document (PRD). ## Usage ``` /write-spec $ARGUMENTS ``` ## Workflow ### 1. Understand the Feature Ask the user what they want to spec. Accept any of: - A feature name ("SSO support") - A problem statement ("Enterprise customers keep asking for centralized auth") - A user request ("Users want to export their data as CSV") - A vague idea ("We should do something about onboarding drop-off") ### 2. Gather Context Ask the user for the following. Be conversational — do not dump all questions at once. Ask the most important ones first and fill in gaps as you go: - **User problem**: What problem does this solve? Who experiences it? - **Target users**: Which user segment(s) does this serve? - **Success metrics**: How will we know this worked? - **Constraints**: Technical constraints, timeline, regulatory requirements, dependencies - **Prior art**: Has this been attempted before? Are there existing solutions? ### 3. Pull Context from Connected Tools If **~~project tracker** is connected: - Search for related tickets, epics, or features - Pull in any existing requirements or acceptance criteria - Identify dependencies on other work items If **~~knowledge base** is connected: - Search for related research documents, prior specs, or design docs - Pull in relevant user research findings - Find related meeting notes or decision records If **~~design** is connected: - Pull related mockups, wireframes, or design explorations - Search for design system components relevant to the feature If these tools are not connected, work entirely from what the user provides. Do not ask the user to connect tools — just proceed with available information. ### 4. Generate the PRD Produce a structured PRD with these sections. See **PRD Structure** below for detailed guidance on what each section should contain. - **Problem Statement**: The user problem, who is affected, and impact of not solving it (2-3 sentences) - **Goals**: 3-5 specific, measurable outcomes tied to user or business metrics - **Non-Goals**: 3-5 things explicitly out of scope, with brief rationale for each - **User Stories**: Standard format ("As a [user type], I want [capability] so that [benefit]"), grouped by persona - **Requirements**: Categorized as Must-Have (P0), Nice-to-Have (P1), and Future Considerations (P2), each with acceptance criteria - **Success Metrics**: Leading indicators (change quickly) and lagging indicators (change over time), with specific targets - **Open Questions**: Unresolved questions tagged with who needs to answer (engineering, design, legal, data) - **Timeline Considerations**: Hard deadlines, dependencies, and phasing ### 5. Review and Iterate After generating the PRD: - Ask the user if any sections need adjustment - Offer to expand on specific sections - Offer to create follow-up artifacts (design brief, engineering ticket breakdown, stakeholder pitch) ## PRD Structure ### Problem Statement - Describe the user problem in 2-3 sentences - Who experiences this problem and how often - What is the cost of not solving it (user pain, business impact, competitive risk) - Ground this in evidence: user research, support data, metrics, or customer feedback ### Goals - 3-5 specific, measurable outcomes this feature should achieve - Each goal should answer: "How will we know this succeeded?" - Distinguish between user goals (what users get) and business goals (what the company gets) - Goals should be outcomes, not outputs ("reduce time to first value by 50%" not "build onboarding wizard") ### Non-Goals - 3-5 things this feature explicitly will NOT do - Adjacent capabilities that are out of scope for this version - For each non-goal, briefly explain why it is out of scope (not enough impact, too complex, separate initiative, premature) - Non-goals prevent scope creep during implementation and set expectations with stakeholders ### User Stories Write user stories in standard format: "As a [user type], I want [capability] so that [benefit]" Guidelines: - The user type should be specific enough to be meaningful ("enterprise admin" not just "user") - The capability should describe what they want to accomplish, not how - The benefit should explain the "why" — what value does this deliver - Include edge cases: error states, empty states, boundary conditions - Include different user types if the feature serves multiple personas - Order by priority — most important stories first Example: - "As a team admin, I want to configure SSO for my organization so that my team members can log in with their corporate credentials" - "As a team member, I want to be automatically redirected to my company's SSO login so that I do not need to remember a separate password" - "As a team admin, I want to see which members have logged in via SSO so that I can verify the rollout is working" ### Requirements **Must-Have (P0)**: The feature cannot ship without these. These represent the minimum viable version of the feature. Ask: "If we cut this, does the feature still solve the core problem?" If no, it is P0. **Nice-to-Have (P1)**: Significantly improves the experience but the core use case works without them. These often become fast follow-ups after launch. **Future Considerations (P2)**: Explicitly out of scope for v1 but we want to design in a way that supports them later. Documenting these prevents accidental architectural decisions that make them hard later. For each requirement: - Write a clear, unambiguous description of the expected behavior - Include acceptance criteria (see below) - Note any technical considerations or constraints - Flag dependencies on other teams or systems ### Open Questions - Questions that need answers before or during implementation - Tag each with who should answer (engineering, design, legal, data, stakeholder) - Distinguish between blocking questions (must answer before