🧪 Skills

Prd

Create and manage Product Requirements Documents (PRDs). Use when: (1) Creating structured task lists with user stories, (2) Specifying features with acceptance criteria, (3) Planning feature implemen

v2.0.5
❤️ 7
⬇️ 4.6k
👁 1
Share

Description


name: prd description: Create and manage Product Requirements Documents (PRDs). Use when: (1) Creating structured task lists with user stories, (2) Specifying features with acceptance criteria, (3) Planning feature implementation for AI agents or human developers. author: Benjamin Jesuiter bjesuiter@gmail.com metadata: clawdbot: emoji: "📋" os: ["darwin", "linux"]

PRD Skill

Create and manage Product Requirements Documents (PRDs) for feature planning.

What is a PRD?

A PRD (Product Requirements Document) is a structured specification that:

  1. Breaks a feature into small, independent user stories
  2. Defines verifiable acceptance criteria for each story
  3. Orders tasks by dependency (schema → backend → UI)

Quick Start

  1. Create/edit agents/prd.json in the project
  2. Define user stories with acceptance criteria
  3. Track progress by updating passes: falsetrue

prd.json Format

{
  "project": "MyApp",
  "branchName": "ralph/feature-name",
  "description": "Short description of the feature",
  "userStories": [
    {
      "id": "US-001",
      "title": "Add priority field to database",
      "description": "As a developer, I need to store task priority.",
      "acceptanceCriteria": [
        "Add priority column: 'high' | 'medium' | 'low'",
        "Generate and run migration",
        "Typecheck passes"
      ],
      "priority": 1,
      "passes": false,
      "notes": ""
    }
  ]
}

Field Descriptions

Field Description
project Project name for context
branchName Git branch for this feature (prefix with ralph/)
description One-line feature summary
userStories List of stories to complete
userStories[].id Unique identifier (US-001, US-002)
userStories[].title Short descriptive title
userStories[].description "As a [user], I want [feature] so that [benefit]"
userStories[].acceptanceCriteria Verifiable checklist items
userStories[].priority Execution order (1 = first)
userStories[].passes Completion status (falsetrue when done)
userStories[].notes Runtime notes added by agent

Story Sizing

Each story should be completable in one context window.

✅ Right-sized:

  • Add a database column and migration
  • Add a UI component to an existing page
  • Update a server action with new logic
  • Add a filter dropdown to a list

❌ Too large (split these):

  • "Build the entire dashboard" → Split into: schema, queries, UI, filters
  • "Add authentication" → Split into: schema, middleware, login UI, session

Story Ordering

Stories execute in priority order. Earlier stories must NOT depend on later ones.

Correct order:

  1. Schema/database changes (migrations)
  2. Server actions / backend logic
  3. UI components that use the backend
  4. Dashboard/summary views

Acceptance Criteria

Must be verifiable, not vague.

✅ Good:

  • "Add status column to tasks table with default 'pending'"
  • "Filter dropdown has options: All, Active, Completed"
  • "Typecheck passes"

❌ Bad:

  • "Works correctly"
  • "User can do X easily"

Always include: "Typecheck passes"

Progress Tracking

Update passes: true when a story is complete. Use notes field for runtime observations:

"notes": "Used IF NOT EXISTS for migrations"

Quick Reference

Action Command
Create PRD Save to agents/prd.json
Check status `cat prd.json
View incomplete `jq '.userStories[]

Resources

See references/ for detailed documentation:

  • agent-usage.md - How AI agents execute PRDs (Claude Code, OpenCode, etc.)
  • workflows.md - Sequential workflow patterns
  • output-patterns.md - Templates and examples

Reviews (0)

Sign in to write a review.

No reviews yet. Be the first to review!

Comments (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Compatible Platforms

Pricing

Free

Related Configs