| name | brainstorming |
| description | Use when creating or developing anything, before writing code or implementation plans - refines rough ideas into fully-formed designs through structured Socratic questioning, alternative exploration, and incremental validation |
Brainstorming Ideas Into Designs
Overview
Transform rough ideas into fully-formed designs through structured questioning and alternative exploration.
Core principle: Research first, ask targeted questions to fill gaps, explore alternatives, present design incrementally for validation.
Announce at start: "I'm using the brainstorming skill to refine your idea into a design."
Quick Reference
| Phase | Key Activities | Tool Usage | Output |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prep: Autonomous Recon | Inspect repo/docs/commits, form initial model | Native tools (ls, cat, git log, etc.) | Draft understanding to confirm |
| 1. Understanding | Share findings, ask only for missing context | AskUserQuestion for real decisions | Purpose, constraints, criteria (confirmed) |
| 2. Exploration | Propose 2-3 approaches | AskUserQuestion for approach selection | Architecture options with trade-offs |
| 3. Design Presentation | Present in 200-300 word sections | Open-ended questions | Complete design with validation |
| 4. Design Documentation | Write design document | writing-clearly-and-concisely skill | Design doc in docs/plans/ |
| 5. Worktree Setup | Set up isolated workspace | using-git-worktrees skill | Ready development environment |
| 6. Planning Handoff | Create implementation plan | writing-plans skill | Detailed task breakdown |
The Process
Copy this checklist to track progress:
Brainstorming Progress:
- [ ] Prep: Autonomous Recon (repo/docs/commits reviewed, initial model shared)
- [ ] Phase 1: Understanding (purpose, constraints, criteria gathered)
- [ ] Phase 2: Exploration (2-3 approaches proposed and evaluated)
- [ ] Phase 3: Design Presentation (design validated in sections)
- [ ] Phase 4: Design Documentation (design written to docs/plans/)
- [ ] Phase 5: Worktree Setup (if implementing)
- [ ] Phase 6: Planning Handoff (if implementing)
Prep: Autonomous Recon
MANDATORY evidence (paste ALL):
Recon Checklist:
□ Project structure:
$ ls -la
[PASTE OUTPUT]
□ Recent activity:
$ git log --oneline -10
[PASTE OUTPUT]
□ Documentation:
$ head -50 README.md
[PASTE OUTPUT]
□ Test coverage:
$ find . -name "*test*" -type f | wc -l
[PASTE OUTPUT]
□ Key frameworks/tools:
$ [Check package.json, requirements.txt, go.mod, etc.]
[PASTE RELEVANT SECTIONS]
Only after ALL evidence pasted: Form your model and share findings.
Skip any evidence = not following the skill
Question Budget
Maximum 3 questions per phase. More = insufficient research.
Question count:
- Phase 1: ___/3
- Phase 2: ___/3
- Phase 3: ___/3
Hit limit? Do research instead of asking.
Phase 1: Understanding
- Share your synthesized understanding first, then invite corrections or additions.
- Ask one focused question at a time, only for gaps you cannot close yourself.
- Use AskUserQuestion tool only when you need the human to make a decision among real alternatives.
- Gather: Purpose, constraints, success criteria (confirmed or amended by your partner)
Example summary + targeted question:
Based on the README and yesterday's commit, we're expanding localization to dashboard and billing emails; admin console is still untouched. Only gap I see is whether support responses need localization in this iteration. Did I miss anything important?
Phase Lock Rules
CRITICAL: Once you enter a phase, you CANNOT skip ahead.
- Asked a question? → WAIT for answer before solutions
- Proposed approaches? → WAIT for selection before design
- Started design? → COMPLETE before documentation
Violations:
- "While you consider that, here's my design..." → WRONG
- "I'll proceed with option 1 unless..." → WRONG
- "Moving forward with the assumption..." → WRONG
WAIT means WAIT. No assumptions.
Phase 2: Exploration
- Propose 2-3 different approaches
- For each: Core architecture, trade-offs, complexity assessment, and your recommendation
- Use AskUserQuestion tool to present approaches when you truly need a judgement call
- Lead with the option you prefer and explain why; invite disagreement if your partner sees it differently
- Own prioritization: if the repo makes priorities clear, state them and proceed rather than asking
Example using AskUserQuestion:
Question: "Which architectural approach should we use?"
Options:
- "Direct API calls with retry logic" (simple, synchronous, easier to debug) ← recommended for current scope
- "Event-driven with message queue" (scalable, complex setup, eventual consistency)
- "Hybrid with background jobs" (balanced, moderate complexity, best of both)
I recommend the direct API approach because it matches existing patterns and minimizes new infrastructure. Let me know if you see a blocker that pushes us toward the other options.
