Product management workflows: PRDs, user stories, sprint planning, roadmaps, and stakeholder communication.
What it does
Claude writes PRDs and user stories that read like they came from a product management textbook — technically correct structure, generic content. The stories don't have clear acceptance criteria, the PRDs don't define what "done" looks like, and the roadmaps don't reflect real trade-off decisions. This skill loads specific PM frameworks with concrete templates: PRD structure that forces scope decisions, user story format with testable acceptance criteria, sprint planning with explicit trade-off documentation, and roadmap formats that communicate priority rationale. Made by phuryn.
Use case
Product managers who want Claude to apply real PM frameworks rather than produce generic outputs. Also useful for engineering leads writing specs or designers documenting requirements.
"Write a PRD for this feature — force me to make the scope decisions." "Turn these requirements into user stories with proper acceptance criteria." "Build a sprint plan for these 12 stories — flag the risks and dependencies." "Create a roadmap for Q3 that shows the reasoning behind priority order." "Write a one-pager that explains this product decision to the engineering team."
Provide the raw requirement or feature idea. Claude asks the clarifying questions a good PM would ask before writing.
Claude fills the template with your answers — not generic placeholder content.
For roadmaps: provide the candidate features and constraints. Claude builds the prioritisation framework, not just a list.
Input
A feature idea, requirement, or set of user needs. The vaguer the input, the more questions Claude asks before producing the output.
Output
PM documents with genuine content: PRDs with specific scope boundaries, stories with testable acceptance criteria, sprint plans with explicit dependency graphs, and roadmaps with stated priority rationale.
npx skillsadd phuryn/skills/pm-skills
Requires skills.sh CLI
A set of resources to help me write all kinds of internal communications, using the formats that my company likes to use. Claude should use this skill whenever asked to write some sort of internal communications (status reports, leadership updates, 3P updates, company newsletters, FAQs, incident reports, project updates, etc.).
Send message notifications for agent workflows — alert on completion, errors, or milestones.
Manage local CLI AI agents via tmux — start, stop, monitor, assign tasks, and schedule with cron.