starting) and non-blocking (can resolve during implementation) ### Timeline Considerations - Hard deadlines (contractual commitments, events, compliance dates) - Dependencies on other teams' work or releases - Suggested phasing if the feature is too large for one release ## User Story Writing Good user stories are: - **Independent**: Can be developed and delivered on their own - **Negotiable**: Details can be discussed, the story is not a contract - **Valuable**: Delivers value to the user (not just the team) - **Estimable**: The team can roughly estimate the effort - **Small**: Can be completed in one sprint/iteration - **Testable**: There is a clear way to verify it works ### Common Mistakes in User Stories - Too vague: "As a user, I want the product to be faster" — what specifically should be faster? - Solution-prescriptive: "As a user, I want a dropdown menu" — describe the need, not the UI widget - No benefit: "As a user, I want to click a button" — why? What does it accomplish? - Too large: "As a user, I want to manage my team" — break this into specific capabilities - Internal focus: "As the engineering team, we want to refactor the database" — this is a task, not a user story ## Requirements Categorization ### MoSCoW Framework - **Must have**: Without these, the feature is not viable. Non-negotiable. - **Should have**: Important but not critical for launch. High-priority fast follows. - **Could have**: Desirable if time permits. Will not delay delivery if cut. - **Won't have (this time)**: Explicitly out of scope. May revisit in future versions. ### Tips for Categorization - Be ruthless about P0s. The tighter the must-have list, the faster you ship and learn. - If everything is P0, nothing is P0. Challenge every must-have: "Would we really not ship without this?" - P1s should be things you are confident you will build soon, not a wish list. - P2s are architectural insurance — they guide design decisions even though you are not building them now. ## Success Metrics Definition ### Leading Indicators Metrics that change quickly after launch (days to weeks): - **Adoption rate**: % of eligible users who try the feature - **Activation rate**: % of users who complete the core action - **Task completion rate**: % of users who successfully accomplish their goal - **Time to complete**: How long the core workflow takes - **Error rate**: How often users encounter errors or dead ends - **Feature usage frequency**: How often users return to use the feature ### Lagging Indicators Metrics that take time to develop (weeks to months): - **Retention impact**: Does this feature improve user retention? - **Revenue impact**: Does this drive upgrades, expansion, or new revenue? - **NPS / satisfaction change**: Does this improve how users feel about the product? - **Support ticket reduction**: Does this reduce support load? - **Competitive win rate**: Does this help win more deals? ### Setting Targets - Targets should be specific: "50% adoption within 30 days" not "high adoption" - Base targets on comparable features, industry benchmarks, or explicit hypotheses - Set a "success" threshold and a "stretch" target - Define the measurement method: what tool, what query, what time window - Specify when you will evaluate: 1 week, 1 month, 1 quarter post-launch ## Acceptance Criteria Write acceptance criteria in Given/When/Then format or as a checklist: **Given/When/Then**: - Given [precondition or context] - When [action the user takes] - Then [expected outcome] Example: - Given the admin has configured SSO for their organization - When a team member visits the login page - Then they are automatically redirected to the organization's SSO provider **Checklist format**: - [ ] Admin can enter SSO provider URL in organization settings - [ ] Team members see "Log in with SSO" button on login page - [ ] SSO login creates a new account if one does not exist - [ ] SSO login links to existing account if email matches - [ ] Failed SSO attempts show a clear error message ### Tips for Acceptance Criteria - Cover the happy path, error cases, and edge cases - Be specific about the expected behavior, not the implementation - Include what should NOT happen (negative test cases) - Each criterion should be independently testable - Avoid ambiguous words: "fast", "user-friendly", "intuitive" — define what these mean concretely ## Scope Management ### Recognizing Scope Creep Scope creep happens when: - Requirements keep getting added after the spec is approved - "Small" additions accumulate into a significantly larger project - The team is building features no user asked for ("while we're at it...") - The launch date keeps moving without explicit re-scoping - Stakeholders add requirements without removing anything ### Preventing Scope Creep - Write explicit non-goals in every spec - Require that any scope addition comes with a scope removal or timeline extension - Separate "v1" from "v2" clearly in the spec - Review the spec against the original problem statement — does everything serve it? - Time-box investigations: "If we cannot figure out X in 2 days, we cut it" - Create a "parking lot" for good ideas that are not in scope ## Output Format Use markdown with clear headers. Keep the document scannable — busy stakeholders should be able to read just the headers and bold text to get the gist. ## Tips - Be opinionated about scope. It is better to have a tight, well-defined spec than an expansive vague one. - If the user's idea is too big for one spec, suggest breaking it into phases and spec the first phase. - Success metrics should be specific and measurable, not vague ("improve user experience"). - Non-goals are as important as goals. They prevent scope creep during implementation. - Open questions should be genuinely open — do not include questions you can answer from context.