Help us improve
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
From product-skills
Analyzes businesses, products, or features using Hamilton Helmer's 7 Powers framework to evaluate competitive moats, defensibility, and strategic durability. Triggers on moat, power analysis, or '7 Powers' queries.
npx claudepluginhub amplitude/builder-skills --plugin product-skillsHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/product-skills:7-powersThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Apply Hamilton Helmer's 7 Powers framework to evaluate whether a business, product, or feature possesses durable competitive advantages ("Powers") that enable persistent differential returns.
Use this skill when the user asks about "7 powers", "Hamilton Helmer", "competitive moats", "how do we build a moat", "sustainable competitive advantage", "defensibility", "what makes us hard to copy", "long-term defensibility", or wants to evaluate which structural competitive advantages apply to their product and how to build them deliberately.
Conducts competitive landscape analysis: discovers competitors via WebSearch, applies Porter's Five Forces, builds feature/pricing matrices, positioning maps, and assesses moats.
Performs Porter's Five Forces analysis: competitive rivalry, supplier/buyer power, substitutes, new entrants. For evaluating industry dynamics and market attractiveness.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Apply Hamilton Helmer's 7 Powers framework to evaluate whether a business, product, or feature possesses durable competitive advantages ("Powers") that enable persistent differential returns.
For detailed definitions, attributes, and examples of each Power, consult framework.md.
Clarify the subject: Identify what's being analyzed — a company, product line, or specific feature. Ask the user if ambiguous.
Scan all 7 Powers: Evaluate the subject against each Power:
Assess each Power using three dimensions:
Identify Power combinations that reinforce each other (e.g., Scale Economies + Network Effects create growth loops).
Recommend strategic actions: What should the business do to strengthen, develop, or defend its Powers?
Use this structure for the analysis:
# 7 Powers Analysis: [Subject]
## Executive Summary
[1-2 sentences on overall strategic position and key Powers identified]
## Power Assessment
| Power | Present? | Strength | Durability | Notes |
|-------|----------|----------|------------|-------|
| Scale Economies | Yes/No | None-Strong | Fragile-Durable | [brief rationale] |
| Network Economies | Yes/No | None-Strong | Fragile-Durable | [brief rationale] |
| Counter-Positioning | Yes/No | None-Strong | Fragile-Durable | [brief rationale] |
| Switching Costs | Yes/No | None-Strong | Fragile-Durable | [brief rationale] |
| Branding | Yes/No | None-Strong | Fragile-Durable | [brief rationale] |
| Cornered Resource | Yes/No | None-Strong | Fragile-Durable | [brief rationale] |
| Process Power | Yes/No | None-Strong | Fragile-Durable | [brief rationale] |
## Deep Dive: Key Powers
[For each Power rated Moderate or Strong, provide 2-3 paragraphs covering:
- Evidence supporting the assessment
- How this Power creates a barrier for competitors
- Risks or vulnerabilities to this Power]
## Power Synergies
[Identify reinforcing combinations between Powers the subject holds]
## Strategic Recommendations
1. **Strengthen**: [How to deepen existing Powers]
2. **Develop**: [Which new Powers could be built, and how]
3. **Defend**: [What threatens current Powers and how to protect them]
For a new feature or product decision: Focus on Power Reinforcement (does this strengthen existing Powers?), Power Expansion (does it create new Powers?), and Power Defense (does it protect against threats?).
For competitive threat assessment: Focus on which Powers competitors possess, which emerging competitors are developing, and how existing Powers could be neutralized.
For early-stage companies: Focus on Power Potential — which Powers could form given the business model, and what's the timeline for development. Use the Power Progression lens: Potential → Realization → Persistent Returns.
User: "Analyze Figma's competitive position"
Key findings would include: