| name | prescriptive-actions |
| description | Use when the user asks for recommendations, next steps, best approaches, or “what should I do” guidance to achieve a goal or fix a problem. |
| version | 1 |
Prescriptive Actions Skill
Purpose
Provide actionable guidance: recommended approaches, prioritized steps, options, and tradeoffs.
When to use
Use this skill when the user request is primarily:
- Recommend / advise / propose
- “What should I do?”
- Suggest next steps or an approach
- Diagnose + prescribe direction (but not a full plan)
Do NOT use if the user explicitly asks for:
- a roadmap or timeline (use planning-action)
- a runbook or checklist (use procedural-action)
- success criteria or tests (use validation-action)
Operating rules
- Restate the goal in one line.
- Recommend a primary approach.
- Provide alternatives when meaningful (A/B).
- Make tradeoffs explicit (cost, time, risk, complexity).
- Keep steps high-level and directional, not exhaustive.
- List assumptions clearly.
- Follow safety and legality constraints.
Outputs
Use this structure unless the user specifies otherwise:
Goal
- One sentence.
Recommended approach
- 3–6 high-level steps or principles (directional, not detailed).
Alternatives
- Option A: when to use it
- Option B: when to use it
Tradeoffs
- Cost / speed / risk / complexity notes
Key risks
- Major risks to watch (no mitigation plans unless asked)
Immediate next actions
- 2–5 concrete starting actions (not a full checklist)