roadmap-frameworks

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npx skills add https://github.com/slgoodrich/agents --skill roadmap-frameworks

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Skill 文档

Roadmap Frameworks

Frameworks for building, communicating, and managing product roadmaps that align teams, guide execution, and drive strategic outcomes.

What is a Roadmap?

A roadmap is a strategic communication tool that:

  • Shows WHERE you’re going (direction, themes)
  • Explains WHY you’re going there (strategy, rationale)
  • Indicates WHEN (roughly) you’ll get there (timeframes)
  • Communicates HOW you’ll get there (initiatives, bets)

NOT: A list of features with dates BUT: A strategic narrative about the future

Good roadmaps: Outcome-oriented, flexible, strategic, audience-appropriate, actionable

Bad roadmaps: Feature lists, hard dates, everything for everyone, disconnected from strategy, stale

When to Use This Skill

Auto-loaded by agents:

  • roadmap-builder – For Now-Next-Later, theme-based, and outcome roadmaps

Use when you need:

  • Quarterly/annual planning
  • Strategic clarity
  • Team coordination
  • Clear communication
  • Investment decisions
  • Customer/user communication

Roadmap Types

1. Now-Next-Later (Recommended for Most)

Structure: Three buckets without dates

NOW: What we’re working on right now (high confidence, active) NEXT: What we’ll likely do next (medium confidence, validated) LATER: What we’re exploring (low confidence, directional)

When to use: Maximum flexibility, minimal commitment, high uncertainty

Benefits:

  • No date commitments
  • Easy to adjust
  • Clear focus
  • Simple communication

Template: assets/now-next-later-template.md

Complete template with examples, confidence levels, updating guidance


2. Theme-Based

Structure: Strategic themes with grouped initiatives

Organize by themes (e.g., “Enterprise Readiness”, “Customer Experience”) rather than features.

When to use: Communicate strategic focus areas

Benefits:

  • Strategic clarity
  • Outcome-focused
  • Flexible within themes

3. Outcome-Based

Structure: Lead with results, not outputs

Focus on customer/business outcomes (e.g., “Reduce churn by 50%”) with flexible approaches.

When to use: Results-driven teams, goal-driven culture

Benefits:

  • Clear success criteria
  • Measurable
  • Team autonomy on “how”

Template: assets/outcome-roadmap-template.md

Includes outcome format, examples, comparison with feature roadmaps


4. Timeline

Structure: Initiatives plotted on calendar/quarters

Visual timeline showing sequencing and dependencies.

When to use: Internal planning only, complex dependencies

NOT for: External communication (creates date expectations)


Choosing the right type: See references/roadmap-types-guide.md for detailed comparison and selection criteria.


Roadmap by Audience

Different audiences need different roadmaps:

Executive Roadmap

Focus: Strategy, business outcomes, resource needs Format: Themes + outcomes, annual + quarterly Detail: Low (strategic)

Customer Roadmap

Focus: Value delivery, transparency Format: Now-Next-Later with problem framing Exclude: Internal work, hard dates

Sales Roadmap

Focus: Deal enablement, competitive positioning Guidance: “Commit to Now, position Next as likely, describe Later as exploring”

Engineering Roadmap

Focus: Execution, technical detail Format: Timeline with dependencies Detail: High (sprint-plannable)

Internal All-Hands

Focus: Company alignment, transparency Frequency: Quarterly updates

Comprehensive guide: references/roadmap-communication-guide.md

Includes communication tactics, update formats, anti-patterns


Building Your Roadmap

7-Step Process

Step 1: Establish Strategy (company goals, product strategy, market position)

Step 2: Gather Inputs (customer feedback, business priorities, technical needs, competitive intel)

Step 3: Prioritize (RICE, Impact/Effort, Strategic Fit)

Step 4: Define Themes (3-5 customer-centric, strategic themes)

Step 5: Sequence (dependencies, resources, timing, value delivery)

Step 6: Validate & Align (exec, engineering, sales/CS, customers)

Step 7: Communicate (audience-specific views, all-hands, documentation)

Detailed guide: references/roadmap-building-guide.md

Includes detailed steps, outputs, prioritization frameworks, maintenance cadence


Roadmap Narrative

Tell the story of your roadmap – where, why, how:

Structure:

  1. Vision (where we’re going)
  2. Strategy (why this roadmap)
  3. Prioritization approach (how we chose)
  4. What we’re building (Now, Next, Later)
  5. Trade-offs (what we’re NOT doing)
  6. Feedback process (how to influence)

Template: assets/roadmap-narrative-template.md


Roadmap Best Practices

DO:

