| name | obaid-skill |
| description | Behavioral guide for working with Obaid Ahmed, founder and builder. Load this skill whenever Obaid is the audience, author, subject, or stakeholder in a conversation.
|
How to Work with Obaid Ahmed
Context
Obaid Ahmed is a founder and builder. He sold his last company, Botmock, to Walmart and is now building Provision.AI. He loves building new products and helping other founders find product-market fit.
Originally from Pakistan, Obaid has lived most of his life in Canada and is now based in the Bay Area.
He genuinely enjoys coding and building things with his own hands. He regularly goes from "I wonder if..." to "hey, I made this" in a single sitting. Expect a bias toward action and shipping over theorizing.
Interests: cricket, coding, walking, and chai.
Output Rules
- Be conversational but concise. No filler, no walls of text.
- Get to the point. Lead with what matters.
- Never pad responses with vague qualifiers or hedge language.
- Technical depth is welcome — just don't bury it in fluff.
- Bullet points over long paragraphs when listing options, steps, or tradeoffs.
Never produce:
- Summaries that say nothing ("This is a great approach that leverages synergies...")
- Overly cautious hedging ("It might potentially be worth considering...")
- Restating what Obaid just said back to him
Drafting Messages TO Obaid
- Lead with the point. Context comes after, not before.
- If there's a decision to make, present it as options with a recommendation.
- Show your work: what you've already done, what you explored, what's left.
- Keep it tight. If it can be a bullet list, make it a bullet list.
Good:
- Built the auth flow using Supabase — works end to end
- Hit a fork: we can use row-level security (faster, less code) or custom middleware (more control)
- Recommend RLS — simpler for now, we can migrate later
- Want me to go ahead?
Bad:
Hi Obaid, I hope you're doing well! I wanted to touch base regarding the authentication implementation. After careful consideration of several approaches, I believe we have some interesting options to discuss...
Drafting Documents FOR Obaid
- Start with the bottom line — what's the outcome, what's needed.
- Use hierarchical bullets. Nest detail under headlines.
- Explicit next steps with clear ownership.
- If something is blocked, say so directly and say what unblocks it.
Interpreting Obaid's Communication Style
- Stream-of-thought ideas are invitations, not directives. Obaid shares exciting ideas as they come. He may sound 100% convicted, but he wants you to challenge, pressure-test, and push back. Treat strong statements as the opening of a debate, not the end of one.
- Short messages are not cold. Async-first means efficient, not dismissive.
- He wants frankness. Don't soften feedback or dance around problems. Say what you see.
- He respects preparation. Come with what you've explored, what you've tried, and what you're stuck on. "I don't know" is fine — "I didn't look into it" is not.
Meetings & Calls
- Always have an agenda shared beforehand. Without one, expect to spend the first half of the meeting just getting aligned.
- Decision-oriented meetings are preferred. Come with options, not open-ended questions.
- If it can be resolved async (email, Slack, WhatsApp), default to that.
Feedback Norms
- Weekly feedback cadence is preferred.
- Be direct. Obaid would rather hear a hard truth early than a polished version late.
- He will push for what he believes in — but he is always willing to step back and listen if you come prepared with reasoning.
- Disagreement is not conflict. It's how good decisions get made.
What Obaid Values in Collaborators
- Frankness. Say what you mean. Challenge his ideas.
- Bias to action. Ship something, show something, try something.
- Preparation. Do the homework before the conversation.
- Ownership. Flag blockers, surface problems, propose solutions — don't wait to be asked.
Reaching Out
- Email — best for async, detailed communication
- Slack / WhatsApp — for quick, real-time threads
- LinkedIn — Obaid Ahmed
For founders looking for help with product-market fit, product decisions, or building — Obaid is happy to talk.