Phase 3: Design Presentation
- Present in coherent sections; use ~200-300 words when introducing new material, shorter summaries once alignment is obvious
- Cover: Architecture, components, data flow, error handling, testing
- Check in at natural breakpoints rather than after every paragraph: "Stop me if this diverges from what you expect."
- Use open-ended questions to allow freeform feedback
- Assume ownership and proceed unless your partner redirects you
Design Acceptance Gate:
Design is NOT approved until human EXPLICITLY says one of:
- "Approved" / "Looks good" / "Proceed"
- "Let's implement that" / "Ship it"
- "Yes" (in response to "Shall I proceed?")
These do NOT mean approval:
- Silence / No response
- "Interesting" / "I see" / "Hmm"
- Questions about the design
- "What about X?" (that's requesting changes)
No explicit approval = keep refining
Phase 4: Design Documentation
After validating the design, write it to a permanent document:
- File location:
docs/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-design.md(use actual date and descriptive topic) - RECOMMENDED SUB-SKILL: Use elements-of-style:writing-clearly-and-concisely (if available) for documentation quality
- Content: Capture the design as discussed and validated in Phase 3, organized into sections that emerged from the conversation
- Commit the design document to git before proceeding
Phase 5: Worktree Setup (for implementation)
When design is approved and implementation will follow:
- Announce: "I'm using the using-git-worktrees skill to set up an isolated workspace."
- REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use ring:using-git-worktrees
- Follow that skill's process for directory selection, safety verification, and setup
- Return here when worktree ready
Phase 6: Planning Handoff
Ask: "Ready to create the implementation plan?"
When your human partner confirms (any affirmative response):
- Announce: "I'm using the writing-plans skill to create the implementation plan."
- REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use ring:writing-plans
- Create detailed plan in the worktree
Question Patterns
When to Use AskUserQuestion Tool
Use AskUserQuestion when:
- You need your partner to make a judgement call among real alternatives
- You have a recommendation and can explain why it’s your preference
- Prioritization is ambiguous and cannot be inferred from existing materials
Best practices:
- State your preferred option and rationale inside the question so your partner can agree or redirect
- If you know the answer from repo/docs, state it as fact and proceed—no question needed
- When priorities are spelled out, acknowledge them and proceed rather than delegating the choice back to your partner
When to Use Open-Ended Questions
Use open-ended questions for:
- Phase 3: Design validation ("Does this look right so far?")
- When you need detailed feedback or explanation
- When partner should describe their own requirements
- When structured options would limit creative input
Frame them to confirm or expand your current understanding rather than reopening settled topics.
Example decision flow:
- "What authentication method?" → Use AskUserQuestion (2-4 options)
- "Does this design handle your use case?" → Open-ended (validation)
When to Revisit Earlier Phases
digraph revisit_phases {
rankdir=LR;
"New constraint revealed?" [shape=diamond];
"Partner questions approach?" [shape=diamond];
"Requirements unclear?" [shape=diamond];
"Return to Phase 1" [shape=box, style=filled, fillcolor="#ffcccc"];
"Return to Phase 2" [shape=box, style=filled, fillcolor="#ffffcc"];
"Continue forward" [shape=box, style=filled, fillcolor="#ccffcc"];
"New constraint revealed?" -> "Return to Phase 1" [label="yes"];
"New constraint revealed?" -> "Partner questions approach?" [label="no"];
"Partner questions approach?" -> "Return to Phase 2" [label="yes"];
"Partner questions approach?" -> "Requirements unclear?" [label="no"];
"Requirements unclear?" -> "Return to Phase 1" [label="yes"];
"Requirements unclear?" -> "Continue forward" [label="no"];
}
You can and should go backward when:
- Partner reveals new constraint during Phase 2 or 3 → Return to Phase 1
- Validation shows fundamental gap in requirements → Return to Phase 1
- Partner questions approach during Phase 3 → Return to Phase 2
- Something doesn't make sense → Go back and clarify
Avoid forcing forward linearly when going backward would give better results.
Required Patterns
This skill uses these universal patterns:
- State Tracking: See
skills/shared-patterns/state-tracking.md - Failure Recovery: See
skills/shared-patterns/failure-recovery.md - Exit Criteria: See
skills/shared-patterns/exit-criteria.md - TodoWrite: See
skills/shared-patterns/todowrite-integration.md
Apply ALL patterns when using this skill.
Key Principles
| Principle | Application |
|---|---|
| One question at a time | Phase 1: Single targeted question only for gaps you can’t close yourself |
| Structured choices | Use AskUserQuestion tool for 2-4 options with trade-offs |
| YAGNI ruthlessly | Remove unnecessary features from all designs |
| Explore alternatives | Always propose 2-3 approaches before settling |
| Incremental validation | Present design in sections, validate each |
| Flexible progression | Go backward when needed - flexibility > rigidity |
| Own the initiative | Recommend priorities and next steps; ask if you should proceed only when requirements conflict |
| Announce usage | State skill usage at start of session |