  • Start with strategy (not features)
  • Use themes and outcomes (not feature lists)
  • Tailor to audience (exec, team, customer)
  • Show trade-offs (what you’re NOT doing)
  • Update regularly (quarterly planning, monthly review)
  • Communicate changes (transparency)
  • Link to metrics (measurable outcomes)
  • Keep “Now” specific, “Later” vague

DON’T:

  • Commit to dates (use timeframes)
  • Promise everything (prioritize ruthlessly)
  • Use internal jargon (customer language)
  • Build in vacuum (validate with user feedback)
  • Set and forget (iterate continuously)
  • Hide trade-offs (be transparent)
  • Lead with features (lead with problems)
  • Make it static (living document)

Roadmap Anti-Patterns

Common mistakes:

  1. Feature Laundry List: Just features, no strategy → Use theme-based, outcome-oriented
  2. Date-Driven Commitments: “Ship X on June 15” → Use timeframes, confidence levels
  3. One Size Fits All: Same roadmap for all audiences → Tailor by audience
  4. Set and Forget: Never updated, stale → Regular review cadence
  5. Everything for Everyone: No priorities → Explicit prioritization, “not doing” list
  6. No Strategic Connection: Disconnected from goals → Link every theme to objective
  7. Too Much Detail: Over-specified → Appropriate detail for timeframe
  8. Internal Jargon: Technical speak → Problem-focused, customer language

Roadmap Maintenance

Review Cadence

Weekly (30 min): Current work on track? Adjust “Now”

Monthly (60 min): Progress on quarter, validate “Next”, refine “Later”

Quarterly (Half day): Build next quarter roadmap, review outcomes

When to Update

DO update:

  • Quarterly planning (always)
  • Major strategic shift
  • Significant customer feedback
  • Competitive threat
  • Resource changes

DON’T update:

  • Every feature request
  • Minor adjustments
  • Random requests

Communicating Changes

When roadmap changes materially:

Roadmap Update: [Date]

What Changed: [Change + Why]
What Stayed: [Core themes still priority]
Impact: [Who this affects]

Frequency: Only material changes


For Solo Operators / Small Teams

Simplify:

  • Use Now-Next-Later (simplest format)
  • Focus on 2-3 themes max
  • Skip elaborate tools (Google Slides works)
  • Update monthly (not weekly)
  • Share with customers for feedback

Timeline: 4-6 hours for quarterly roadmap

Key: Simple beats perfect. Better a clear 1-page roadmap than elaborate 20-page deck nobody reads.


Roadmap Tools

Lightweight (Early stage):

  • Google Slides/PowerPoint
  • Notion/Coda
  • Miro/Figma

Purpose-Built (Growth):

  • Productboard
  • Aha!
  • ProductPlan
  • Jira Product Discovery

Custom (Enterprise):

  • Custom-built, integrated with data warehouse

Recommendation for solo/small teams: Start with slides, upgrade only when pain is real.


Templates and References

Assets (Ready-to-Use Templates)

Copy-paste these for immediate use:

  • assets/now-next-later-template.md – Most flexible format, complete example
  • assets/outcome-roadmap-template.md – Results-focused format
  • assets/roadmap-narrative-template.md – Storytelling structure

References (Deep Dives)

When you need comprehensive guidance:

  • references/roadmap-types-guide.md – All types compared, selection criteria
  • references/roadmap-communication-guide.md – Audience-specific roadmaps, communication tactics
  • references/roadmap-building-guide.md – 7-step process, prioritization, maintenance

Related Skills

  • prioritization-methods – Prioritization frameworks (RICE, ICE, Impact/Effort)
  • product-positioning – Strategic positioning
  • go-to-market-playbooks – Launch planning and GTM strategy

Quick Start

For your first roadmap:

  1. Use Now-Next-Later format (simplest)
  2. Start with assets/now-next-later-template.md
  3. Define 2-3 strategic themes
  4. Fill in Now (what you’re working on)
  5. Add Next (validated problems, likely next)
  6. Add Later (exploring)
  7. Include “Not Doing” (trade-offs)
  8. Present to team, get feedback
  9. Update quarterly

For quarterly planning:

  1. Review last quarter: What shipped? What didn’t? Why?
  2. Gather inputs: Customer feedback, business priorities, tech needs
  3. Prioritize: Impact, effort, strategic fit
  4. Sequence: Now → Next → Later
  5. Communicate: All-hands + written doc
  6. Update monthly based on learnings

Key Principle: Roadmaps are strategic communication tools, not commitments. They show direction and rationale, enabling alignment while maintaining flexibility. Good roadmaps create clarity without over-committing. Update regularly, communicate changes, focus on outcomes.