From product-skills
Writes product strategy documents enforcing tradeoffs and choices using Rumelt's Strategy Kernel and Playing to Win framework. Use for strategy planning, defining direction, or 'where to play/how to win'.
npx claudepluginhub assimovt/productskills --plugin product-skillsThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Write strategy that forces hard choices. A strategy that doesn't say "no" to something isn't a strategy — it's a wish list. Strategy is not goals, not aspirations, and not a list of things you want to do. It's a coherent set of choices about where to play and how to win.
Builds product strategies driving real choices: defines where to play/how to win, strategy canvases, ICP/Anti-ICP, positioning, pricing, GTM motions, strategic bets.
Generates 9-section Product Strategy Canvas: vision, segments, costs, value propositions, trade-offs, metrics, growth, capabilities, defensibility. Use for building product strategies or defining direction.
Generates actionable SWOT analyses, lean business plans, OKRs, and competitive analyses for small and medium businesses.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Write strategy that forces hard choices. A strategy that doesn't say "no" to something isn't a strategy — it's a wish list. Strategy is not goals, not aspirations, and not a list of things you want to do. It's a coherent set of choices about where to play and how to win.
Every strategy document must contain these three elements:
What's actually going on? Name the challenge clearly. A good diagnosis simplifies complexity by identifying the critical factors.
The overall approach for dealing with the challenge. This is the big directional bet — it rules things in AND rules things out.
Specific, coordinated actions that execute the guiding policy. Actions should reinforce each other.
Structure the strategy as five cascading choices:
Each choice constrains the next. If "Where to Play" doesn't narrow the field, it's not a choice.
Bad guiding policy:
"We will build the best product in the market by focusing on quality, speed, and customer satisfaction."
Good guiding policy:
"We will win technical PMs at Series A-B startups by being the fastest path from customer insight to shipped feature — sacrificing enterprise compliance features and multi-team coordination to stay opinionated and fast."
The good version names who, names what you're sacrificing, and could be argued against.
Built on Good Strategy Bad Strategy (Richard Rumelt) and Playing to Win (Lafley/Martin). Skills from productskills.