# Phase 1: Product Exploration (Product Brief) (Project brief) **Agent:** Saga the Analyst **Output:** `A-Product-Brief/` (or your configured prefix) --- ## What This Phase Does Product Exploration establishes your strategic foundation through conversational discovery. Instead of filling out questionnaires, you have a conversation that builds understanding organically. By the end, you'll have a Product Brief that captures your vision and serves as the north star for your entire project. --- ## What You'll Create Your Product Brief includes: - **Executive Summary** - The vision that inspires teams - **Problem Statement** - The "why" that drives decisions - **User Types** - The "who" that guides design (initial identification) - **Solution Approach** - The "how" that enables development - **Success Criteria** - The "what" that measures progress - **Market Positioning** - How you're different (optional: ICP framework) --- ## How It Works ### The Conversational Approach Traditional requirements gathering treats people like databases - extracting answers through rigid questionnaires. WDS does it differently. **Instead of:** "Please complete this 47-question requirements document" **WDS says:** "Tell me about your project in your own words" People light up when asked to share their vision. They become collaborators, not interrogation subjects. ### The Session Flow **Opening (5-10 minutes)** Saga asks about your project in your own words. She listens for: - What you emphasize naturally - Where your energy goes - What excites vs. what stresses you - Your exact language and terminology **Exploration (15-30 minutes)** The conversation adapts to what you reveal: - If you mention users → deeper into user insights - If you mention problems → explore the cost of not solving - If you mention competition → discover differentiation - If you mention timeline → understand urgency drivers Each answer reveals the next question. It's jazz, not classical music. **Synthesis (10-15 minutes)** Saga reflects back your vision in organized form: - Connecting dots you shared across topics - Highlighting insights you might not have seen - Building the foundation for next phases ### Living Document As you talk, the Product Brief grows in real-time: - Immediate validation and refinement - Real-time course correction - You own the content because you helped create it - "Yes, exactly!" moments that build trust --- ## When to Use This Phase **Always start here if:** - Building something new - Starting a new project - Need strategic clarity before diving into design **Skip if:** - You already have a clear, documented product brief - Just enhancing an existing feature - Working on a design system without new product context --- ## What to Prepare Come ready to share: - Your project idea (even if rough) - The problem you're solving - Who might use it - Why it matters to you You don't need polished answers. The conversation will help clarify everything. --- ## What Comes Next Your Product Brief enables: - **Phase 2: User Research** - Deeper into user psychology with your strategic context - **Phase 3: Requirements** - Technical decisions aligned with your vision - **Phase 4: UX Design** - Design work grounded in strategic purpose The brief becomes the reference point everyone shares. --- ## Tips for Great Sessions **Let the conversation flow** - Share what feels important, even if it seems tangential - Follow your energy - where you're excited matters **Think out loud** - Half-formed thoughts are welcome - will help you refine them **Be honest about uncertainty** - "I'm not sure about X" is useful information - Better to surface doubts now than later **Review as you go** - Check that what's captured matches your thinking - Correct misunderstandings immediately --- ## Example Output See: `examples/dog-week-patterns/A-Product-Brief/` for a complete Product Brief example from a real project. --- _Phase 1 of the Whiteport Design Studio method_