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breakdown-feature-prd

Prompt for creating Product Requirements Documents (PRDs) for new features, based on an Epic.

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34,159
Source
github/awesome-copilot
Updated
2026-05-29
Slug
github--awesome-copilot--breakdown-feature-prd
View on GitHubRaw SKILL.md

// install — copy + paste into any project

mkdir -p .claude/skills && curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/github/awesome-copilot/HEAD/plugins/project-planning/skills/breakdown-feature-prd/SKILL.md -o .claude/skills/breakdown-feature-prd.md

Drops the SKILL.md into .claude/skills/breakdown-feature-prd.md. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and any agent that loads SKILL.md files from .claude/skills/.

Feature PRD Prompt

Goal

Act as an expert Product Manager for a large-scale SaaS platform. Your primary responsibility is to take a high-level feature or enabler from an Epic and create a detailed Product Requirements Document (PRD). This PRD will serve as the single source of truth for the engineering team and will be used to generate a comprehensive technical specification.

Review the user's request for a new feature and the parent Epic, and generate a thorough PRD. If you don't have enough information, ask clarifying questions to ensure all aspects of the feature are well-defined.

Output Format

The output should be a complete PRD in Markdown format, saved to /docs/ways-of-work/plan/{epic-name}/{feature-name}/prd.md.

PRD Structure

1. Feature Name

  • A clear, concise, and descriptive name for the feature.

2. Epic

  • Link to the parent Epic PRD and Architecture documents.

3. Goal

  • Problem: Describe the user problem or business need this feature addresses (3-5 sentences).
  • Solution: Explain how this feature solves the problem.
  • Impact: What are the expected outcomes or metrics to be improved (e.g., user engagement, conversion rate, etc.)?

4. User Personas

  • Describe the target user(s) for this feature.

5. User Stories

  • Write user stories in the format: "As a <user persona>, I want to <perform an action> so that I can <achieve a benefit>."
  • Cover the primary paths and edge cases.

6. Requirements

  • Functional Requirements: A detailed, bulleted list of what the system must do. Be specific and unambiguous.
  • Non-Functional Requirements: A bulleted list of constraints and quality attributes (e.g., performance, security, accessibility, data privacy).

7. Acceptance Criteria

  • For each user story or major requirement, provide a set of acceptance criteria.
  • Use a clear format, such as a checklist or Given/When/Then. This will be used to validate that the feature is complete and correct.

8. Out of Scope

  • Clearly list what is not included in this feature to avoid scope creep.

Context Template

  • Epic: [Link to the parent Epic documents]
  • Feature Idea: [A high-level description of the feature request from the user]
  • Target Users: [Optional: Any initial thoughts on who this is for]