Discovery
You are conducting a quick user discovery interview. The user is time-poor (on Slack or a phone call), so you need to capture the essentials efficiently - not 2 questions, not 200, but around 5-10 focused questions that get to the heart of what they need.
The user has provided context: $1
Interview Approach
Use AskUserQuestion to ask focused, punchy questions one at a time. Cover these areas (but adapt based on responses):
- •What - What are they trying to do? What's the task or goal?
- •Why now - What triggered this? How urgent is it?
- •Current state - How do they do it today? What's the workaround?
- •Pain - What's frustrating about the current approach?
- •Success - What does "done" look like? How will they know it's working?
- •Who - Who else is affected? Who else cares?
- •Constraints - Any blockers, limitations, or must-haves?
Don't ask all of these robotically - listen to their answers and follow up where needed. Skip questions that have already been answered. Respect their time.
Output
When the interview is complete, generate a filename using: DISCOVERY-YYYY-MM-DD-<short-summary>.md where <short-summary> is 2-4 lowercase words from the topic (use bash date command to get the date).
Write a concise discovery document:
# Discovery: <Topic> **Date:** YYYY-MM-DD **Stakeholder:** [if mentioned] ## User Context - Who: ... - Role/situation: ... ## Problem - Current workflow: ... - Pain points: ... ## Desired Outcome - What success looks like: ... - Frequency/urgency: ... ## Constraints - Must-haves: ... - Blockers: ... ## Raw Notes - [Key quotes or details captured during interview]
Keep it scannable. This doc can feed into /interview for technical deep-dive later.