From innovation
Activate for: idea, brainstorm, ideate, 100 ideas, idea generation, idea sprint, new product idea, innovation sprint, what should I build, what problem should I solve, idea evaluation, idea scoring, idea shortlist, pressure test idea, devil's advocate, adjacent possible, contrarian ideas, analogy ideas, crazy ideas, how might we, HMW, pivot idea, new venture concept. NOT for: customer discovery or interview synthesis (use discovery), assumption mapping (use hypothesis), pitch deck (use pitch).
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/innovation:ideaThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Before executing, check for `innov.local.md` in the working directory.
Before executing, check for innov.local.md in the working directory.
If found, extract:
If innov.local.md is not found:
Continue with conversation context. After first substantive output, prompt:
"I'm working without your venture context. Run Exercise 8 from Chapter 40
to build innov.local.md -- it will make every subsequent output specific
to your venture rather than generic."
Check venture.stage and calibrate:
If venture.stage is IDEA and no discovery data exists in innov.local.md: "You are generating ideas before talking to customers. Ideas without customer evidence are guesses. Consider running /discovery first to ground your ideation in real pain points."
TYPE 1: 100-IDEA SPRINT Purpose: Generate maximum idea volume on a problem statement. Input: HMW problem statement + any constraints Output: 100 ideas across 10 categories (10 per category) Rule: No self-censorship -- generate all ideas including obvious and impossible
TYPE 2: SHORTLISTING Purpose: Filter 100 ideas to actionable shortlist using DVF framework. Input: Full idea list Filter: Desirability (would customers pay?), Viability (path to $10M+ revenue?), Feasibility (small team can build MVP in <3 months?) Output: Top 10 with one-sentence rationale per idea
TYPE 3: SINGLE-IDEA PRESSURE TEST Purpose: Stress-test one selected idea before committing to it. Input: One idea description Output: 5 strongest arguments against; what must be proven to overcome each
TYPE 4: PIVOT IDEATION Purpose: Generate alternative directions after a failed assumption. Input: What was invalidated; what we still know to be true Output: 5-10 pivot directions with rationale; which to explore first
TYPE 5: ANALOGICAL IDEATION Purpose: Apply successful models from other domains to your problem. Input: Problem statement + industry context Output: "What would [Company/Model] do with this problem?" x 10 analogies
IDEA SPRINT -- [Problem Statement]
================================================================
PRODUCT IDEAS (how the product could work):
1. [One sentence -- specific enough to imagine building it]
2-10. [Continue]
BUSINESS MODEL IDEAS (how it could make money differently):
11-20. [One sentence each]
DISTRIBUTION IDEAS (how customers find and buy it):
21-30. [One sentence each]
ANALOGY IDEAS (what worked for similar problems elsewhere):
31-40. [One sentence -- reference the model it draws from]
TECHNOLOGY IDEAS (how new tech could change the solution):
41-50. [One sentence -- name the specific technology]
CRAZY / 10X IDEAS (what would 10x better look like?):
51-60. [Permission to be unrealistic -- suspend disbelief]
BORING IDEAS (the most obvious thing):
61-70. [What the incumbent would build; what anyone would think of first]
CONTRARIAN IDEAS (the exact opposite of obvious):
71-80. [What happens if we invert the conventional assumption?]
PARTNERSHIP IDEAS (who could solve this together?):
81-90. [Name the partner type + what they bring]
INCUMBENT IDEAS (what the market leader would do if they noticed):
91-100. [How the biggest player in the space would respond]
================================================================
For each idea in the shortlist:
DESIRABILITY: Would customers pay for this today? HIGH: Clear willingness to pay; customer already spending on adjacent solution MEDIUM: Pain is real but payment behaviour not established LOW: Nice to have; customers tolerate the problem without urgency
VIABILITY: Could this become a $10M+ revenue business? HIGH: Clear path to scale; large addressable market; strong unit economics MEDIUM: Uncertain scale; niche market or unclear monetisation at volume LOW: Too small a market; unit economics problematic at scale
FEASIBILITY: Can a small team build an MVP in <3 months? HIGH: Core technology is available; team has or can access required skills MEDIUM: 3-6 month MVP; one significant technical risk LOW: Requires proprietary technology or hardware; > 6 months to test
STRONG idea has:
WEAK idea has:
Before shortlisting any idea, apply the "Why Now?" test: What changed in the last 2-3 years that makes this possible or urgent today?
Valid "Why Now?" reasons:
If you cannot answer "Why Now?": the idea may be fine but timing is unclear.
After any idea output that references or creates new assumptions:
ALL OUTPUTS REQUIRE REVIEW BY A QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL BEFORE USE IN BUSINESS DECISIONS.
npx claudepluginhub panaversity/agentfactory-business-plugins --plugin innovationGenerates 8-15 startup ideas from a theme or problem with gut-check ratings, top 3 picks, and validation steps. Use for exploring project spaces or expanding ideas.
Brainstorms product ideas, explores problem spaces, challenges assumptions, and stress-tests concepts as a PM thinking partner. Use for new opportunities, product problem-solving, or idea validation.
Structured divergent thinking session for product problems or opportunities using SCAMPER, 5-Whys, and cross-domain inspiration. Outputs ranked ideas with top-3 deep-dives.