scoping-cutting
Help users scope projects and cut features effectively. Use when someone is defining an MVP, dealing with scope creep, trying to ship faster, or needs to make tradeoffs about what to build.
Find the perfect capability for your agent.
Help users scope projects and cut features effectively. Use when someone is defining an MVP, dealing with scope creep, trying to ship faster, or needs to make tradeoffs about what to build.
Help users ship products faster and with higher quality. Use when someone is planning a launch, struggling to release features, dealing with shipping velocity issues, or trying to establish better release practices.
Help users decide when and how to pivot their startup. Use when someone is questioning their current direction, seeing poor traction, considering a major strategy change, or stuck in the pre-PMF stage.
Help users design effective team rituals. Use when someone is building team culture, creating recurring team practices, trying to improve team communication, or establishing operational rhythms for their organization.
Help users communicate more effectively in writing. Use when someone is drafting memos, emails, strategy docs, announcements, or any written communication that needs to be clear, concise, and persuasive.
Help users craft compelling brand narratives. Use when someone is defining brand strategy, writing company positioning, creating pitch narratives, developing messaging frameworks, or trying to make their company story more memorable.
Help users build and grow product communities. Use when someone is starting a community, scaling an ambassador program, driving community-led growth, or choosing between user, developer, or partner communities.
Help users build relationships with journalists and get press coverage. Use when someone is pitching reporters, preparing for media outreach, trying to get press coverage, or managing ongoing journalist relationships.
Help users write effective job descriptions. Use when someone is creating a job posting, defining a new role, preparing to hire, or trying to attract the right candidates for an open position.
Help users build and scale design systems. Use when someone is creating a component library, establishing design tokens, scaling brand consistency, or deciding when to invest in a design system.
Reference guide for Wren Engine connection info — explains required fields for all 18 supported data sources (PostgreSQL, MySQL, BigQuery, Snowflake, ClickHouse, Trino, DuckDB, Databricks, Spark, Athena, Redshift, Oracle, SQL Server, Apache Doris, S3, GCS, MinIO, local files). Covers sensitive field handling, Docker host hints, and BigQuery credential encoding. Use when the user asks how to configure a data source connection or what fields to fill in.
Help users define AI product strategy. Use when someone is building an AI product, deciding where to apply AI in their product, planning an AI roadmap, evaluating build vs buy for AI capabilities, or figuring out how to integrate AI into existing products.
Help users build effective AI applications. Use when someone is building with LLMs, writing prompts, designing AI features, implementing RAG, creating agents, running evals, or trying to improve AI output quality.
Interact with Wren Engine MCP server via plain HTTP JSON-RPC requests — no MCP client SDK required. Covers session initialization, tool discovery, and calling all 20+ Wren tools (query, deploy, metadata, health check) using standard HTTP POST with JSON-RPC 2.0 payloads. Use when the client cannot or prefers not to use the MCP protocol directly (e.g. OpenClaw, custom HTTP clients, shell scripts, or any environment without an MCP SDK).
Generate a Wren MDL project by exploring a database with available tools (SQLAlchemy, database drivers, MCP connectors, or raw SQL). Guides agents through schema discovery, type normalization, and MDL YAML generation using the wren CLI. Use when: user wants to create or set up a new MDL, onboard a new data source, or scaffold a project from an existing database.
Help users build software using AI coding tools. Use when someone is using AI to generate code, building prototypes without deep technical skills, or exploring how non-engineers can create functional software through natural language.
Help users evaluate emerging technologies. Use when someone is assessing new tools, making build vs buy decisions, evaluating AI vendors, or deciding on technical architecture.
Help users write effective specs and design documents. Use when someone is creating technical specs, feature specs, design docs, or trying to communicate product requirements to engineering and design teams.
Help users navigate tough feedback, performance conversations, and conflict. Use when someone needs to give hard feedback, have a performance conversation, fire someone, address conflict with a colleague, or deliver disappointing news like a denied promotion.