Loading...
Loading...
Found 23 Skills
Define the structural layer of a product or site before visual design begins. Covers navigation, content hierarchy, page structure, URL patterns, and user flows. Use when user wants to plan site structure, define navigation, map user flows, organize content, or mentions "IA" or "information architecture".
Organize and structure information for clarity and discoverability. Design navigation systems, hierarchies, and mental models that match user needs.
Use when organizing content for digital products, designing navigation systems, restructuring information hierarchies, improving findability, creating taxonomies or metadata schemas, or when users mention information architecture, IA, sitemap, navigation design, content structure, card sorting, tree testing, taxonomy, findability, or need help making information discoverable and usable.
In large applications, information architecture determines whether users can find, understand, and act on data. Naming matters. The UI should mirror the data model and signal how data can be transformed. Dangerous or irreversible changes always require a confirm dialog. Use when designing navigation, naming entities, structuring large feature sets, or modelling data-driven UI.
Evaluate design effectiveness from a UX perspective. Assesses visual hierarchy, information architecture, emotional resonance, and overall design quality with actionable feedback.
Strip designs to their essence by removing unnecessary complexity. Great design is simple, powerful, and clean.
When the user wants to plan, map, or restructure their website's page hierarchy, navigation, URL structure, or internal linking. Also use when the user mentions "sitemap," "site map," "visual sitemap," "site structure," "page hierarchy," "information architecture," "IA," "navigation design," "URL structure," "breadcrumbs," "internal linking strategy," or "website planning." NOT for XML sitemaps (that's technical SEO — see seo-audit). For SEO audits, see seo-audit. For structured data, see schema-markup.
Low/high fidelity wireframes, user flows, information architecture, prototyping techniques, and design iteration processes
Create, refine, review, critique, or iterate on page briefings under `stardust/briefings/**/*.md` (including `_site.md`) — intent, audience, key messages, CTAs, tone, page copy (headlines, hero, section copy), imagery direction, plus site-level information architecture and multi-page content reuse maps. Sole source of truth for page copy. Independent of brand extraction: can be authored before or after `/stardust:brand`. Use when the user wants to plan pages, write briefings, define audience or CTAs, plan imagery, map shared sections across pages, when the user asks to change, refine, refactor, review, improve, polish, critique, or iterate on any file under `stardust/briefings/`, or whenever the user asks to modify a file under `stardust/briefings/**/*.md`.
Expert in documentation structure, cohesion, flow, audience targeting, and information architecture. Use PROACTIVELY for documentation quality issues, content organization, duplication, navigation problems, or readability concerns. Detects documentation anti-patterns and optimizes for user experience.
UX/UI design principles for clean, intuitive interfaces. Use when designing layouts, improving usability, planning information architecture, or ensuring accessibility. Triggers on "user experience", "usability", "information architecture", "accessibility", "interaction design".
UX design principles for creating intuitive, accessible, and user-centered digital experiences