with one click
to-prd
// Turn the current conversation context into a PRD draft and, with approval, publish it to the project issue tracker. Use when user wants to create a PRD from the current context.
// Turn the current conversation context into a PRD draft and, with approval, publish it to the project issue tracker. Use when user wants to create a PRD from the current context.
Runs benchmark, QA, or smoke-test loops with explicit budgets, artifacts, diagnosis, and approval gates
Maintains durable file-based memory using PARA-style organization, daily notes, and atomic facts
Diagnoses why agentic work stopped, looped, or drifted, then proposes bounded recovery rules
Converts plans into executable task graphs with clear owners, dependencies, and parallel work lanes
Review the changes since a fixed point (commit, branch, tag, or merge-base) along two axes — Standards (does the code follow this repo's documented coding standards?) and Spec (does the code match what the originating issue/PRD asked for?). Runs both reviews in parallel sub-agents and reports them side by side. Use when the user wants to review a branch, a PR, work-in-progress changes, or asks to "review since X".
Sets up an `## Agent skills` block in AGENTS.md/CLAUDE.md and `docs/agents/` so the engineering skills know this repo's issue tracker, triage label vocabulary, and domain doc layout. Use when installing Matt Pocock's skills in a repo, before first use of `to-issues`, `to-prd`, `triage`, `diagnose`, `tdd`, `improve-codebase-architecture`, or `zoom-out`, or when those skills appear to be missing repo context.
| name | to-prd |
| description | Turn the current conversation context into a PRD draft and, with approval, publish it to the project issue tracker. Use when user wants to create a PRD from the current context. |
This skill takes the current conversation context and codebase understanding and produces a PRD. Do NOT interview the user — just synthesize what you already know.
The issue tracker and triage label vocabulary should have been provided to you — run /setup-matt-pocock-skills if not.
Explore the repo to understand the current state of the codebase, if you haven't already. Use the project's domain glossary vocabulary throughout the PRD, and respect any ADRs in the area you're touching.
Sketch out the major modules you will need to build or modify to complete the implementation. Actively look for opportunities to extract deep modules that can be tested in isolation.
A deep module (as opposed to a shallow module) is one which encapsulates a lot of functionality in a simple, testable interface which rarely changes.
Check with the user that these modules match their expectations. Check with the user which modules they want tests written for.
ready-for-agent triage label only after approval.The problem that the user is facing, from the user's perspective.
The solution to the problem, from the user's perspective.
A LONG, numbered list of user stories. Each user story should be in the format of:
This list of user stories should be extremely extensive and cover all aspects of the feature.
A list of implementation decisions that were made. This can include:
Do NOT include specific file paths or code snippets. They may end up being outdated very quickly.
Exception: if a prototype produced a snippet that encodes a decision more precisely than prose can (state machine, reducer, schema, type shape), inline it within the relevant decision and note briefly that it came from a prototype. Trim to the decision-rich parts — not a working demo, just the important bits.
A list of testing decisions that were made. Include:
A description of the things that are out of scope for this PRD.
Any further notes about the feature.