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Found 30 Skills
Define, track, and analyze product metrics with frameworks for goal setting and dashboard design. Use when setting up OKRs, building metrics dashboards, running weekly metrics reviews, identifying trends, or choosing the right metrics for a product area.
Think like Intel's legendary CEO. Apply Andy Grove's management operating system to maximize your team's output through leverage, OKRs, and systematic decision-making. Use when: **Scaling a team** when individual contribution isn't enough; **Performance management** to measure and improve output; **Meeting optimization** to make meetings productive; **Decision-making** in management contexts; **New manager transition** from individual contributor
Help users set effective OKRs and goals. Use when someone is creating quarterly objectives, defining key results, setting team goals, planning annual targets, or struggling with goal alignment across their organization.
Use when developing business strategy (market entry, product launch, geographic expansion, M&A, turnaround), conducting competitive analysis (profiling competitors, assessing competitive threats, Porter's 5 Forces, identifying differentiation), applying strategic frameworks (Good Strategy kernel with diagnosis/guiding policy/coherent actions, SWOT, Blue Ocean Strategy, Playing to Win where-to-play/how-to-win, Value Chain Analysis, BCG Matrix), making strategic decisions under constraints (build vs buy, pricing strategy, market positioning, business model choices), planning strategic initiatives (annual planning, OKRs, roadmaps), evaluating competitive positioning (moats, sustainable advantages, differentiation vs cost leadership), or when user mentions "strategy", "competitive analysis", "Porter's 5 Forces", "SWOT", "market positioning", "strategic planning", "competitive landscape", or "strategic frameworks".
Write structured strategic documents for small and medium businesses. Produces SWOT analyses, lean business plans, OKRs, and competitive analyses. Each mode has a defined structure and quality bar. Use when a business needs to articulate strategy, set goals, analyse competition, or plan for growth. Outputs actionable documents, not generic frameworks.
The meta-framework for how a company runs -- the connective tissue between all C-suite roles. Covers operating system selection (EOS, Scaling Up, OKR-native, hybrid), accountability charts, scorecards, meeting pulse design, issue resolution (IDS), 90-day rocks, and communication cadence. Use when setting up company operations, selecting a management framework, designing meeting rhythms, building accountability systems, implementing OKRs, or when user mentions EOS, Scaling Up, operating system, L10 meetings, rocks, scorecard, accountability chart, quarterly planning, or meeting cadence.
Set aligned, measurable OKRs/goals and produce an OKR & Goals Pack (objectives, key results, anti-gaming guardrails, systems/habits, review cadence, grading plan).
Use when asked to "set OKRs", "objectives and key results", "quarterly OKR planning", "align objectives", "measure OKR progress", or "focus priorities with OKRs". Helps teams focus on what matters most and create a cadence of progress. The OKR framework (originated by Andy Grove at Intel, popularized by John Doerr at Google) creates alignment, focus, and learning cycles. Christina Wodtke's Radical Focus approach emphasizes simplicity and avoiding common pitfalls.
Use when content must be translated between audiences with different expertise, context, or goals while preserving accuracy but adapting presentation. Invoke when technical content needs business framing (engineering decisions → executive summary), strategic vision needs tactical translation (board presentation → team OKRs), expert knowledge needs simplification (academic paper → blog post, medical diagnosis → patient explanation), formal content needs casual tone (annual report → social media post), long-form needs summarization (50-page doc → 1-page brief), internal content needs external framing (roadmap → public updates, bug tracking → known issues), cross-cultural adaptation (US idioms → international clarity, Gen Z → Boomer messaging), medium shifts (written report → presentation script, detailed spec → action checklist), or when user mentions "explain to", "reframe for", "translate this for [audience]", "make this more [accessible/formal/technical]", "adapt for [executives/engineers/customers]", "simplify without losing accuracy", or "same content, different audience". Apply to technical communication (code → business value), organizational translation (strategy → execution), education (expert → novice), customer communication (internal → external), cross-cultural messaging, and anywhere same core message needs different presentation for different stakeholders while maintaining correctness.
Universal project planning for non-technical projects. Domains: business, personal, creative, academic, organizational, events. Capabilities: goal setting, milestone planning, resource allocation, timeline creation, risk assessment, progress tracking. Actions: create, plan, structure, breakdown, track projects. Keywords: project plan, roadmap, strategy, goal setting, milestones, timeline, action plan, project management, business plan, personal goals, creative project, academic planning, event planning, organizational change, OKRs, SMART goals, Gantt chart. Use when: creating project plans, setting goals/milestones, planning business initiatives, organizing events, structuring academic work, developing strategies/roadmaps.
Brainstorm team-level OKRs aligned with company objectives — qualitative objectives with measurable key results. Use when setting quarterly OKRs, aligning team goals with company strategy, drafting objectives, or learning how to write effective OKRs.
Analytics de produto — PostHog, Mixpanel, eventos, funnels, cohorts, retencao, north star metric, OKRs e dashboards de produto.