defining-product-vision
npx machina-cli add skill liqiongyu/lenny_skills_plus/defining-product-vision --openclawDefining Product Vision
Scope
Covers
- Defining or refreshing a product vision (5–10 year future state)
- Writing a vision statement + short vision narrative (concrete, not a tagline)
- Translating vision into pillars and strategic choices (what we will/won’t do)
- Packaging a “Product Vision Pack” leaders and teams can use as a decision tie-breaker
When to use
- “We need a real product vision (not a slogan).”
- “Leadership isn’t aligned on where the product is going.”
- “Write a vision statement + one-pager for the next 5–10 years.”
- “Bridge our mission to strategy and planning.”
- “We have a big technology vision—what’s the user-friendly product form factor?”
When NOT to use
- You only need a marketing tagline or positioning copy (do marketing/copywriting instead).
- You need a detailed product strategy doc, roadmap, or OKRs after vision is already aligned (use those downstream skills).
- You don’t have even a rough target customer/problem hypothesis (do discovery/research first).
- You’re choosing metrics/measurement before agreeing on the future state (do vision first, then North Star metrics).
Inputs
Minimum required
- Product (what it is today) + target customer segment(s)
- The potent user problem / job-to-be-done the vision is grounded in
- Time horizon (default: 5–10 years)
- Mission / higher-level purpose (or executive intent)
- Constraints (what must remain true: trust, safety, margin, compliance, etc.)
- Stakeholders who must align (roles/names)
Missing-info strategy
- Ask up to 5 questions from references/INTAKE.md.
- If answers aren’t available, proceed with clearly labeled assumptions and provide 2–3 vision options.
Outputs (deliverables)
Produce a Product Vision Pack in Markdown (in-chat; or as files if requested):
- Context snapshot (bullets)
- Problem anchor (target customer + potent user problem)
- Vision statement (1 sentence)
- Vision narrative (concrete 5–10 year future state; tech-agnostic; aspirational but attainable)
- Vision pillars (3–5) + optional experience principles
- Strategy bridge (3–5 explicit choices + non-goals + “near-term wedge/form factor”)
- Rollout & alignment plan (workshop + comms + cadence)
- Risks / Open questions / Next steps (always included)
Templates: references/TEMPLATES.md
Workflow (8 steps)
1) Intake + constraints
- Inputs: User context; use references/INTAKE.md.
- Actions: Confirm product, target customer, horizon, mission, constraints, stakeholders, and why-now.
- Outputs: 8–12 bullet Context snapshot.
- Checks: You can restate “who we serve + what problem we solve” in 1–2 sentences.
2) Define the problem anchor (potent user problem)
- Inputs: Context snapshot.
- Actions: Write the target customer + problem as a crisp, user-centered statement; identify what “success” means for them.
- Outputs: Problem anchor section (template in references/TEMPLATES.md).
- Checks: Problem is specific, important, and not framed as “our feature idea”.
3) Draft 2–3 future states (vision options)
- Inputs: Problem anchor + horizon.
- Actions: Generate 2–3 distinct future-state options that are:
- Lofty and realistic
- Tech-agnostic (not limited by today’s implementation)
- Grounded in the user problem
- Outputs: 2–3 Vision options (short narratives).
- Checks: Each option passes the 4-point vision test in references/CHECKLISTS.md.
4) Write the vision statement + narrative (not a tagline)
- Inputs: Chosen vision option.
- Actions: Draft a 1-sentence vision statement and a short narrative (5–10 year future). Run the “what does that mean?” elaboration test.
- Outputs: Vision statement + Vision narrative.
- Checks: A stakeholder can ask “what does that mean?” and you can answer concretely (future customers, value difference, what’s changed).
5) Define pillars + principles (make it decision-useful)
- Inputs: Vision narrative.
- Actions: Create 3–5 pillars that imply product choices; add experience principles that help users act on the core value.
- Outputs: Vision pillars (+ optional experience principles).
- Checks: Each pillar can be translated into “we will invest in X / say no to Y”.
