| name | stakeholder-doc |
| description | Generate presentation-ready Word documents for stakeholder discussions. Translates technical architecture blueprints into business-focused presentations with diagrams, cost analysis, and approval checklists. |
Stakeholder Document Generator
Transform technical architecture blueprints into presentation-ready documents for executive presentations, budget approvals, and stakeholder buy-in.
Perfect for: CTO reviews, board presentations, finance approvals, agency RFPs, investor updates
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when you need to:
- Present architecture to non-technical stakeholders (executives, product managers, business teams)
- Get budget approval for development costs
- Share technical decisions with wider team before proceeding
- Create RFPs for agency vendors
- Document architectural decisions for compliance/audit
Input: Full architecture blueprint (from /architect:blueprint)
Output: Word document (.docx) with diagrams rendered as PNGs
Document Structure
1. Cover Page
# [Project Name]
## Architecture & Implementation Plan
**Prepared for**: [Stakeholder Name/Team]
**Prepared by**: Architect AI
**Date**: [Today's Date]
**Version**: 1.0
2. Executive Summary (1 page max)
Translate technical blueprint into business value:
## Executive Summary
**What we're building**: [One-sentence description from blueprint]
**Who it's for**: [Customer type from requirements - B2B enterprise/SMB/B2C]
**Business Value**:
- [Extract from blueprint: What problem does this solve?]
- [Key capability that drives value]
- [Integration or feature that reduces friction]
**Timeline**:
- MVP (core features): [Calculate from sprint backlog - usually 8 weeks]
- Production-ready: [Add 4 weeks for enterprise features if B2B]
**Budget**:
- Infrastructure: $[Low]-[High]/month (from cost estimate section)
- Development: $[Low]-[High] (from Next Steps - 3 build paths)
**Major Risks** (top 3):
1. [Extract from Complexity Assessment - highest-scored complexity factors]
- **Mitigation**: [From blueprint's risk mitigation notes]
2. [Second highest risk]
- **Mitigation**: [Strategy]
3. [Third risk]
- **Mitigation**: [Strategy]
**Recommendation**: GO - Architecture is sound, risks are manageable, timeline is realistic.
[Or: PROCEED WITH CAUTION if complexity score > 7/10]
Rules:
- Use non-technical language (translate JWT → "secure login tokens", RLS → "data isolation", etc.)
- Lead with business impact, not technical features
- Keep to 1 page maximum
- Include confidence level in recommendation (High/Medium/Low based on complexity score)
3. Solution Overview
3.1 High-Level Architecture Diagram
Extract from blueprint's Architecture Diagram section:
- Take the C4 Container diagram (Mermaid code)
- Render to PNG (1200px width minimum)
- Caption: "System components and how they connect"
Simplify for non-technical audience:
- Frontend → "User Interface (Web/Mobile)"
- Backend → "Business Logic Server"
- Database → "Data Storage"
- Keep external integrations (Stripe, Slack, etc.) - business stakeholders recognize these
3.2 Solution Components Table
Extract from blueprint and present as table:
| Component | Technology | Purpose | Cost/Month |
|---|
| [From manifest: frontend] | [Framework] | User interface | $[From cost estimate] |
| [From manifest: backend] | [Framework] | Business logic | $[From cost estimate] |
| [From manifest: database] | [Type] | Data storage | $[From cost estimate] |
| [From manifest: integrations] | [Services] | [Purpose] | $[From cost estimate] |
| Total | | | $[Sum]/month |
3.3 Key Capabilities Checklist
Extract from blueprint's Plain English Specifications:
- ✅ [Feature 1 from specs]
- ✅ [Feature 2 from specs]
- ✅ [Feature 3 from specs]
- ✅ [Critical integration]
- ✅ [Security/compliance feature if mentioned]
Limit to top 6 capabilities that stakeholders care about.
4. Technology Stack & Decisions
For each major technology decision, create a decision card:
Extract from:
- Database Schema section → Database choice
- Architecture Diagram → Hosting choice
- Application Architecture section → Architecture pattern
- Product Type Detection → Multi-tenancy approach (if B2B)
Template for Each Decision:
### Decision: [Technology Category] - [Choice] ✅ Recommended
**Why [Choice]?**
- ✅ [Business benefit 1 - extract from blueprint's tech stack reasoning]
- ✅ [Business benefit 2]
- ✅ [Cost or hiring benefit]
- ✅ [Proven track record - if mentioned in blueprint]
**Alternatives Considered**:
- ❌ [Alternative 1]: [Why rejected - from blueprint's ADRs or alternatives]
- ❌ [Alternative 2]: [Why rejected]
**Upgrade Path**: [From blueprint's assumptions - "Start with X, upgrade to Y when Z"]
**Risk**: [Low/Medium/High based on blueprint's complexity assessment]
Example (using blueprint data):
### Decision: Database - PostgreSQL ✅ Recommended
**Why PostgreSQL?**
- ✅ Handles relational data (tickets, users, workspaces) efficiently
- ✅ Used by Instagram, Notion, Figma - proven at scale
- ✅ $0-25/month free tier, scales to millions of users
- ✅ Built-in multi-tenancy support (Row-Level Security)
**Alternatives Considered**:
- ❌ MongoDB: Doesn't fit relational data model, harder data integrity
- ❌ MySQL: Less feature-rich, weaker JSON support
**Upgrade Path**: Start with Supabase free tier → Upgrade to Pro ($25/month) at 1K users
**Risk**: Low - Industry standard with massive community support
Generate decision cards for:
- Database
- Hosting (managed platforms vs AWS/GCP)
- Architecture pattern (monolith vs microservices)
- Multi-tenancy approach (if B2B product detected)
Add ⚠️ "Requires Validation" flag if:
- Complexity score for this decision > 6/10
- Blueprint mentions "needs validation" or "confirm with user"
- Security-critical decision (e.g., multi-tenant data isolation)
5. Cost Breakdown
Extract from blueprint's Cost Estimate section.
