Interactive co-authoring skill for the wide end of the exploration funnel. Captures and refines the core intent, whether the outcome is a software app, a business process improvement, research analysis, or strategic roadmap. Guides users through gathering context, iteratively drafting the brief, and testing for blind spots.
From exploration-cycle-pluginnpx claudepluginhub richfrem/agent-plugins-skills --plugin exploration-cycle-pluginThis skill is limited to using the following tools:
acceptance-criteria.mdevals/evals.jsonevals/results.tsvintake-agent.mdreferences/acceptance-criteria.mdreferences/architecture.mdscripts/execute.pyGuides Next.js Cache Components and Partial Prerendering (PPR) with cacheComponents enabled. Implements 'use cache', cacheLife(), cacheTag(), revalidateTag(), static/dynamic optimization, and cache debugging.
Migrates code, prompts, and API calls from Claude Sonnet 4.0/4.5 or Opus 4.1 to Opus 4.5, updating model strings on Anthropic, AWS, GCP, Azure platforms.
Configures VPN and dedicated connections like Direct Connect, ExpressRoute, Interconnect for secure on-premises to AWS, Azure, GCP, OCI hybrid networking.
Note: This skill runs fully interactively via Claude — no script needed.
execute.pyis a planned batch-mode convenience wrapper that hasn't been built yet, but the core skill works now. The intake-agent provides an alternative agentic dispatch path.
This skill provides a structured, 3-stage interactive workflow for generating an Exploration Session Brief. Guide the user through each stage in sequence — do not skip ahead or dump the full brief at once.
Important Note for Agents: Do NOT passively run a bash script or dump a massive block of markdown. You must guide the user through the following 3 stages.
Your goal is to understand the boundaries of the exploration before drafting anything. Ask all three questions together in a single message:
Domain: What category best fits this exploration?
Trigger: What specific event, pain point, or decision caused us to start this session right now?
Raw material: Do you have any notes, transcripts, screenshots, or prior docs to share? (You can brain-dump freely — messy is fine.)
Wait for the user's response. If any answer is too sparse to proceed (e.g., one-word domain, no trigger explained), ask one targeted follow-up before moving to Stage 2. Do not proceed until you have a clear trigger and at least one concrete detail.
Build the brief iteratively — do not write the entire document in one pass.
Propose the Outline: Based on the domain from Stage 1, propose a section list using the appropriate template below. Present it as a numbered list and ask the user: "Does this structure fit? Anything to add or remove?"
| Domain | Suggested sections |
|---|---|
| Software feature/system | Problem Statement · Stakeholders · Current Behavior · Desired Behavior · Constraints · Open Questions |
| Business process | Problem Statement · Stakeholders · Current Process · Pain Points · Desired State · Constraints · Open Questions |
| Risk/compliance | Risk Description · Affected Parties · Current Exposure · Mitigation Options · Constraints · Open Questions |
| Research/strategy | Research Question · Context · What We Know · What We Don't Know · Success Criteria · Open Questions |
Curate: Apply any changes the user requests. If they want a custom section, add it. Do not argue for the template.
Draft section by section: For each section, write a 2–5 sentence draft using only information from Stage 1. Present it and ask: "What should we keep, cut, or change?" Apply edits before moving to the next section. Mark anything inferred (not stated by user) as [UNCONFIRMED].
Once all sections are drafted and approved, stress-test the brief before writing it out:
## Open Questions?"[CONFIRMED] and [UNCONFIRMED] markers.Write the approved, refined markdown content to: exploration/sessions/session-brief.md (or a timestamped equivalent).