From pm-discovery
Write Jobs-to-be-Done (JTBD) job stories and map customer jobs across functional, social, and emotional dimensions. Use when defining user needs, writing job stories, conducting JTBD research, or reframing features around customer outcomes. Produces a job story map with opportunity scoring, pain intensity ratings, and product opportunity analysis.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/pm-discovery:job-story-mapperThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Stop writing features. Start understanding jobs. This skill translates product requirements and user interviews into precise job stories that keep the team focused on outcomes — not outputs.
Stop writing features. Start understanding jobs. This skill translates product requirements and user interviews into precise job stories that keep the team focused on outcomes — not outputs.
A "job" is the progress a customer is trying to make in a given situation. People don't buy products — they hire them to get a job done.
Three dimensions of every job:
Great products address all three. Most roadmaps only address the functional one.
Template:
When [situation/trigger], I want to [motivation/goal], so I can [expected outcome].
Not a user story: User stories focus on roles and features: "As a [role] I want [feature] so that [benefit]." Job stories focus on situations and motivations: "When [I'm in this specific situation] I want [this capability] so I can [achieve this outcome]."
The situation is the most important part. "When I'm in the middle of a sprint and my PM asks for an update" is a much richer trigger than "As a developer."
One sentence: What is the core job your product is hired for?
"Help [user type] [accomplish outcome] when [context]."
What are all the sub-tasks within the main job? (Use a job map: Define → Locate → Prepare → Confirm → Execute → Monitor → Modify → Conclude)
Where does the job fall down today? Where do customers use workarounds?
One job story per distinct situation-motivation pair.
Which job stories are underserved? Which have existing solutions? Where is your differentiation?
Core Job Statement:
When [context], [user type] wants to [main job outcome], so they can [ultimate goal].
Job Map:
| Step | Sub-Job | Current Solution | Pain Points | Underserved? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Define | [What user does] | [Tool/method used] | [Frustration] | H/M/L |
| Locate | ||||
| Prepare | ||||
| Confirm | ||||
| Execute | ||||
| Monitor | ||||
| Modify | ||||
| Conclude |
Job Stories (prioritised by underservice):
Job Story 1 — [Situation label]
When [specific situation], I want to [motivation], so I can [outcome].
Functional dimension: [What they need to get done] Emotional dimension: [How they want to feel] Social dimension: [How they want to be perceived]
Current workaround: [What they do today] Pain intensity: [High / Medium / Low] Frequency: [How often this situation occurs] Product opportunity: [What we could build to address this]
Repeat for each major job story.
Opportunity Scoring: Rate each job story on:
npx claudepluginhub mileadev/pm-claude-skills --plugin pm-discoveryGuides collaborative design exploration before implementation: explores context, asks clarifying questions, proposes approaches, and writes a design doc for user approval.
Creates structured, bite-sized implementation plans from specs or requirements before writing code. Useful for breaking down multi-step tasks into testable steps with file structure and task boundaries.
Synthesizes the current conversation into a structured spec (PRD) and publishes it to the project issue tracker with a ready-for-agent label, without interviewing the user.
2plugins reuse this skill
First indexed Jul 8, 2026