Product Strategy

Added March 10, 2026 Source: Pawel Huryn

Map out a complete product strategy with the 9-section Product Strategy Canvas. This skill helps define your product’s vision, target segments, value propositions, and growth plan. It’s great for outlining how your product will compete and win.

Installation

This skill is self-contained. Copy the SKILL.md below directly into your project to get started.

.claude/skills/product-strategy/SKILL.md    # Claude Code
.cursor/skills/product-strategy/SKILL.md    # Cursor

Or install as a personal skill (available across all your projects):

~/.claude/skills/product-strategy/SKILL.md

You can also install using the skills CLI:

npx skills add phuryn/pm-skills --skill product-strategy

Requires Node.js 18+.

SKILL.md

---
name: product-strategy
description: "Create a comprehensive product strategy using the 9-section Product Strategy Canvas — vision, segments, costs, value propositions, trade-offs, metrics, growth, capabilities, and defensibility. Use when building a product strategy, creating a strategic plan, or defining product direction."
---
# Product Strategy Canvas

## Metadata
- **Name**: product-strategy
- **Description**: Generate a comprehensive product strategy using the 9-section Product Strategy Canvas. Covers vision, market segments, costs, value propositions, trade-offs, metrics, growth, capabilities, and defensibility.
- **Triggers**: product strategy, strategy canvas, strategic plan, product strategy document

## Instructions

You are an experienced product strategist developing a comprehensive product strategy for $ARGUMENTS.

Your task is to create a detailed Product Strategy Canvas that outlines how the product will compete, win, and grow in the market.

## Input Requirements
- Product description and current positioning
- Market context, competitors, and customer insights
- Company resources, constraints, and priorities
- Any relevant business or market data

## Product Strategy Canvas Template

### 1. Vision
- How can we inspire people?
- What are we aspiring to achieve?
- What values do we uphold?

### 2. Market Segments
- Market defined by people's problems (not demographics)
- Jobs to Be Done (JTBD), desired outcomes, constraints
- Who is our first segment?
- Why this segment first?

### 3. Relative Costs
- Do we optimize for low cost (like Southwest Airlines)?
- Or do we emphasize unique value (like Starbucks)?
- What's our cost position relative to competitors?

### 4. Value Proposition
For each target segment:
- **What before**: The customer's current situation, pain, or need
- **How**: How your product delivers the solution
- **What after**: The improved outcome or future state
- **Alternatives**: What customers use today instead

### 5. Trade-offs
- What will we NOT do?
- What features or markets are out of scope?
- How does saying "no" create focus and amplify our value?

### 6. Key Metrics
- **North Star Metric**: Single metric that drives overall business success
- **OMTM (One Metric That Matters)**: The one metric we optimize for this quarter

### 7. Growth
- Sales-Led Growth or Product-Led Growth?
- Primary acquisition channels
- How do we scale?
- What's our unit economics?

### 8. Capabilities
- What competencies and resources do we need?
- What do we build vs. partner for?
- What capabilities must we develop to win?

### 9. Can't/Won't
- Why can't competitors easily copy this?
- What defensibility do we have (network effects, switching costs, IP)?
- What barriers to entry exist for new competitors?

## Output Process
1. Define the vision and aspirational impact
2. Identify 2-3 target market segments with their JTBD
3. Establish cost positioning (low cost vs. premium value)
4. Develop value propositions for each segment
5. List explicit trade-offs (what we won't do)
6. Set North Star and quarterly OMTM
7. Outline growth strategy and channels
8. Document required capabilities and partnerships
9. Explain defensibility and barriers to competition
10. Validate strategy coherence: ensure elements reinforce each other
11. Surface critical hypotheses that must be true for success
12. Suggest low-effort experiments to test key assumptions

## Notes
- Ensure all 9 elements fit together logically
- Identify what must be true for this strategy to work (hypotheses)
- Propose validation experiments with minimal effort
- Strategy guides decisions; clarity enables faster execution
- Revisit quarterly as market conditions change

---

### Templates

- [Product Strategy Canvas (PPTX)](https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1xRBqSOISvAKzwM_z5tC8fiuO5O2YhboB/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=111307342557889008106&rtpof=true&sd=true)

---

### Further Reading

- [Product Strategy Canvas: From Vision to Action](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/product-strategy-canvas)
- [Product Strategy Examples: Google Maps, Netflix, OpenAI](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/product-strategy-examples)
- [Product Vision vs Strategy vs Objectives vs Roadmap: The Advanced Edition](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/product-vision-strategy-goals-and)
- [Product Model First Principles: Product Team and Product Strategy In Depth](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/product-model-first-principles-transformed-cagan)
- [Introducing the Product Strategy Canvas](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/new-product-strategy-canvas)
- [Business Outcomes vs Product Outcomes vs Customer Outcomes](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/business-outcomes-vs-product-outcomes)
- [From Strategy to Objectives Masterclass](https://www.productcompass.pm/p/product-vision-strategy-objectives-course) (video course)

Originally by Pawel Huryn, adapted here as an Agent Skills compatible SKILL.md.

This skill follows the Agent Skills open standard, supported by Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, Gemini CLI, and 20+ more editors.

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