oma-brainstorm
Brainstorm - Design-First Ideation
Scheduling
Goal
Explore user intent, constraints, and alternative approaches before planning or implementation, then preserve an approved design for downstream planning.
Intent signature
- User says they have an idea, want to brainstorm, compare approaches, explore concepts, or design before planning.
- Request is ambiguous enough that implementation or task planning would be premature.
When to use
- Exploring a new feature idea before planning
- Understanding user intent and constraints before committing to an approach
- Comparing multiple design approaches with trade-offs
- When the user says "I have an idea" or "let's design something"
- Before invoking
/planfor complex or ambiguous requests
When NOT to use
- Requirements are already clear and well-defined -> use pm-agent directly
- Implementing actual code -> delegate to specialized agents
- Performing code reviews -> use QA Agent
- Debugging existing issues -> use debug-agent
Expected inputs
- Early idea, ambiguous goal, product concept, design question, or set of constraints
- Existing project context when the idea must fit a codebase or product direction
- User preferences and approval gates
Expected outputs
- Clarified intent and constraints
- Two or three approaches with tradeoffs and a recommended option
- Section-by-section approved design document
- Saved design artifact before handoff to planning
Dependencies
- Shared context loading, reasoning templates, clarification protocol, quality principles, and skill routing
- Downstream PM workflow for task decomposition after design approval
Control-flow features
- Branches by ambiguity, user answers, approach comparison, and approval gates
- Asks one question at a time
- Stops before implementation or task planning
Structural Flow
Entry
- Confirm that the request is exploratory rather than ready for implementation.
- Load enough project context to understand constraints.
- Start with intent and constraints, not solutions.
Scenes
- PREPARE: Explore context and frame the design question.
- ACQUIRE: Ask clarifying questions one at a time.
- REASON: Generate two or three approaches with tradeoffs.
- VERIFY: Get user approval section by section.
- FINALIZE: Save design and transition to planning when appropriate.
Transitions
- If requirements become clear and implementation-ready, transition to PM planning.
- If user rejects an approach, revise before moving to detailed design.
- If implementation pressure appears early, defer it until design approval.
Failure and recovery
- If the user cannot answer a question, propose assumptions and ask for confirmation.
- If scope expands, split the design into smaller sections.
- If alternatives collapse into one option, identify the real constraint causing that.
Exit
- Success: approved design exists and is ready for planning.
- Partial success: open questions and assumptions are explicit.
Logical Operations
Actions
| Action | SSL primitive | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Read context and idea | READ |
User prompt and project context |
| Ask targeted questions | REQUEST |
Clarification phase |
| Compare approaches | COMPARE |
Tradeoff matrix |
| Infer recommendation | INFER |
Recommended option |
| Validate approval | VALIDATE |
Section-by-section confirmation |
| Write design artifact | WRITE |
docs/plans/designs/ and memory |
| Transition to plan | NOTIFY |
Handoff summary |
Tools and instruments
- Context loading, reasoning templates, clarification protocol
- Project memory and
docs/plans/designs/for persisted designs
Canonical workflow path
1. Ask one clarifying question at a time.
2. Present 2-3 approaches with tradeoffs and a recommended option.
3. Save the approved design to `docs/plans/designs/` before handing off to planning.
Resource scope
| Scope | Resource target |
|---|---|
MEMORY |
User intent, assumptions, decisions |
CODEBASE |
Existing project context when relevant |
LOCAL_FS |
Approved design artifacts |
Preconditions
- The user is still exploring or the request is ambiguous.
- The agent can ask clarifying questions before implementation.
Effects and side effects
- Produces design decisions and persisted design docs.
- Influences downstream planning but does not implement code.
Guardrails
- No implementation or planning before design approval - brainstorm produces a design document, not code or task plans
- One question at a time - ask clarifying questions sequentially, not in batches
- Always propose 2-3 approaches - include a recommended option with trade-off analysis
- Section-by-section design - present design incrementally with user confirmation at each step
- YAGNI - do not over-engineer; design only what is needed for the stated goal
- Save design, then transition - persist the approved design document before handing off to
/plan
Execution Phases
Follow the brainstorm workflow step by step:
- Phase 1 - Context: Explore the existing codebase and understand the project landscape
- Phase 2 - Questions: Ask clarifying questions one at a time to understand intent and constraints
- Phase 3 - Approaches: Propose 2-3 approaches with a recommended option and trade-off matrix
- Phase 4 - Design: Present the detailed design section by section, getting user approval at each step
- Phase 5 - Documentation: Save the approved design to
docs/plans/designs/and project memory - Phase 6 - Transition: Hand off to
/planfor task decomposition
Common Pitfalls
- Jumping to solutions: Asking "how" before fully understanding "what" and "why"
- Too many questions at once: Overwhelming the user with a wall of questions
- Single approach bias: Presenting only one option without alternatives
- Over-engineering: Designing for hypothetical future requirements instead of stated needs
- Skipping confirmation: Moving forward without explicit user approval on design decisions
References
Vendor-specific execution protocols are injected automatically by oma agent:spawn.
Source files live under ../_shared/runtime/execution-protocols/{vendor}.md.
- Context loading:
../_shared/core/context-loading.md - Reasoning templates:
../_shared/core/reasoning-templates.md - Clarification protocol:
../_shared/core/clarification-protocol.md - Quality principles:
../_shared/core/quality-principles.md - Skill-to-agent mapping:
../_shared/core/skill-routing.md
More from first-fluke/oh-my-ag
pm-agent
Product manager that decomposes requirements into actionable tasks with priorities and dependencies. Use for planning, requirements, specification, scope, prioritization, task breakdown, and ISO 21500, ISO 31000, or ISO 38500-aligned planning recommendations.
45orchestrator
Automated multi-agent orchestrator that spawns CLI subagents in parallel, coordinates via MCP Memory, and monitors progress. Use for orchestration, parallel execution, and automated multi-agent workflows.
44qa-agent
Quality assurance specialist for security, performance, accessibility, comprehensive testing, and quality standard alignment. Use for test, review, security audit, OWASP, coverage, lint work, and ISO/IEC 25010 or ISO/IEC 29119-aligned QA recommendations.
43multi-agent-workflow
Guide for coordinating PM, Frontend, Backend, Mobile, and QA agents on complex projects via CLI. Use for manual step-by-step coordination and workflow guidance.
43frontend-agent
Frontend specialist for React, Next.js, TypeScript with FSD-lite architecture, shadcn/ui, and design system alignment. Use for UI, component, page, layout, CSS, Tailwind, and shadcn work.
42mobile-agent
Mobile specialist for Flutter, React Native, and cross-platform mobile development. Use for mobile app, Flutter, Dart, iOS, Android, Riverpod, and widget work.
42