5.1 Infrastructure Costs (monthly recurring)
Create 3 scenarios from blueprint:
| Scenario | User Count | Cost/Month | Cost/Year | Notes |
|---|
| MVP | [From blueprint scale assumptions] | $[Low] | $[Low × 12] | Free tiers sufficient |
| Growth | [10x MVP] | $[Mid] | $[Mid × 12] | Paid tiers + scaling |
| Scale | [100x MVP] | $[High] | $[High × 12] | Enterprise tiers |
Breakdown (Growth scenario):
[List each service from cost estimate with monthly cost]
5.2 Development Costs (one-time)
Extract from blueprint's Next Steps Guide (3 build paths):
| Path | Cost | Timeline | Best For |
|---|
| Build with AI tools | $[From Next Steps] | [Weeks] | Technical founders |
| Hire developer | $[From Next Steps] | [Weeks] | Budget $20K-50K |
| Hire agency | $[From Next Steps] | [Weeks] | Enterprise projects |
5.3 Total First-Year Cost
Calculate:
Development: $[Choose middle path - hire developer]
Infrastructure: $[Growth tier × 12]
Third-party: $[Domain + other one-time costs]
Total Year 1: $[Sum]
6. Major Architectural Decisions & Defense
Q&A format for common stakeholder questions:
Extract from blueprint and translate to Q&A:
Q: Why not use AWS instead of [recommended hosting]?
A: [Extract from blueprint's hosting decision reasoning, translate to business terms]
Example:
AWS requires a DevOps engineer ($120K/year salary). Managed platforms (Vercel + Supabase) handle deployment, scaling, and backups automatically for $1,800/year. We save $118K/year and ship 3-5x faster.
When to switch: When you reach >100K users or need enterprise compliance (SOC 2), estimated 12-18 months away.
Q: Why monolith instead of microservices?
A: [Extract from blueprint's architecture pattern decision]
Q: How do we prevent [top security concern from blueprint]?
A: [Extract security mitigations from Security Architecture section]
Rules:
- Lead with business impact ($$ savings, time savings, risk reduction)
- Include "When to switch" for each decision (upgrade path)
- Keep answers to 2-3 sentences max
7. Risk Assessment
Extract from blueprint's Complexity Assessment and Well-Architected Review.
Create risk table:
| Risk | Severity | Probability | Mitigation | Owner |
|---|
| [Top complexity factor] | High/Med/Low | High/Med/Low | [From blueprint's mitigation notes] | Dev Team/CTO |
| [Second factor] | ... | ... | ... | ... |
| [Third factor] | ... | ... | ... | ... |
Severity calculation:
- High: Complexity score 7-10/10
- Medium: Complexity score 4-6/10
- Low: Complexity score 1-3/10
Probability:
- Extract from blueprint's risk flags or assume:
- High: New/unproven technology
- Medium: Standard technology, some complexity
- Low: Proven patterns, low complexity
Add these standard risks:
- Vendor lock-in: Low severity, High probability → Mitigation: Exit strategy documented
- Budget overrun: Medium severity, Low probability → Mitigation: Fixed-price contracts + monthly caps
- Timeline slippage: Medium severity, Medium probability → Mitigation: Risk-prioritized sprints
8. Timeline & Milestones
Extract from blueprint's Sprint Backlog section.
Convert sprints to milestone table:
| Phase | Duration | Deliverables | Success Criteria |
|---|
| Sprint 0: Setup | 1 week | [From sprint 0 goals] | ✅ [From acceptance criteria] |
| Sprint 1: [Feature] | [Duration] | [From sprint goals] | ✅ [From acceptance criteria] |
| Sprint 2: [Feature] | [Duration] | [From sprint goals] | ✅ [From acceptance criteria] |
| ... | ... | ... | ... |
| MVP Launch | [Total weeks] | All core features | ✅ [From sprint backlog MVP definition] |
| Production | [Total + 4 weeks] | Enterprise-ready | ✅ First paying customer |
Highlight critical path:
Critical Path: [Identify hardest/riskiest sprints from backlog] - any delay here impacts launch
9. Success Metrics
Extract from blueprint's Service Level Objectives and Next Steps.
