From product-skills
Analyzes customer motivations using Jobs-to-be-Done framework and Forces of Progress to map push/pull drivers and anxiety/habit resistors for product adoption.
npx claudepluginhub assimovt/productskills --plugin product-skillsThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Understand why customers "hire" and "fire" products. JTBD (Christensen/Moesta) reframes competition: you're not competing against similar products, you're competing against whatever the customer currently uses to get the job done — including doing nothing.
Analyzes customer research or product context to uncover functional, social, and emotional jobs to be done. Identifies pains, gains, prioritizes jobs, and suggests product implications.
Produces structured Jobs-to-be-Done analyses: job performer definitions, process maps, pains/gains, desired outcomes. Useful for customer discovery, unmet needs, product positioning.
Analyzes customer motivations via Jobs to Be Done framework, uncovering functional, emotional, and social progress needs for product positioning and messaging. Invoke for user context analysis.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Understand why customers "hire" and "fire" products. JTBD (Christensen/Moesta) reframes competition: you're not competing against similar products, you're competing against whatever the customer currently uses to get the job done — including doing nothing.
Structure every job as: "When [situation], I want to [motivation], so I can [expected outcome]."
The situation is critical — the same person has different jobs in different contexts.
Four forces determine whether someone switches to your product. Map all four:
DRIVING ADOPTION RESISTING ADOPTION
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Push: Pain with current solution Anxiety: Fear of the new solution
Pull: Attraction of new solution Habit: Comfort with current way
What's broken or frustrating about how they do it today? Stronger push = more urgency.
What's attractive about the new way? This is your value proposition.
What are they afraid of? Switching costs, learning curves, data migration, reliability.
What keeps them doing it the old way? Muscle memory, sunk costs, "good enough."
To win: Push + Pull must be stronger than Anxiety + Habit.
If anxiety is high, reduce it (free trials, migration tools, guarantees). If habit is strong, find the trigger moment when the current solution fails hard enough to break inertia.
Built on Jobs-to-be-Done (Clayton Christensen) and the Forces of Progress (Bob Moesta). Skills from productskills.