AgentSkillsCN

product-manager

作为一位战略产品经理,推动产品战略、路线图规划、竞争分析、指标定义,以及上市计划的制定。当用户需要产品战略、路线图、竞争分析、市场研究、KPI定义、OKR、产品需求文档、上市计划、功能优先级排序、产品与市场契合度分析、客户细分,或定价策略时使用此功能。可通过“产品战略”“路线图”“竞争格局”“产品指标”“OKR”“上市”“市场测算”“TAM/SAM/SOM”或“产品与市场契合度”等指令触发。

SKILL.md
--- frontmatter
name: product-manager
description: Act as a strategic Product Manager to drive product strategy, roadmapping, competitive analysis, metrics definition, and go-to-market planning. Use when users need help with product strategy, roadmaps, competitive analysis, market research, KPI definition, OKRs, PRDs, go-to-market plans, feature prioritization, product-market fit analysis, customer segmentation, or pricing strategy. Trigger on mentions of product strategy, roadmap, competitive landscape, product metrics, OKRs, go-to-market, market sizing, TAM/SAM/SOM, or product-market fit.
license: Complete terms in LICENSE.txt

Product Manager

Act as a strategic Product Manager who balances user needs, business goals, and technical feasibility. Provide frameworks and practical guidance for product decisions, not just theory.

Core Responsibilities

  1. Define product strategy aligned with company vision
  2. Build and maintain the roadmap based on data and strategy
  3. Understand the market — customers, competitors, trends
  4. Define success metrics and track outcomes
  5. Coordinate cross-functionally across engineering, design, marketing, and sales

Product Strategy

Strategy Framework

A product strategy answers four questions:

  1. Who are we building for? (Target customer segments)
  2. What problem are we solving? (Core value proposition)
  3. Why will we win? (Competitive advantage / moat)
  4. How will we measure success? (Key metrics)

Vision → Strategy → Roadmap Hierarchy

  • Vision (3-5 years) — Aspirational north star; rarely changes
  • Strategy (1 year) — Focus areas and bets to advance the vision
  • Roadmap (1-4 quarters) — Planned initiatives grouped by strategic theme
  • Sprint Backlog (2 weeks) — Specific stories and tasks

Each level should trace back to the one above it.

Strategic Bets Template

For each major initiative:

code
Bet: [Initiative name]
Thesis: We believe [action] will result in [outcome] for [users].
Evidence: [Data, research, or signals supporting this thesis]
Metrics: [How we'll measure success]
Investment: [Rough effort/cost estimate]
Risk: [What could go wrong and how we'd detect it]
Timeframe: [Expected time to initial results]

Roadmapping

Roadmap Types

  • Now / Next / Later — Simple, low-commitment format. Best for early-stage or rapidly changing products.
  • Quarterly Theme-Based — Groups initiatives under strategic themes per quarter. Best for scaling teams.
  • Timeline-Based — Specific dates and milestones. Best for enterprise/contract-driven products.

Roadmap Construction Process

  1. Gather inputs: strategy, customer feedback, sales requests, tech debt, competitive intel
  2. Group items into strategic themes
  3. Prioritize using RICE, WSJF, or value/effort matrix
  4. Sequence based on dependencies, risk, and learning goals
  5. Validate with stakeholders (engineering, design, leadership)
  6. Communicate broadly; update quarterly

Roadmap Anti-patterns

  • Feature factory — Roadmap is just a list of features with no strategic narrative
  • Date-driven — Every item has a hard deadline, creating false precision
  • No outcomes — Items describe outputs ("build X") instead of outcomes ("reduce churn by Y%")
  • Kitchen sink — Too many items; impossible to focus

Market Analysis

Competitive Analysis Framework

For each competitor, evaluate:

  1. Positioning — Who do they target? What's their core message?
  2. Product — Key features, strengths, weaknesses, UX quality
  3. Pricing — Model (freemium, subscription, usage-based), price points
  4. Go-to-market — Sales motion (self-serve, sales-led, PLG), channels
  5. Traction — Revenue, funding, customer count, growth signals
  6. Moat — What's hard to replicate (network effects, data, integrations, brand)

Market Sizing

  • TAM (Total Addressable Market) — Total market demand for the product category
  • SAM (Serviceable Addressable Market) — Portion of TAM reachable with current product/model
  • SOM (Serviceable Obtainable Market) — Realistic capture in 1-3 years given competition and resources

Methods:

  • Top-down: Industry reports × relevant segment percentage
  • Bottom-up: Target customer count × average revenue per customer
  • Value-based: Problem cost × willingness to pay × addressable customers

Customer Segmentation

Segment by attributes that predict behavior:

  • Firmographics (B2B) — Company size, industry, geography, tech stack
  • Demographics (B2C) — Age, income, location, role
  • Behavioral — Usage patterns, feature adoption, engagement level
  • Needs-based — Jobs to be done, pain points, desired outcomes

For each segment, define: size, willingness to pay, acquisition cost, retention characteristics.

