# Step 4: Desired Emotional Response
## MANDATORY EXECUTION RULES (READ FIRST):
- 🛑 NEVER generate content without user input
- 📖 CRITICAL: ALWAYS read the complete step file before taking any action - partial understanding leads to incomplete decisions
- 🔄 CRITICAL: When loading next step with 'C', ensure the entire file is read and understood before proceeding
- ✅ ALWAYS treat this as collaborative discovery between UX facilitator and stakeholder
- 📋 YOU ARE A UX FACILITATOR, not a content generator
- 💬 FOCUS on defining desired emotional responses and user feelings
- 🎯 COLLABORATIVE discovery, not assumption-based design
- ✅ YOU MUST ALWAYS SPEAK OUTPUT In your Agent communication style with the config `{communication_language}`
## EXECUTION PROTOCOLS:
- 🎯 Show your analysis before taking any action
- ⚠️ Present A/P/C menu after generating emotional response content
- 💾 ONLY save when user chooses C (Continue)
- 📖 Update output file frontmatter, adding this step to the end of the list of stepsCompleted.
- 🚫 FORBIDDEN to load next step until C is selected
## COLLABORATION MENUS (A/P/C):
This step will generate content and present choices:
- **A (Advanced Elicitation)**: Use discovery protocols to develop deeper emotional insights
- **P (Party Mode)**: Bring multiple perspectives to define optimal emotional responses
- **C (Continue)**: Save the content to the document and proceed to next step
## PROTOCOL INTEGRATION:
- When 'A' selected: Read fully and follow: {project-root}/_bmad/core/workflows/advanced-elicitation/workflow.xml
- When 'P' selected: Read fully and follow: {project-root}/_bmad/core/workflows/party-mode/workflow.md
- PROTOCOLS always return to this step's A/P/C menu
- User accepts/rejects protocol changes before proceeding
## CONTEXT BOUNDARIES:
- Current document and frontmatter from previous steps are available
- Core experience definition from step 3 informs emotional response
- No additional data files needed for this step
- Focus on user feelings and emotional design goals
## YOUR TASK:
Define the desired emotional responses users should feel when using the product.
## EMOTIONAL RESPONSE DISCOVERY SEQUENCE:
### 1. Explore Core Emotional Goals
Start by understanding the emotional objectives:
Now let's think about how {{project_name}} should make users feel.
**Emotional Response Questions:**
- What should users FEEL when using this product?
- What emotion would make them tell a friend about this?
- How should users feel after accomplishing their primary goal?
- What feeling differentiates this from competitors?
Common emotional goals: Empowered and in control? Delighted and surprised? Efficient and productive? Creative and inspired? Calm and focused? Connected and engaged?
### 2. Identify Emotional Journey Mapping
Explore feelings at different stages:
**Emotional Journey Considerations:**
- How should users feel when they first discover the product?
- What emotion during the core experience/action?
- How should they feel after completing their task?
- What if something goes wrong - what emotional response do we want?
- How should they feel when returning to use it again?
### 3. Define Micro-Emotions
Surface subtle but important emotional states:
**Micro-Emotions to Consider:**
- Confidence vs. Confusion
- Trust vs. Skepticism
- Excitement vs. Anxiety
- Accomplishment vs. Frustration
- Delight vs. Satisfaction
- Belonging vs. Isolation
Which of these emotional states are most critical for your product's success?
### 4. Connect Emotions to UX Decisions
Link feelings to design implications:
**Design Implications:**
- If we want users to feel [emotional state], what UX choices support this?
- What interactions might create negative emotions we want to avoid?
- Where can we add moments of delight or surprise?
- How do we build trust and confidence through design?
**Emotion-Design Connections:**
- [Emotion 1] → [UX design approach]
- [Emotion 2] → [UX design approach]
- [Emotion 3] → [UX design approach]
### 5. Validate Emotional Goals
Check if emotional goals align with product vision:
Let me make sure I understand the emotional vision for {{project_name}}:
**Primary Emotional Goal:** [Summarize main emotional response]
**Secondary Feelings:** [List supporting emotional states]
**Emotions to Avoid:** [List negative emotions to prevent]
Does this capture the emotional experience you want to create? Any adjustments needed?
### 6. Generate Emotional Response Content
Prepare the content to append to the document:
#### Content Structure:
When saving to document, append these Level 2 and Level 3 sections:
```markdown
## Desired Emotional Response
### Primary Emotional Goals
[Primary emotional goals based on conversation]
### Emotional Journey Mapping
[Emotional journey mapping based on conversation]
### Micro-Emotions
[Micro-emotions identified based on conversation]
### Design Implications
[UX design implications for emotional responses based on conversation]
### Emotional Design Principles
[Guiding principles for emotional design based on conversation]
```
### 7. Present Content and Menu
Show the generated emotional response content and present choices:
I've defined the desired emotional responses for {{project_name}}. These emotional goals will guide our design decisions to create the right user experience.
**Here's what I'll add to the document:**
[Show the complete markdown content from step 6]
**What would you like to do?**
[A] Advanced Elicitation - Let's refine the emotional response definition
[P] Party Mode - Bring different perspectives on user emotional needs
[C] Continue - Save this to the document and move to inspiration analysis
### 8. Handle Menu Selection
#### If 'A' (Advanced Elicitation):
- Read fully and follow: {project-root}/_bmad/core/workflows/advanced-elicitation/workflow.xml with the current emotional response content
- Process the enhanced emotional insights that come back
- Ask user: "Accept these improvements to the emotional response definition? (y/n)"
- If yes: Update content with improvements, then return to A/P/C menu
- If no: Keep original content, then return to A/P/C menu
#### If 'P' (Party Mode):
- Read fully and follow: {project-root}/_bmad/core/workflows/party-mode/workflow.md with the current emotional response definition
- Process the collaborative emotional insights that come back
- Ask user: "Accept these changes to the emotional response definition? (y/n)"
- If yes: Update content with improvements, then return to A/P/C menu
- If no: Keep original content, then return to A/P/C menu
#### If 'C' (Continue):
- Append the final content to `{planning_artifacts}/ux-design-specification.md`
- Update frontmatter: append step to end of stepsCompleted array
- Load `./step-05-inspiration.md`
## APPEND TO DOCUMENT:
When user selects 'C', append the content directly to the document using the structure from step 6.
## SUCCESS METRICS:
✅ Primary emotional goals clearly defined
✅ Emotional journey mapped across user experience
✅ Micro-emotions identified and addressed
✅ Design implications connected to emotional responses
✅ Emotional design principles established
✅ A/P/C menu presented and handled correctly
✅ Content properly appended to document when C selected
## FAILURE MODES:
❌ Missing core emotional goals or being too generic
❌ Not considering emotional journey across different stages
❌ Overlooking micro-emotions that impact user satisfaction
❌ Not connecting emotional goals to specific UX design choices
❌ Emotional principles too vague or not actionable
❌ Not presenting A/P/C menu after content generation
❌ Appending content without user selecting 'C'
❌ **CRITICAL**: Reading only partial step file - leads to incomplete understanding and poor decisions
❌ **CRITICAL**: Proceeding with 'C' without fully reading and understanding the next step file
❌ **CRITICAL**: Making decisions without complete understanding of step requirements and protocols
## NEXT STEP:
After user selects 'C' and content is saved to document, load `./step-05-inspiration.md` to analyze UX patterns from inspiring products.
Remember: Do NOT proceed to step-05 until user explicitly selects 'C' from the A/P/C menu and content is saved!