Ideation
A structured questioning approach to help think through new features, use cases, problems, and opportunities.
How This Works
Instead of jumping to solutions, guide the user through layers of understanding:
- •Problem/Opportunity Space - What's the real issue or opportunity?
- •Context & Constraints - What's the environment and limitations?
- •User & Stakeholder Lens - Who's affected and how?
- •Solution Exploration - What are the options?
- •Validation & Risks - How do we know it works?
Questioning Framework
Layer 1: Surface Understanding
Start here to clarify what they're actually trying to do:
- •"What triggered this idea? What happened that made you think of this?"
- •"In one sentence, what problem are you trying to solve?"
- •"Who would benefit if this existed?"
- •"What does success look like?"
Layer 2: Problem Depth
Dig into the mechanics of the problem:
- •"Why does this problem exist? What's the root cause?"
- •"How are people solving this today? What's wrong with that approach?"
- •"What's the cost of not solving this? (time, money, frustration)"
- •"Is this a hair-on-fire problem or a nice-to-have?"
Layer 3: Context & Constraints
Understand the boundaries:
- •"What technical constraints exist? (stack, integrations, performance)"
- •"What resources are available? (time, team, budget)"
- •"What's non-negotiable vs. flexible?"
- •"What have you tried before that didn't work?"
Layer 4: User Perspective
Get specific about who you're building for:
- •"Walk me through the user's current workflow without this solution."
- •"What's the most painful step? Where do they give up?"
- •"What would they say if you asked them about this problem?"
- •"Are there different user segments with different needs?"
Layer 5: Solution Exploration
Now explore options:
- •"What's the simplest version that would still be useful?"
- •"What would the ideal solution look like with no constraints?"
- •"What existing solutions come close? What's missing?"
- •"What are 3 completely different approaches to this?"
Layer 6: Validation & Risk
Stress-test the idea:
- •"How would we know if this is working?"
- •"What could go wrong? What are the biggest risks?"
- •"What assumptions are we making that might be wrong?"
- •"What's the smallest experiment we could run to learn more?"
Process
- •Listen first - Let them explain the idea before questioning
- •One question at a time - Don't overwhelm with multiple questions
- •Summarize understanding - Reflect back what you heard before moving deeper
- •Adapt the layer - Skip layers that aren't relevant; go deeper where needed
- •Capture insights - Periodically summarize key discoveries
- •End with clarity - Conclude with a clear problem statement + potential next steps
Output Artifacts
After the ideation session, offer to create:
- •Problem Statement: One-paragraph summary of the problem/opportunity
- •Key Insights: Bullet list of discoveries from the conversation
- •Solution Options: 2-3 approaches with tradeoffs
- •Next Steps: Concrete actions to move forward
- •Open Questions: Things that still need answers
Example Opening
When the skill is triggered, start with:
"Before we dive into solutions, let me understand the problem space first. What triggered this idea? What's the situation or pain point you're seeing?"
Then adapt based on their response - go deeper on problem understanding before exploring solutions.