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coreyhaines31/product-marketing

coreyhaines31

product-marketing

When the user wants to create or update their product marketing context document. Also use when the user mentions 'product context,' 'marketing context,' 'set up context,' 'positioning,' 'who is my target audience,' 'describe my product,' 'ICP,' 'ideal customer profile,' or wants to avoid repeating foundational information across marketing tasks. Use this at the start of any new project before using other marketing skills — it creates `.agents/product-marketing.md` that all other skills reference for product, audience, and positioning context.

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Product Marketing Context

You help users create and maintain a product marketing context document. This captures foundational positioning and messaging information that other marketing skills reference, so users don't repeat themselves.

The document is stored at .agents/product-marketing.md.

Workflow

Step 1: Check for Existing Context

First, check if .agents/product-marketing.md already exists. Also check .claude/product-marketing.md and the legacy filename product-marketing-context.md (in either .agents/ or .claude/) for older setups — if found anywhere other than .agents/product-marketing.md, offer to move it to the canonical location.

If it exists:

  • Read it and summarize what's captured
  • Ask which sections they want to update
  • Only gather info for those sections

If it doesn't exist, offer two options:

  1. Auto-draft from codebase (recommended): You'll study the repo—README, landing pages, marketing copy, package.json, etc.—and draft a V1 of the context document. The user then reviews, corrects, and fills gaps. This is faster than starting from scratch.

  2. Start from scratch: Walk through each section conversationally, gathering info one section at a time.

Most users prefer option 1. After presenting the draft, ask: "What needs correcting? What's missing?"

Step 2: Gather Information

If auto-drafting:

  1. Read the codebase: README, landing pages, marketing copy, about pages, meta descriptions, package.json, any existing docs
  2. Draft all sections based on what you find
  3. Present the draft and ask what needs correcting or is missing
  4. Iterate until the user is satisfied

If starting from scratch: Walk through each section below conversationally, one at a time. Don't dump all questions at once.

For each section:

  1. Briefly explain what you're capturing
  2. Ask relevant questions
  3. Confirm accuracy
  4. Move to the next

Push for verbatim customer language — exact phrases are more valuable than polished descriptions because they reflect how customers actually think and speak, which makes copy more resonant.


Sections to Capture

1. Product Overview

  • One-line description
  • What it does (2-3 sentences)
  • Product category (what "shelf" you sit on—how customers search for you)
  • Product type (SaaS, marketplace, e-commerce, service, etc.)
  • Business model and pricing

2. Target Audience

  • Target company type (industry, size, stage)
  • Target decision-makers (roles, departments)
  • Primary use case (the main problem you solve)
  • Jobs to be done (2-3 things customers "hire" you for)
  • Specific use cases or scenarios

3. Personas (B2B only)

If multiple stakeholders are involved in buying, capture for each:

  • User, Champion, Decision Maker, Financial Buyer, Technical Influencer
  • What each cares about, their challenge, and the value you promise them

4. Problems & Pain Points

  • Core challenge customers face before finding you
  • Why current solutions fall short
  • What it costs them (time, money, opportunities)
  • Emotional tension (stress, fear, doubt)

5. Competitive Landscape

  • Direct competitors: Same solution, same problem (e.g., Calendly vs SavvyCal)
  • Secondary competitors: Different solution, same problem (e.g., Calendly vs Superhuman scheduling)
  • Indirect competitors: Conflicting approach (e.g., Calendly vs personal assistant)
  • How each falls short for customers

6. Differentiation

  • Key differentiators (capabilities alternatives lack)
  • How you solve it differently
  • Why that's better (benefits)
  • Why customers choose you over alternatives

7. Objections & Anti-Personas

  • Top 3 objections heard in sales and how to address them
  • Who is NOT a good fit (anti-persona)

8. Switching Dynamics

The JTBD Four Forces:

  • Push: What frustrations drive them away from current solution
  • Pull: What attracts them to you
  • Habit: What keeps them stuck with current approach
  • Anxiety: What worries them about switching

9. Customer Language

  • How customers describe the problem (verbatim)
  • How they describe your solution (verbatim)
  • Words/phrases to use
  • Words/phrases to avoid
  • Glossary of product-specific terms

10. Brand Voice

  • Tone (professional, casual, playful, etc.)
  • Communication style (direct, conversational, technical)
  • Brand personality (3-5 adjectives)

11. Proof Points

  • Key metrics or results to cite
  • Notable customers/logos
  • Testimonial snippets
  • Main value themes and supporting evidence

12. Goals

  • Primary business goal
  • Key conversion action (what you want people to do)
  • Current metrics (if known)

Step 3: Create the Document

After gathering information, create .agents/product-marketing.md with this structure:

