/layers-orient
Assumes has been loaded for framework context.
Orient is a rapid diagnostic. It maps the current state of decisions across all seven layers, identifies the bottleneck — the lowest layer with unresolved or risky decisions — and recommends where to focus next.
It is not a deep dive into any layer. That's what the individual layer skills are for. Orient answers the prior question: which layer deserves attention most urgently?
What it assesses:
- Whether key decisions have been made at each layer, and how solidly
- Whether decisions treated as solid are actually assumptions
- Which layer is the most foundational with unresolved work, creating risk for everything above
Quality signals — when orient is done well:
- The bottleneck layer is specifically named, not vaguely gestured at
- Assumed layers are distinguished from Strong ones — they require different responses
- The recommendation connects to a specific skill with a clear reason
Guided session
Describe your design situation and what prompted you to pick it up, or say "let's orient" to start.
Ask:
"Where should I capture the work from this session?" (see
for options)
Then ask:
- What product or feature are you working on?
- What design challenge are you facing right now?
- How far along is this work — early exploration, active design, or fixing something in an existing product?
Listen for clues about which layers have already been worked through and which are thin or missing.
Layer audit
Work through each layer with one or two targeted questions. Rate each as:
Strong / Partial / Assumed / Weak / Not started / N/A
Observed behaviour
"What user research do you have? Have you spoken to users, observed them, or have analytics? Or is this mostly based on what the team believes users do?"
The domain
"How well do you understand the space this product operates in — the real-world concepts, terminology, and how users think before your product enters the picture?"
User needs
"Can you articulate what users are trying to achieve — not in features, but the underlying job and why it matters? Do you have job stories or equivalent?"
Product & service strategy
"Do you know which specific user need this work targets and what business outcome it's meant to move? Is the connection between opportunity and business goal explicit, or informal?"
Conceptual model
"Does the product have a clear model of the objects it works with — the things that exist, how they connect, and what vocabulary you use? Is this shared across the team, or does each person have their own version?"
Interaction structure and flow
"Do you have a clear picture of the key user journeys — places, steps, decision points? A breadboard, rough flow, working code, or a description you can narrate?"
Surface
"Is there an existing design system, visual language, or component library this needs to fit into?"
Decision landscape
Produce the audit as a table:
Layer | State | Notes
---------------------------|-------------|----------------------------------------
Observed behaviour | |
The domain | |
User needs | |
Product & service strategy | |
Conceptual model | |
Interaction structure | |
Surface | |
Bottleneck analysis
Identify the bottleneck layer: the lowest layer with Weak, Assumed, or Not started state. State it clearly: what decisions are missing, and what risk does that create for the layers above?
Also flag assumed layers — layers treated as decided but not verified. Assumptions that look solid are often where the most dangerous decisions hide.
If the designer has a deadline or constraint that changes the calculus, acknowledge it. Sometimes the right move isn't the most foundational one — name that tradeoff explicitly rather than ignoring it.
Recommendation
Recommend a specific skill to run next and why:
- Conceptual model →
- Product strategy →
- User needs →
- Domain →
- Interaction structure →
- Observed behaviour →
/layers-observed-behaviour
Close with: "Want to run [skill] now, or is there something in this picture to push back on first?"