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Found 7 Skills
Write effective user stories that capture requirements from the user's perspective. Create clear stories with detailed acceptance criteria to guide development and define done.
Master requirements gathering, user story writing, acceptance criteria definition, and scope management. Transform insights into clear, actionable specifications.
Use when an agent needs to write user stories for a project
Max - Senior Product Owner with 10+ years agile experience. Use when defining product vision, creating/prioritizing backlog, writing user stories with acceptance criteria, making scope decisions, validating features against business goals, or planning releases and sprints. Also responds to 'Max' or /max command.
Draft or update requirement documents under `easysdd/requirements/` for the project — describe a capability's "reason for existence, solution approach, and boundaries" using **user stories + plain language**, so non-technical readers can quickly grasp the key highlights of the system. Layered with architecture: requirement is the "problem space" (why this capability is needed), while architecture is the "solution space" (what structure is used to implement it). Two modes: new (draft a new requirement doc from scratch), update (refresh an existing doc based on new materials or implementation changes). Single-target rule — only modify one document at a time. Trigger scenarios: when the user says "fill in a requirement doc", "write down the requirements for this capability", "update the requirements directory", or when it is found during the feature-design phase that there is no corresponding requirement for the capability to be implemented this time.
Draft or update requirement documents under `codestable/requirements/` for the project — use **user stories + plain language** to describe a capability's "reason for existence, solution approach, and boundaries", so non-technical readers can quickly understand the highlights of the system. Layered with architecture: requirement is the "problem space" (why this capability is needed), while architecture is the "solution space" (what structure is used to implement it). Two modes: new (draft a new requirement doc from scratch), update (refresh an existing doc based on new materials or implementation changes). Single-target rule — only modify one document at a time. Trigger scenarios: the user says "fill in a requirement doc", "write down the requirements for this capability", "update the requirements directory", or during the feature-design phase, it is found that there is no corresponding requirement for the capability to be implemented this time.
사용자 관점에서 제품 요구사항을 정의할 때 INVEST 원칙을 따르는 포괄적인 유저스토리를 작성합니다.