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Found 40 Skills
Plan and facilitate design sprints from challenge framing through prototype testing.
Map user Jobs-to-Be-Done with functional, emotional, and social dimensions plus outcome expectations. Use when reframing product decisions around user motivations rather than features.
Help users define problems clearly before jumping to solutions. Use when someone is scoping a new feature, validating a product idea, struggling to articulate what they're building, or falling into the "shiny object trap" with new technology.
User research, usability heuristics, user psychology, accessibility, inclusive design, user testing, and UX metrics
Expert product management covering strategy, roadmapping, user research, prioritization frameworks, and stakeholder management.
UX design principles for creating intuitive, accessible, and user-centered digital experiences
Launch 3 research agents in parallel — market, users, tech — fast answers
Guide product managers through Jeff Gothelf's Lean UX Canvas v2—a one-page tool that frames work around a business problem, exposes assumptions, and ensures learning every sprint.
Customer-obsessed design methodology. Use when designing features, validating problems, choosing research methods, or measuring design success.
Understand customer motivations through job theory. Use when defining product strategy, conducting user research, identifying competitors, writing user stories, or reframing features around customer progress.
Expert UX design assistance for user research, wireframing, prototyping, and design strategy. Use when: creating wireframes, conducting user research, building prototypes, designing user flows, writing UX copy, reviewing designs for usability, creating personas, planning usability tests, or when user mentions UX design, user experience, wireframes, prototypes, user research, information architecture, or design systems.
Help users run effective customer discovery conversations and extract actionable insights. Use when someone is preparing for user research, planning discovery interviews, writing interview questions, analyzing findings, validating problems, understanding customer behavior, or trying to learn what customers actually want. Triggers include mentions of "customer interviews", "user research", "discovery calls", "talking to customers", "validating ideas", "customer conversations", "problem validation", or questions about what to ask customers.