--- name: one-on-one-prep description: "Deep-dive preparation for 1:1 meetings with direct reports. Surfaces recent work, wins, friction, wellbeing signals, and development goal progress, anchored in the org's performance framework, organizational values, and management best practices. Produces a prep sheet with suggested conversation topics, not a script." --- # 1:1 Prep > **Great 1:1s live at the intersection of performance and care.** Development keeps growth alive. Wellbeing makes sure the person behind the work is seen. Both matter every time. Deep-dive preparation for 1:1 meetings with a specific direct report, anchored in the org's performance framework (from `manager-context/performance-framework.md`) and organizational values. ## When to Use - Before any 1:1 meeting with a direct report - When the manager says "prep my 1:1 with [name]", "what should I discuss with [name]" - Can be invoked with just a name, the skill finds the relevant context ## Instructions If any MCP connector is unavailable, follow the connector unavailability protocol in `../../references/operating-principles.md`. ### 1. Identify the Team Member If a name is provided, match it against `manager-context/team/` profiles. If no name is specified, check the calendar for the next upcoming 1:1 meeting and identify the attendee. If ambiguous: ``` Which team member? Your upcoming 1:1s are: - [Name], [day] at [time] - [Name], [day] at [time] ``` Load the team member's profile from `manager-context/team/[name].md` for: - Their role, current projects, communication style - Goals location (Notion page, Drive doc) - Last review date and development areas - Last 1:1 date and open items If no profile exists: ``` ⚠️ No profile found for [name]. Run /setup to build team context, or I'll work with what I can find from sources directly. ``` ### 2. Surface Recent Work & Wins **Slack (last 7-14 days):** - Messages posted by this person in team/project channels - Threads they've been active in - Any shoutouts or recognition they received (search for their name + positive signals like "great", "shipped", "amazing", "thanks") - Features shipped, PRs merged, deliverables completed (visible in public channels) **Google Drive:** - Documents they've recently created or edited - Especially docs related to their projects or deliverables **Notion:** - Pages they've authored or updated recently - Project status updates they've contributed to Compile into a "recent activity" summary. ### 3. Detect Friction or Concerns Look for signals (NOT diagnoses, signals for the manager to explore): **Slack:** - Repeated blockers or unanswered questions - Messages where they expressed frustration or confusion - Decreased activity compared to usual patterns (if baseline is known) - Long threads where they're asking for help without clear resolution **Calendar:** - Cancelled or rescheduled 1:1s - Unusually heavy or light meeting load **Important:** Frame these as *conversation starters*, not assessments: ``` 💡 Potential topics to explore (signals, not conclusions): - [Name] asked about [topic] in #channel 3 times this week without a clear resolution, might be a blocker worth discussing - [Name]'s activity in #project-channel has been lower than usual, could be fine, but worth checking in ``` ### 4. Values & Wellbeing Check Scan for signals related to the organization's values (from `manager-context/values.md`). These give the manager conversation threads beyond just goals and deliverables. If no values are configured, focus on these universal management dimensions: **Wellbeing & Energy:** - Late-night or weekend Slack activity (potential overwork) - Calendar density (back-to-back days, no focus time) - Tone in recent messages: enthusiasm vs. fatigue (soft signal only) - Have they taken time off recently? **Team Connection & Collaboration:** - Are they collaborating across the team, or working in isolation? - Engagement in team channels (social, celebrations) - Have they helped or unblocked teammates recently? **Communication & Transparency:** - Are they sharing context, asking for feedback, raising issues openly? - Any threads where they seemed hesitant to speak up? **Resourcefulness & Problem-Solving:** - Evidence of creative problem-solving, unblocking themselves, learning new things **Ownership & Initiative:** - Volunteering for stretch work, proposing ideas, taking initiative - Driving things to completion vs. waiting for direction If organizational values are configured, map these dimensions to the specific values and use value names in the output. Compile into a brief values snapshot (not a scorecard, conversation prompts): ``` Values Snapshot: - [Value/Dimension 1]: [observation or "no signal"] - [Value/Dimension 2]: [observation or "no signal"] ... ``` _Only include values/dimensions where there's a meaningful signal. Don't force all of them every time._ ### 5. Check Development Goals Using the goals location from the team member's profile: **Notion:** - Pull their current goals and development areas - Check when goals were last updated - Look for any self-assessment or progress notes **Google Drive:** - Pull the 1:1 document for this person - Check the most recent entries for open action items and commitments **Reference the org's performance framework dimensions** (from `manager-context/performance-framework.md`). Use the org's dimension names and sub-dimensions when checking goal progress. If this file doesn't exist, ask the manager to run `/setup` first. See the "Evidence Gathering Guidelines" section in `../../references/performance-framework.md` for what to look for per dimension type: - **Results/delivery dimensions:** goal completion, shipped work, quality feedback, business outcomes - **Growth/development dimensions:** learning activities, new skills applied, scope expansion, behavioural changes - **Collaboration/leadership dimensions:** cross-team activity, mentoring, influence in discussions ``` 📋 Development Goal Status: - Goal 1: "[goal text]", [status: on track / needs attention / no update since [date]] - Goal 2: "[goal text]", [status] - Development area: "[area]", [any evidence of progress or attention] ⏰ Last goal update: [date], [flag if >6 weeks old] ``` ### 6. Pull Previous 1:1 Notes Search for the last 1:1 document/notes: **Google Drive:** Search "[name] 1:1", "one on one [name]" Extract: - Open action items (for both manager and team member) - Topics that were "parked" for follow-up - Development commitments made ``` 📝 From last 1:1 ([date]): Open items: - [ ] [Manager] to [action], [status: done/pending/unknown] - [ ] [Team member] to [action], [status: done/pending/unknown] Parked topics: [if any] ``` ### 7. Produce the Prep Sheet Read `references/output-template.md` for the full output template structure. ### 8. Sub-Agent Review Spawn a sub-agent to review the prep sheet with fresh eyes. The reviewer should: - Check that **wellbeing signals are framed as conversation starters**, not assessments or diagnoses. - Check that the **values snapshot** only includes values with meaningful signals, not forcing all values every time. - Verify that **wins lead the document** and the tone is constructive, not surveillance-like. - Flag any phrasing that crosses from observation ("posted after 22:00 three times") into interpretation ("seems burned out"). - Check that evidence gaps are noted where data is thin, rather than padded with weak signals. Incorporate the reviewer's feedback before presenting the final prep sheet. ### 9. Present and Offer Follow-Up ``` Here's your prep for your 1:1 with [name]. Anything you'd like me to dig deeper on? ``` ## Important Notes Read `../../references/operating-principles.md` for shared operating principles (data scope, DM flagging, signals vs diagnoses, connector unavailability). Additional notes specific to this skill: - **Wins first.** Always lead with recognition opportunities. This sets the tone. - **Goals are the backbone.** If goals are missing or stale, flag it prominently. Great 1:1s keep development goals alive. - **Framework + values alignment.** Suggested questions should map to the org's performance framework dimensions or organizational values. Don't force all values every time, only surface values where there's a real signal. - **Values are conversation threads, not checklists.** The values snapshot helps managers notice things beyond deliverables. A 1:1 that only covers goals misses the human. A 1:1 that only covers feelings misses the growth. Both. - **Don't script the conversation.** Provide prompts and context, not a talk track.