| name | pm-review |
| description | Product manager perspective — assess current product state against the plan, verify what's actually built, identify gaps, and recommend what to build next ordered by user impact. |
PM Review Skill
Evaluates the current state of the product from a product manager's perspective. Verifies actual progress against the plan, identifies what's truly shippable vs partial vs stubbed, and recommends priorities for the next work session.
When to Use
- Starting a new development session to orient on what matters most
- After completing a phase to assess readiness for the next
- When deciding what to build next
- Manual invocation with
/pm-review
Behavior
- Non-interactive: Researches and reports — no prompts
- Evidence-based: Verifies claims by reading actual code, not just plan files
- Opinionated: Recommends specific priorities, doesn't just list options
Instructions
CRITICAL — NON-INTERACTIVE: Run every step to completion without pausing. Never ask questions, request confirmation, offer choices, or wait for input. Research and report.
Step 1: Read the Plan
Read the project's planning documents to understand the intended roadmap:
ls plan/ 2>/dev/null || ls docs/plan/ 2>/dev/null
Read:
- Master plan file (e.g.,
plan/plan.md)
- The current phase's detailed plan
- The next phase's detailed plan (to understand what's coming)
- CLAUDE.md for locked conventions and rules
Also read memory files if they exist (session summaries, MEMORY.md) for recent context.
Step 2: Verify Actual State
Don't trust phase status claims — verify by checking what actually exists in the codebase.
git log --oneline -30
git status --short
find src/app -name "page.tsx" -o -name "route.ts" 2>/dev/null
For each feature the plan claims is "complete", spot-check:
- Does the page/component file exist?
- Does it have real implementation (not placeholder/stub)?
- Does it have an API route if it needs one?
- Is there actual UI (not just a "Coming soon" message)?
Step 3: Assess Each Area
3.1 Phase Progress
Map the plan's phases to actual implementation status:
| Phase | Claimed | Verified | Notes |
|---|
| ... | ... | ... | ... |
Use these statuses:
- Complete: Feature is fully functional, tested (if tests exist), production-ready
- Functional: Works but has rough edges, missing polish, or no tests
- Partial: Core logic exists but significant pieces are missing
- Stubbed: File exists but contains placeholder content
- Missing: Doesn't exist yet
3.2 MVP Readiness
If the project has an MVP milestone, assess:
- What's required for MVP to ship?
- What's actually done?
- What's the gap?
- Are there blockers?
3.3 Scope Creep Check
Look for work that doesn't belong in the current phase:
- Features from future phases that were started early
- Unnecessary abstractions or premature optimization
- "Nice to have" additions that aren't in any plan
Step 4: Identify User Value Gaps
Think from the end user's perspective:
- What would make the biggest difference to someone using this today?
- Are there rough edges that undermine trust (broken flows, missing feedback)?
- Is there a critical path that's incomplete?
Step 5: Assess Technical Health
Quick scan for issues that could block future work:
- Accumulating tech debt (TODOs, hacks, workarounds)
- Missing error handling in critical paths
- Schema changes needed before next phase
- Dependencies that need updating
grep -r "TODO\|FIXME\|HACK\|XXX" src/ --include="*.ts" --include="*.tsx" -c 2>/dev/null
Step 6: Recommend Priorities
Based on all the above, recommend the top 3-5 priorities for the next work session. Order by:
- Blockers first: Anything preventing the MVP/current phase from shipping
- User impact: What delivers the most value to end users
- Technical risk: What reduces risk of future rework
- Quick wins: High-value, low-effort items
Step 7: Present Report
## PM Review
### Product Status
Phase X of Y — [1-2 sentence summary of where things stand]
### Progress Verification
| Feature | Plan Status | Actual Status | Notes |
|---------|-------------|---------------|-------|
| ... | ... | ... | ... |
### MVP Gap Analysis
**Ready to ship?** Yes / No — [reason]
Missing for MVP:
- [Gap] — [effort estimate: small/medium/large]
### Scope Check
- [Any out-of-phase work detected, or "Clean — all work is within current phase"]
### Recommended Next Priorities
1. **[Priority]** — [why this matters most] — [effort: S/M/L]
2. **[Priority]** — [why] — [effort]
3. **[Priority]** — [why] — [effort]
### Technical Health
- TODOs/FIXMEs: N found
- [Any concerning patterns or blockers]
### Risks
- [Risk] — [mitigation]
Notes
- This skill reads code but never modifies it
- Effort estimates are rough: S = hours, M = a session, L = multiple sessions
- The "Verified" status matters more than the "Claimed" status — always check the actual files
- Enforce project rules (e.g., MVP boundary, no tech stack changes) in recommendations
- If the project has a locked phase plan, don't recommend skipping ahead
- Be direct about what's not ready — sugar-coating wastes the developer's time