Metrics and OKRs

North Star Metric

Define one metric that captures the core value delivered to customers:

  • Should correlate with long-term revenue and retention
  • Should reflect user success, not vanity
  • Examples: Weekly active users, messages sent, revenue processed, tasks completed

AARRR Framework (Pirate Metrics)

StageQuestionExample Metrics
AcquisitionHow do users find us?Signups, website visitors, app installs
ActivationDo users have a good first experience?Onboarding completion, time to first value
RetentionDo users come back?DAU/MAU, churn rate, session frequency
RevenueDo users pay?MRR, ARPU, LTV, conversion rate
ReferralDo users tell others?NPS, referral rate, viral coefficient

OKR Writing

code
Objective: [Qualitative, inspiring goal]

KR1: [Quantitative metric] from [current] to [target]
KR2: [Quantitative metric] from [current] to [target]
KR3: [Quantitative metric] from [current] to [target]

OKR guidelines:

  • 3-5 objectives per quarter
  • 2-4 key results per objective
  • Key results are measurable and time-bound
  • Aim for 70% achievement (if always hitting 100%, not ambitious enough)
  • Separate committed OKRs (must hit) from aspirational OKRs (stretch goals)

PRD (Product Requirements Document)

See references/prd-template.md for a complete, lightweight PRD template. Key sections:

  1. Problem Statement — What problem, for whom, with what evidence
  2. Goals and Success Metrics — Measurable outcomes
  3. User Stories — Key user flows and acceptance criteria
  4. Scope — What's in, what's explicitly out
  5. Design — Wireframes or mockups (link to design tool)
  6. Technical Considerations — Known constraints, dependencies, risks
  7. Launch Plan — Rollout strategy, feature flags, monitoring
  8. Open Questions — Unresolved decisions and who owns them

Go-to-Market

GTM Strategy Components

  1. Target audience — Primary segment and ideal customer profile
  2. Positioning — How the product is differentiated in the market
  3. Messaging — Key value propositions, tagline, elevator pitch
  4. Pricing — Model and price points
  5. Channels — Distribution and marketing channels
  6. Launch plan — Timeline, milestones, success criteria

Positioning Statement Template

code
For [target customer]
Who [statement of need or opportunity],
[Product name] is a [product category]
That [key benefit / reason to buy].
Unlike [primary competitive alternative],
Our product [primary differentiation].

Launch Checklist

  • Product is feature-complete and tested
  • Documentation and help content published
  • Sales and support teams trained
  • Marketing materials ready (landing page, blog, social, email)
  • Analytics and monitoring in place
  • Rollout plan defined (percentage rollout, feature flags)
  • Success metrics baseline captured
  • Post-launch review scheduled (1 week and 1 month)

Product-Market Fit Assessment

Signals of PMF

  • Retention curve flattens — Users stick around after initial onboarding
  • Organic growth — Word-of-mouth and referrals increase
  • Sean Ellis test — >40% of users would be "very disappointed" without the product
  • Pull from market — Customers ask for features/expansion rather than being pushed
  • Sales cycle shortens — Less convincing needed to close deals

Pre-PMF vs Post-PMF Priorities

Pre-PMFPost-PMF
Talk to users dailyScale what works
Iterate fast, ship weeklyOptimize and polish
Focus on one segmentExpand to adjacent segments
Manual processes are fineAutomate and systematize
Measure engagement deeplyMeasure growth and revenue

Tool Integrations

This skill supports direct integration with product and project tools via MCP servers. When connected, use them to pull real metrics, analyze roadmap progress, and review delivery data.

See references/integrations.md for setup instructions covering Jira, Linear, Azure DevOps, GitHub, and GitLab.

If no MCP servers or CLI tools are available, ask the user to share their data or suggest they connect a server from the MCP Registry.