# Product Marketing Context

*Last updated: [date]*

## Product Overview
**One-liner:**
**What it does:**
**Product category:**
**Product type:**
**Business model:**

## Target Audience
**Target companies:**
**Decision-makers:**
**Primary use case:**
**Jobs to be done:**
-
**Use cases:**
-

## Personas
| Persona | Cares about | Challenge | Value we promise |
|---------|-------------|-----------|------------------|
| | | | |

## Problems & Pain Points
**Core problem:**
**Why alternatives fall short:**
-
**What it costs them:**
**Emotional tension:**

## Competitive Landscape
**Direct:** [Competitor] — falls short because...
**Secondary:** [Approach] — falls short because...
**Indirect:** [Alternative] — falls short because...

## Differentiation
**Key differentiators:**
-
**How we do it differently:**
**Why that's better:**
**Why customers choose us:**

## Objections
| Objection | Response |
|-----------|----------|
| | |

**Anti-persona:**

## Switching Dynamics
**Push:**
**Pull:**
**Habit:**
**Anxiety:**

## Customer Language
**How they describe the problem:**
- "[verbatim]"
**How they describe us:**
- "[verbatim]"
**Words to use:**
**Words to avoid:**
**Glossary:**
| Term | Meaning |
|------|---------|
| | |

## Brand Voice
**Tone:**
**Style:**
**Personality:**

## Proof Points
**Metrics:**
**Customers:**
**Testimonials:**
> "[quote]" — [who]
**Value themes:**
| Theme | Proof |
|-------|-------|
| | |

## Goals
**Business goal:**
**Conversion action:**
**Current metrics:**

Step 4: Confirm and Save

  • Show the completed document
  • Ask if anything needs adjustment
  • Save to .agents/product-marketing.md
  • Tell them: "Other marketing skills will now use this context automatically. Run /product-marketing anytime to update it."

Tips

  • Be specific: Ask "What's the #1 frustration that brings them to you?" not "What problem do they solve?"
  • Capture exact words: Customer language beats polished descriptions
  • Ask for examples: "Can you give me an example?" unlocks better answers
  • Validate as you go: Summarize each section and confirm before moving on
  • Skip what doesn't apply: Not every product needs all sections (e.g., Personas for B2C)
Files2
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Overall Score

87/100

Grade

A

Excellent

Safety

92

Quality

85

Clarity

88

Completeness

82

Summary

This skill guides users to create and maintain a `.agents/product-marketing.md` document that captures foundational product positioning, audience, and messaging information. It offers two workflows: auto-drafting from existing codebase materials (README, landing pages, marketing copy) or walking through sections conversationally. The document serves as shared context referenced by other marketing skills, eliminating repetition across marketing tasks.

Detected Capabilities

file read (README, landing pages, marketing copy, package.json)file write (.agents/product-marketing.md)conversational information gatheringcodebase scanning and analysisdocument templating and formatting

Trigger Keywords

Phrases that MCP clients use to match this skill to user intent.

product context setupmarketing positioningtarget audience definitionproduct marketing documentICP ideal customer profilebrand positioningcustomer persona creationproduct messaging foundation

Use Cases

  • Create product marketing context document for new projects
  • Update existing product marketing context when strategy changes
  • Establish shared reference for other marketing skills (copywriting, SEO, CRO)
  • Capture target audience, personas, and competitive positioning
  • Document customer language and brand voice for consistent messaging
  • Organize positioning information for early-stage startups or established products

Quality Notes

  • Skill provides two clear, distinct workflows (auto-draft vs conversational) with user choice upfront
  • Handles file migration gracefully (checks legacy locations .claude/ and product-marketing-context.md, offers to move to canonical .agents/product-marketing.md)
  • Well-structured sections with clear rationale (12 comprehensive sections covering product, audience, positioning, objections, brand voice)
  • Practical guidance on information gathering: pushes for verbatim customer language over polished descriptions
  • Comprehensive template provided with markdown structure for consistent output
  • Evals are thorough and test key workflows: new context creation, updates, B2C variants, auto-drafting, checking existing context, and boundary detection (copywriting vs context creation)
  • Tips section gives actionable advice: be specific with questions, capture exact words, ask for examples
  • Skill acknowledges that not all sections apply to all products (B2B vs B2C, early-stage vs mature) and provides guidance on skipping non-applicable sections
  • Instructions for Step 1 (Check for Existing Context) are clear about file locations and migration
  • Step 2 offers good conversational guardrails: don't dump all questions at once, explain each section briefly before asking, confirm accuracy incrementally
Model: claude-haiku-4-5-20251001Analyzed: May 15, 2026

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