| name | analysis-planning |
| description | Structure analysis approach before starting work. Use when receiving new analysis requests, breaking down complex questions into steps, or planning iterative analysis workflows. |
When to use
After requirements are gathered and before any data is touched. Planning is especially important when the analysis involves multiple steps, uncertain data availability, or a tight deadline where sequencing matters. A 15-minute planning session prevents hours of wrong-direction work.
Process
- Decompose the question — break the business question into sub-questions using
references/scoping_framework.md; each sub-question should be answerable with a single data pull or calculation.
- Identify data dependencies — for each sub-question, list the required tables/datasets and assess availability (confirmed / likely / unknown); flag blockers early.
- Sequence the work — order sub-questions so that each output feeds the next; identify which steps can run in parallel.
- Estimate effort — use
references/effort_estimation.md to assign time estimates per step; sum to a total and compare against the deadline.
- Log risks and dependencies — use
references/risks_dependencies.md to document anything that could delay or invalidate the plan (data gaps, external approvals, methodology uncertainty).
- Produce the plan — fill in
assets/analysis_plan_template.md; for projects with stakeholder kickoffs use assets/kickoff_doc_template.md.
Inputs the skill needs
- Analysis brief or requirements doc (from
stakeholder-requirements-gathering skill)
- Available data sources
- Deadline and resource constraints
Output
- Completed analysis plan with sequenced steps and time estimates (
analysis_plan_template.md)
- Kickoff doc for stakeholder alignment (optional,
kickoff_doc_template.md)
- Risk / dependency log