6) Build the strategy bridge (choices + non-goals + wedge)
- Inputs: Vision pillars + constraints.
- Actions: Translate the vision into 3–5 strategic choices and explicit non-goals. Propose a near-term wedge/form factor that delivers immediate utility while progressing the long-term vision.
- Outputs: Strategy bridge section.
- Checks: Strategy forces choice (scarce resources); includes at least 3 non-goals; names a plausible wedge.
7) Align stakeholders + iterate
- Inputs: Draft pack.
- Actions: Create a lightweight review plan (who, how, cadence). Anticipate objections and add an FAQ if needed.
- Outputs: Rollout & alignment plan.
- Checks: Key stakeholders can paraphrase the vision and disagree on specifics (not on meanings).
8) Quality gate + finalize pack
- Inputs: All drafts.
- Actions: Run references/CHECKLISTS.md and score with references/RUBRIC.md. Add Risks / Open questions / Next steps.
- Outputs: Final Product Vision Pack.
- Checks: Pack is shareable as-is; choices, non-goals, and caveats are explicit.
Quality gate (required)
- Use references/CHECKLISTS.md and references/RUBRIC.md.
- Always include: Risks, Open questions, Next steps.
Examples
Example 1 (B2B SaaS): “Define a product vision for a workflow automation platform for IT teams.”
Expected: a Product Vision Pack with a concrete future state, pillars, and a strategy bridge (choices + non-goals + wedge).
Example 2 (Consumer): “Refresh product vision for a personal finance app expanding into a full ‘financial operating system’.”
Expected: a vision that is lofty but attainable, tech-agnostic, grounded in a potent user problem, and packaged in a familiar form factor.
Boundary example: “Write a tagline for our website.”
Response: clarify this skill produces product vision artifacts (not marketing copy). Offer to first produce a vision pack, then hand off a distilled tagline/positioning to a marketing/copy skill.
Source
git clone https://github.com/liqiongyu/lenny_skills_plus/blob/main/skills/defining-product-vision/SKILL.mdView on GitHub Overview
This skill guides you to define or refresh a long-term product vision and package it into a shareable Product Vision Pack. It covers the vision statement, narrative, pillars, strategic choices, and rollout to align leadership and inform product direction for the next decade.
How This Skill Works
Uses an 8-step workflow to translate current product context, user problems, and executive intent into a concrete future state. It starts with intake constraints, builds a crisp problem anchor, drafts 2–3 future-state options, writes a non-tagline vision statement and narrative, defines pillars and strategic choices, then designs rollout plans and risk/next steps.
When to Use It
- We need a real product vision (not a slogan).
- Leadership isn’t aligned on where the product is going.
- Write a vision statement + one-pager for the next 5–10 years.
- Bridge our mission to strategy and planning.
- We have a big technology vision—what’s the user-friendly product form factor?
Quick Start
- Step 1: Intake + constraints (confirm product, target customers, horizon, mission, constraints, stakeholders).
- Step 2: Define the problem anchor (crisp target customer + potent user problem).
- Step 3: Draft 2–3 future-state options and craft the vision statement + narrative.
Best Practices
- Ground the vision in a concrete user problem and target customers.
- Keep the vision tech-agnostic, aspirational, but attainable.
- Develop 2–3 distinct future-state options to compare trade-offs.
- Translate the vision into 3–5 pillars with explicit strategic choices and a near-term wedge/form factor.
- Package outputs into a sharable Product Vision Pack with a rollout and alignment plan.
Example Use Cases
- FinTech budgeting app defines a 10-year vision around proactive financial health and delivers a Vision Pack for exec alignment.
- Enterprise collaboration tool centers on async work, trust, and safety to redefine how teams coordinate.
- Health-tech patient portal envisions improved preventive care through user-friendly digital experiences.
- E-commerce platform builds a personalization engine to unify omni-channel experiences over a 5–10 year horizon.
- IoT/smart buildings management platform crafts a future-state for reliable, scalable device orchestration and insights.