MVP Success (Week [calculated from sprint backlog]):
- ✅ [From SLO section: availability target]
- ✅ [From SLO section: latency target]
- ✅ [User count target from scale assumptions]
- ✅ Infrastructure costs < $[from cost estimate]
Production Success (Week [MVP + 4]):
- ✅ First paying customer onboarded
- ✅ [From SLO: uptime achieved]
- ✅ [From SLO: performance target]
- ✅ Security audit completed (if mentioned in security section)
Business Success (6 months):
- [Infer based on product type and scale]:
- B2B SaaS: 100+ paying customers, $10K+ MRR
- B2C: 10K+ active users, <5% churn
- Marketplace: $100K+ GMV
10. Next Steps & Approval Checklist
Immediate Actions (if approved):
Extract from blueprint's Next Steps Guide:
Approval Checklist:
Decision Required By: [Today + 2 weeks]
Approved By: ___________________________ Date: ___________
11. Appendices
A. Glossary
Auto-generate from technical terms used in document:
- API: How software components talk to each other
- Backend: Server-side code that processes data
- Database: Where all data is stored
- Frontend: User interface in the browser
- Monolith: Single application (vs many small services)
- Multi-tenant: Multiple customers share infrastructure, data isolated
- PostgreSQL: Database used by Instagram, Notion, Figma
- Row-Level Security (RLS): Database security that isolates customer data
- SaaS: Software accessed via web browser
- SSO: Login with company credentials
Rule: Only include terms actually used in the document.
B. Technical Diagrams (as PNGs)
Render these diagrams from blueprint as PNG:
- Architecture diagram (C4 Container)
- Database schema (ERD) - if included in blueprint
- User flow diagrams - if included
- Deployment diagram - if included
Minimum width: 1200px for clarity
C. Reference Links
- Full architecture blueprint (link to markdown file)
- Sprint backlog (link to detailed user stories)
- Cost calculator (link if interactive spreadsheet exists)
Document Formatting
Output as Markdown (can be converted to .docx):
# [Project Name]
## Architecture & Implementation Plan
---
## Executive Summary
[Content...]
---
## Solution Overview
[Content...]

*System components and how they connect*
---
[Continue with all 11 sections...]
Style Guidelines:
- Use
## for main sections (Executive Summary, Solution Overview, etc.)
- Use
### for subsections
- Use tables for structured data (costs, components, risks, timeline)
- Use ✅ for success criteria and capabilities
- Use ❌ for alternatives rejected
- Use ⚠️ for requires validation
- Use bold for emphasis on business-critical points
- Use
code only for actual technical terms that need monospace
Output Format
When invoked, generate:
📄 Generating stakeholder document...
✅ Extracted executive summary from blueprint
✅ Rendered architecture diagram to PNG (1200x800)
✅ Compiled tech stack decisions (4 decisions)
✅ Calculated cost breakdown (3 scenarios)
✅ Generated risk assessment (6 risks)
✅ Created timeline from sprint backlog (8 sprints, 12 weeks total)
✅ Added approval checklist
📄 stakeholder-presentation.md created (11 sections, 2,847 words)
📁 diagrams/ folder created with 1 PNG
Ready to share with stakeholders!
Next steps:
- Convert to .docx: Use Pandoc or copy into Word
- Review and customize for your stakeholder audience
- Add company logo to cover page
- Update "Decision Required By" date
Customization Options
Optional parameters (ask user if they want to customize):
- Stakeholder name/title: "CTO Review Committee", "Board of Directors", etc.
- Budget constraints: Max budget to flag in recommendations
- Timeline constraints: Must-launch-by date to compare against
- Company logo: Upload for cover page
- Custom branding: Color scheme, fonts
Default behavior: Generate with standard formatting if no customization requested.
Success Criteria
A good stakeholder document should:
- ✅ Be understandable by non-technical executives
- ✅ Articulate business value (not just technical features)
- ✅ Include realistic timelines and costs (not optimistic best-case)
- ✅ Address risks upfront with mitigation strategies
- ✅ Provide clear recommendation (Go/No-Go with confidence)
- ✅ Include approval checklist for decision-making
- ✅ Use visual diagrams (PNGs, not Mermaid text)
- ✅ Defend technical decisions with business justification
Error Handling
If blueprint is incomplete:
- Missing cost estimate → Use defaults ($50-150/month infrastructure)
- Missing sprint backlog → Estimate 8-12 weeks for MVP
- Missing complexity assessment → Mark all risks as "Medium"
- Missing SLOs → Use industry standards (99.9% uptime, <500ms latency)
If blueprint is from /architect:quick-spec:
- Warn user: "Quick-spec doesn't have enough detail. Run
/architect:blueprint first."
Examples
See STAKEHOLDER_DOC_SPEC.md for detailed examples of each section.