feature-prioritisation
Feature Prioritisation Skill
Apply the right prioritisation framework to any backlog and produce a clear, defensible ranking with rationale — not just a sorted list.
Required Inputs
Ask the user for these if not provided:
- List of features or initiatives to prioritise
- Goal or metric being prioritised against (OKR, launch, sprint)
- Preferred framework (or recommend based on context below)
- Team data: reach estimates, effort estimates, velocity (for RICE)
Framework Selection Guide
Ask the user which framework they prefer, or recommend based on context:
| Situation | Recommended Framework |
|---|---|
| Need a quick, data-driven score | RICE |
| Stakeholder alignment meeting | MoSCoW |
| Understanding customer delight vs expectations | Kano |
| Early-stage startup, fast decisions | ICE |
| Identifying underserved customer needs | Opportunity Scoring |
| Strategic portfolio decisions | Value vs Effort Matrix |
RICE Scoring
Formula: (Reach × Impact × Confidence) ÷ Effort
| Factor | Definition | Scale |
|---|---|---|
| Reach | Users impacted per quarter | Actual number |
| Impact | Effect on goal per user | 0.25 / 0.5 / 1 / 2 / 3 |
| Confidence | How certain are you? | 50% / 80% / 100% |
| Effort | Person-months required | Actual number |
Output table:
| Feature | Reach | Impact | Confidence | Effort | RICE Score | Priority |
|---|
MoSCoW Method
Categorise each feature as:
- Must Have — non-negotiable for launch/sprint; product fails without it
- Should Have — important but not critical; workarounds exist
- Could Have — nice to have; include only if time allows
- Won't Have (this time) — explicitly out of scope now; may revisit
Always ask: "Must have for what?" — define the scope (launch, sprint, quarter) before categorising.
ICE Scoring (Startup/fast mode)
Formula: Impact + Confidence + Ease (each 1–10)
Quick, subjective — good for early decisions before data exists.
Kano Model
Classify features into:
- Basic (Must-be): Expected; absence causes dissatisfaction
- Performance: More = better satisfaction; linear relationship
- Excitement (Delighters): Unexpected; creates delight; absence is neutral
- Indifferent: Users don't care either way
- Reverse: Some users want it, others don't
Recommend building: all Basic features first → Performance features for key use cases → 1–2 Excitement features per release.
Output Format
Feature Prioritisation — [Product/Team] — [Date]
Framework Used: [RICE / MoSCoW / ICE / Kano / Custom] Scope: [Sprint / Quarter / Release] Goal being prioritised against: [Metric or objective]
[Scored table using selected framework]
Recommended Build Order:
- [Feature] — [1-line rationale]
- [Feature] — [1-line rationale]
- ...
Explicitly Deprioritised:
- [Feature] — Reason: [brief]
Assumptions Made:
- [Any estimates or judgements used in scoring]
Guidelines
- Always anchor prioritisation to a specific goal or metric — never prioritise in a vacuum
- Flag when two features have similar scores but very different risk profiles
- If stakeholder politics are influencing prioritisation, name it explicitly and suggest separating the framework score from the final decision
- Recommend revisiting priorities every 2 weeks minimum
- Never produce a single-column ranked list without rationale — explain the top 3 and bottom 3 decisions
Quality Checks
- Every item is scored against the same goal or metric (not different goals per item)
- Deprioritised items are explicitly listed with reasons (not just absent from the ranked list)
- Assumptions used in scoring are documented
- Stakeholder politics or personal preferences are separated from framework score
- Prioritisation is anchored to a specific scope (sprint / quarter / launch)
More from mohitagw15856/pm-claude-skills
user-research-synthesis
Analyze and synthesize user research findings into structured, actionable insights. Use when given user research data, interview transcripts, survey results, or user feedback that needs to be analyzed and summarised. Produces a themed synthesis with prevalence data, supporting quotes, pain points analysis, feature request prioritisation, and recommended next steps.
26prd-template
Create a Product Requirements Document following proven PM template structure. Use when asked to write a PRD, product spec, feature specification, or requirements document for a new feature or product. Produces a complete PRD with problem statement, user stories, functional requirements, technical considerations, and success metrics.
20stakeholder-update
Create executive stakeholder updates following proven communication frameworks. Use when the user needs to create a status update, progress report, executive summary, or communication for leadership, stakeholders, or executives.
19competitive-analysis
Analyze competitors and create competitive landscape documentation with feature matrices, positioning maps, and strategic recommendations. Use when asked to analyze competitors, create competitive analysis, compare features with competitors, build a competitive landscape, track competitive positioning, or prepare sales battlecard inputs. Produces structured competitor profiles, feature comparison matrix, win/loss analysis, and prioritised strategic recommendations.
18meeting-notes
Structure and format meeting notes following PM best practices. Use when asked to create meeting notes, format discussion notes, capture action items, or document decisions from any meeting type. Produces structured notes with decisions, action items (owner + deadline), open questions, and next steps.
17executive-summary
Write an executive summary for any document, report, or proposal. Use when asked to write an executive summary, management summary, briefing paper, or one-pager for senior stakeholders. Produces a structured summary that busy executives can read in under 3 minutes and act on.
15