home / skills / everyinc / compound-engineering-plugin / brainstorming

This skill helps you brainstorm effectively before features, clarifying intent, exploring options, and guiding design decisions to align with user goals.

npx playbooks add skill everyinc/compound-engineering-plugin --skill brainstorming

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---
name: brainstorming
description: This skill should be used before implementing features, building components, or making changes. It guides exploring user intent, approaches, and design decisions before planning. Triggers on "let's brainstorm", "help me think through", "what should we build", "explore approaches", ambiguous feature requests, or when the user's request has multiple valid interpretations that need clarification.
---

# Brainstorming

This skill provides detailed process knowledge for effective brainstorming sessions that clarify **WHAT** to build before diving into **HOW** to build it.

## When to Use This Skill

Brainstorming is valuable when:
- Requirements are unclear or ambiguous
- Multiple approaches could solve the problem
- Trade-offs need to be explored with the user
- The user hasn't fully articulated what they want
- The feature scope needs refinement

Brainstorming can be skipped when:
- Requirements are explicit and detailed
- The user knows exactly what they want
- The task is a straightforward bug fix or well-defined change

## Core Process

### Phase 0: Assess Requirement Clarity

Before diving into questions, assess whether brainstorming is needed.

**Signals that requirements are clear:**
- User provided specific acceptance criteria
- User referenced existing patterns to follow
- User described exact behavior expected
- Scope is constrained and well-defined

**Signals that brainstorming is needed:**
- User used vague terms ("make it better", "add something like")
- Multiple reasonable interpretations exist
- Trade-offs haven't been discussed
- User seems unsure about the approach

If requirements are clear, suggest: "Your requirements seem clear. Consider proceeding directly to planning or implementation."

### Phase 1: Understand the Idea

Ask questions **one at a time** to understand the user's intent. Avoid overwhelming with multiple questions.

**Question Techniques:**

1. **Prefer multiple choice when natural options exist**
   - Good: "Should the notification be: (a) email only, (b) in-app only, or (c) both?"
   - Avoid: "How should users be notified?"

2. **Start broad, then narrow**
   - First: What is the core purpose?
   - Then: Who are the users?
   - Finally: What constraints exist?

3. **Validate assumptions explicitly**
   - "I'm assuming users will be logged in. Is that correct?"

4. **Ask about success criteria early**
   - "How will you know this feature is working well?"

**Key Topics to Explore:**

| Topic | Example Questions |
|-------|-------------------|
| Purpose | What problem does this solve? What's the motivation? |
| Users | Who uses this? What's their context? |
| Constraints | Any technical limitations? Timeline? Dependencies? |
| Success | How will you measure success? What's the happy path? |
| Edge Cases | What shouldn't happen? Any error states to consider? |
| Existing Patterns | Are there similar features in the codebase to follow? |

**Exit Condition:** Continue until the idea is clear OR user says "proceed" or "let's move on"

### Phase 2: Explore Approaches

After understanding the idea, propose 2-3 concrete approaches.

**Structure for Each Approach:**

```markdown
### Approach A: [Name]

[2-3 sentence description]

**Pros:**
- [Benefit 1]
- [Benefit 2]

**Cons:**
- [Drawback 1]
- [Drawback 2]

**Best when:** [Circumstances where this approach shines]
```

**Guidelines:**
- Lead with a recommendation and explain why
- Be honest about trade-offs
- Consider YAGNI—simpler is usually better
- Reference codebase patterns when relevant

### Phase 3: Capture the Design

Summarize key decisions in a structured format.

