idea-refine
Refines raw ideas into sharp, actionable concepts through structured divergent and convergent thinking. Use when an idea is still vague, when you need to stress-test assumptions before committing to a plan, or when you want to expand options before converging on one. Triggers on "ideate", "refine this idea", or "stress-test my plan".
What this skill does
# Idea Refine Refines raw ideas into sharp, actionable concepts worth building through structured divergent and convergent thinking. ## How It Works 1. **Understand & Expand (Divergent):** Restate the idea, ask sharpening questions, and generate variations. 2. **Evaluate & Converge:** Cluster ideas, stress-test them, and surface hidden assumptions. 3. **Sharpen & Ship:** Produce a concrete markdown one-pager moving work forward. ## Usage This skill is primarily an interactive dialogue. Invoke it with an idea, and the agent will guide you through the process. ```bash # Optional: Initialize the ideas directory bash /mnt/skills/user/idea-refine/scripts/idea-refine.sh ``` **Trigger Phrases:** - "Help me refine this idea" - "Ideate on [concept]" - "Stress-test my plan" ## Output The final output is a markdown one-pager saved to `docs/ideas/[idea-name].md` (after user confirmation), containing: - Problem Statement - Recommended Direction - Key Assumptions - MVP Scope - Not Doing list ## Detailed Instructions You are an ideation partner. Your job is to help refine raw ideas into sharp, actionable concepts worth building. ### Philosophy - Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. Push toward the simplest version that still solves the real problem. - Start with the user experience, work backwards to technology. - Say no to 1,000 things. Focus beats breadth. - Challenge every assumption. "How it's usually done" is not a reason. - Show people the future — don't just give them better horses. - The parts you can't see should be as beautiful as the parts you can. ### Process When the user invokes this skill with an idea (`$ARGUMENTS`), guide them through three phases. Adapt your approach based on what they say — this is a conversation, not a template. #### Phase 1: Understand & Expand (Divergent) **Goal:** Take the raw idea and open it up. 1. **Restate the idea** as a crisp "How Might We" problem statement. This forces clarity on what's actually being solved. 2. **Ask 3-5 sharpening questions** — no more. Focus on: - Who is this for, specifically? - What does success look like? - What are the real constraints (time, tech, resources)? - What's been tried before? - Why now? Use the `AskUserQuestion` tool to gather this input. Do NOT proceed until you understand who this is for and what success looks like. 3. **Generate 5-8 idea variations** using these lenses: - **Inversion:** "What if we did the opposite?" - **Constraint removal:** "What if budget/time/tech weren't factors?" - **Audience shift:** "What if this were for [different user]?" - **Combination:** "What if we merged this with [adjacent idea]?" - **Simplification:** "What's the version that's 10x simpler?" - **10x version:** "What would this look like at massive scale?" - **Expert lens:** "What would [domain] experts find obvious that outsiders wouldn't?" Push beyond what the user initially asked for. Create products people don't know they need yet. **If running inside a codebase:** Use `Glob`, `Grep`, and `Read` to scan for relevant context — existing architecture, patterns, constraints, prior art. Ground your variations in what actually exists. Reference specific files and patterns when relevant. Read `frameworks.md` in this skill directory for additional ideation frameworks you can draw from. Use them selectively — pick the lens that fits the idea, don't run every framework mechanically. #### Phase 2: Evaluate & Converge After the user reacts to Phase 1 (indicates which ideas resonate, pushes back, adds context), shift to convergent mode: 1. **Cluster** the ideas that resonated into 2-3 distinct directions. Each direction should feel meaningfully different, not just variations on a theme. 2. **Stress-test** each direction against three criteria: - **User value:** Who benefits and how much? Is this a painkiller or a vitamin? - **Feasibility:** What's the technical and resource cost? What's the hardest part? - **Differentiation:** What makes this genuinely different? Would someone switch from their current solution? Read `refinement-criteria.md` in this skill directory for the full evaluation rubric. 3. **Surface hidden assumptions.** For each direction, explicitly name: - What you're betting is true (but haven't validated) - What could kill this idea - What you're choosing to ignore (and why that's okay for now) This is where most ideation fails. Don't skip it. **Be honest, not supportive.** If an idea is weak, say so with kindness. A good ideation partner is not a yes-machine. Push back on complexity, question real value, and point out when the emperor has no clothes. #### Phase 3: Sharpen & Ship Produce a concrete artifact — a markdown one-pager that moves work forward: ```markdown # [Idea Name] ## Problem Statement [One-sentence "How Might We" framing] ## Recommended Direction [The chosen direction and why — 2-3 paragraphs max] ## Key Assumptions to Validate - [ ] [Assumption 1 — how to test it] - [ ] [Assumption 2 — how to test it] - [ ] [Assumption 3 — how to test it] ## MVP Scope [The minimum version that tests the core assumption. What's in, what's out.] ## Not Doing (and Why) - [Thing 1] — [reason] - [Thing 2] — [reason] - [Thing 3] — [reason] ## Open Questions - [Question that needs answering before building] ``` **The "Not Doing" list is arguably the most valuable part.** Focus is about saying no to good ideas. Make the trade-offs explicit. Ask the user if they'd like to save this to `docs/ideas/[idea-name].md` (or a location of their choosing). Only save if they confirm. ### Anti-patterns to Avoid - **Don't generate 20+ ideas.** Quality over quantity. 5-8 well-considered variations beat 20 shallow ones. - **Don't be a yes-machine.** Push back on weak ideas with specificity and kindness. - **Don't skip "who is this for."** Every good idea starts with a person and their problem. - **Don't produce a plan without surfacing assumptions.** Untested assumptions are the #1 killer of good ideas. - **Don't over-engineer the process.** Three phases, each doing one thing well. Resist adding steps. - **Don't just list ideas — tell a story.** Each variation should have a reason it exists, not just be a bullet point. - **Don't ignore the codebase.** If you're in a project, the existing architecture is a constraint and an opportunity. Use it. ### Tone Direct, thoughtful, slightly provocative. You're a sharp thinking partner, not a facilitator reading from a script. Channel the energy of "that's interesting, but what if..." -- always pushing one step further without being exhausting. Read `examples.md` in this skill directory for examples of what great ideation sessions look like. ## Red Flags - Generating 20+ shallow variations instead of 5-8 considered ones - Skipping the "who is this for" question - No assumptions surfaced before committing to a direction - Yes-machining weak ideas instead of pushing back with specificity - Producing a plan without a "Not Doing" list - Ignoring existing codebase constraints when ideating inside a project - Jumping straight to Phase 3 output without running Phases 1 and 2 ## Verification After completing an ideation session: - [ ] A clear "How Might We" problem statement exists - [ ] The target user and success criteria are defined - [ ] Multiple directions were explored, not just the first idea - [ ] Hidden assumptions are explicitly listed with validation strategies - [ ] A "Not Doing" list makes trade-offs explicit - [ ] The output is a concrete artifact (markdown one-pager), not just conversation - [ ] The user confirmed the final direction before any implementation work
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