**Design Doc Structure:**

```markdown
---
date: YYYY-MM-DD
topic: <kebab-case-topic>
---

# <Topic Title>

## What We're Building
[Concise description—1-2 paragraphs max]

## Why This Approach
[Brief explanation of approaches considered and why this one was chosen]

## Key Decisions
- [Decision 1]: [Rationale]
- [Decision 2]: [Rationale]

## Open Questions
- [Any unresolved questions for the planning phase]

## Next Steps
→ `/workflows:plan` for implementation details
```

**Output Location:** `docs/brainstorms/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-brainstorm.md`

### Phase 4: Handoff

Present clear options for what to do next:

1. **Proceed to planning** → Run `/workflows:plan`
2. **Refine further** → Continue exploring the design
3. **Done for now** → User will return later

## YAGNI Principles

During brainstorming, actively resist complexity:

- **Don't design for hypothetical future requirements**
- **Choose the simplest approach that solves the stated problem**
- **Prefer boring, proven patterns over clever solutions**
- **Ask "Do we really need this?" when complexity emerges**
- **Defer decisions that don't need to be made now**

## Incremental Validation

Keep sections short—200-300 words maximum. After each section of output, pause to validate understanding:

- "Does this match what you had in mind?"
- "Any adjustments before we continue?"
- "Is this the direction you want to go?"

This prevents wasted effort on misaligned designs.

## Anti-Patterns to Avoid

| Anti-Pattern | Better Approach |
|--------------|-----------------|
| Asking 5 questions at once | Ask one at a time |
| Jumping to implementation details | Stay focused on WHAT, not HOW |
| Proposing overly complex solutions | Start simple, add complexity only if needed |
| Ignoring existing codebase patterns | Research what exists first |
| Making assumptions without validating | State assumptions explicitly and confirm |
| Creating lengthy design documents | Keep it concise—details go in the plan |

## Integration with Planning

Brainstorming answers **WHAT** to build:
- Requirements and acceptance criteria
- Chosen approach and rationale
- Key decisions and trade-offs

Planning answers **HOW** to build it:
- Implementation steps and file changes
- Technical details and code patterns
- Testing strategy and verification

When brainstorm output exists, `/workflows:plan` should detect it and use it as input, skipping its own idea refinement phase.

Overview

This skill guides focused brainstorming before implementing features, building components, or making changes. It helps clarify user intent, surface constraints and success criteria, and explore alternative approaches so planning and implementation start from a shared WHAT, not premature HOW. Use it when requests are ambiguous or multiple valid interpretations exist.

How this skill works

The skill first assesses whether brainstorming is needed by checking signals of clarity or ambiguity in the request. It then asks targeted questions one at a time to understand purpose, users, constraints, success metrics, and edge cases. After understanding the idea it proposes 2–3 concrete approaches with pros/cons and a recommended option, then captures key decisions in a short design summary and offers clear handoff choices (plan, refine, or pause). It enforces YAGNI and incremental validation throughout.

When to use it

  • Requirements are vague or use vague language ("make it better", "add something like")
  • A request has multiple reasonable interpretations or trade-offs to consider
  • You don’t yet know success criteria or target users
  • You want to compare a few distinct implementation approaches before planning
  • The feature scope needs refinement before writing tasks

Best practices

  • Ask one question at a time and prefer multiple-choice prompts when natural
  • Start broad (purpose), then narrow (users, constraints, success metrics, edge cases)
  • Propose 2–3 concrete approaches and lead with a recommendation and rationale
  • Keep outputs concise (200–300 words per section) and validate with the user frequently
  • Apply YAGNI: prefer simple, proven patterns over speculative complexity

Example use cases

  • User says "help me think through notifications" — clarify audience, channels, and success metrics
  • Ambiguous feature request like "improve onboarding" — explore goals, constraints, and measurable outcomes
  • Choice between server-side or client-side rendering — list approaches with pros/cons and recommended trade-offs
  • New component design where existing patterns may apply — identify reuse vs new implementation
  • Feature spikes where multiple engineering trade-offs exist and a lightweight design doc is needed

FAQ

How do I know if brainstorming is necessary?

If requirements are missing acceptance criteria, use vague language, or multiple interpretations exist, run brainstorming. If the request is explicit and constrained, skip to planning.

How many approaches should you propose?

Typically 2–3 concrete approaches. That gives meaningful trade-offs without overwhelming the decision.