Start PRD Implementation

VerifiedCaution

Initiates implementation work on a specific PRD by validating readiness, creating a branch, and preparing the development environment.

Sby Skills Guide Bot
DevelopmentIntermediate
206/2/2026
Claude Code
#prd#implementation#branching#workflow

Recommended for

Our review

Initializes implementation context for a Product Requirements Document (PRD) by creating a branch and preparing the environment.

Strengths

  • Smart detection of target PRD via conversation context, Git branches, or commits
  • Validates PRD readiness before starting implementation
  • Seamless handoff to /prd-next for task breakdown

Limitations

  • Requires PRDs to be stored in a 'prds/' directory
  • Depends on conversation clarity to avoid unnecessary detection steps
  • Does not estimate tasks (delegated to /prd-next)
When to use it

To formally begin implementing a feature defined in a validated PRD.

When not to use it

For minor changes or bug fixes that don't require a formal PRD.

Security analysis

Caution
Quality score88/100

The skill uses git commands for branch creation and context detection. While these are standard development operations and no malicious actions are present, any automated execution of git commands carries a minor risk of accidental branch creation or modification. No destructive, exfiltration, or obfuscated actions are included.

Findings
  • Instructs running git branch/checkout commands, which can alter the repository state.

Examples

Start PRD 306
Start working on PRD 306
Begin PRD implementation from context
Let's start implementing the PRD we discussed earlier.
Autodetect PRD from branch
Start implementing the current PRD

name: prd-start description: Start working on a PRD implementation category: project-management arguments:

  • name: prdNumber description: PRD number to start working on (e.g., 306) required: false disable-model-invocation: true

PRD Start - Begin Implementation Work

Instructions

You are helping initiate active implementation work on a specific Product Requirements Document (PRD). This command sets up the implementation context (validates readiness, creates branch, prepares environment) then hands off to /prd-next for task identification.

IMPORTANT: Do NOT include time estimates or effort estimates in your responses. Focus on setup and readiness without speculating on duration.

Process Overview

  1. Select Target PRD - Identify which PRD to implement
  2. Validate PRD Readiness - Ensure the PRD is ready for implementation
  3. Set Up Implementation Context - Create branch and prepare environment
  4. Hand Off to prd-next - Delegate task identification to the appropriate prompt

Step 0: Check for PRD Argument

If prdNumber argument is provided ({{prdNumber}}):

  • Skip context check and auto-detection
  • Use PRD #{{prdNumber}} directly
  • Proceed to Step 2 (PRD Readiness Validation)

If prdNumber argument is NOT provided:

  • Continue to context awareness check below

Step 0b: Context Awareness Check

Check if PRD context is already clear from recent conversation:

Skip detection if recent conversation shows:

  • Recent PRD work discussed - "We just worked on PRD 29", "Just completed PRD update", etc.
  • Specific PRD mentioned - "PRD #X", "MCP Prompts PRD", etc.
  • PRD-specific commands used - Recent use of /prd-update-progress, /prd-start with specific PRD
  • Clear work context - Discussion of specific features, tasks, or requirements for a known PRD

If context is clear:

  • Skip to Step 2 (PRD Readiness Validation) using the known PRD

If context is unclear:

  • Continue to Step 1 (PRD Detection)

Step 1: Smart PRD Detection (Only if Context Unclear)

Auto-detect the target PRD using these context clues (in priority order):

  1. Git Branch Analysis - Check current branch name for PRD patterns:

    • feature/prd-12-* → PRD 12
    • prd-13-* → PRD 13
    • feature/prd-* → Extract PRD number
  2. Recent Git Commits - Look at recent commit messages for PRD references:

    • "fix: PRD 12 documentation" → PRD 12
    • "feat: implement prd-13 features" → PRD 13
  3. Git Status Analysis - Check modified/staged files for PRD clues:

    • Modified prds/12-*.md → PRD 12
    • Changes in feature-specific directories
  4. Available PRDs Discovery - List all PRDs in prds/ directory

  5. Fallback to User Choice - Only if context detection fails, ask user to specify

Detection Logic:

  • High Confidence: Branch name matches PRD pattern (e.g., feature/prd-12-documentation-testing)
  • Medium Confidence: Modified PRD files in git status or recent commits mention PRD
  • Low Confidence: Multiple PRDs available, use heuristics (most recent, largest)
  • No Context: Present available options to user

If context detection fails, ask the user:

## Which PRD would you like to start implementing?

Please provide the PRD number (e.g., "12", "PRD 12", or "36").

**Not sure which PRD to work on?**
Execute `dot-ai:prds-get` prompt to see all available PRDs organized by priority and readiness.

**Your choice**: [Wait for user input]

Once PRD is identified:

  • Read the PRD file from prds/[issue-id]-[feature-name].md

Step 2: PRD Readiness Validation

Before starting implementation, validate that the PRD is ready:

Requirements Validation

  • Functional Requirements: Are core requirements clearly defined and complete?
  • Success Criteria: Are measurable success criteria established?
  • Dependencies: Are all external dependencies identified and available?
  • Risk Assessment: Have major risks been identified and mitigation plans created?

Documentation Analysis

For documentation-first PRDs:

  • Specification completeness: Is the feature fully documented with user workflows?
  • Integration points: Are connections with existing features documented?
  • API/Interface definitions: Are all interfaces and data structures specified?
  • Examples and usage: Are concrete usage examples provided?

Implementation Readiness Checklist

## PRD Readiness Check
- [ ] All functional requirements defined
- [ ] Success criteria measurable
- [ ] Dependencies available
- [ ] Documentation complete
- [ ] Integration points clear
- [ ] Implementation approach decided

If PRD is not ready: Inform the user what's missing and suggest they complete PRD planning first.

Step 3: Implementation Context Setup

⚠️ MANDATORY: Complete this step BEFORE proceeding to Step 4

Git Branch Management

  1. Check current branch: Run git branch --show-current
  2. If on main or master: Create and switch to feature branch:
    git checkout -b feature/prd-[issue-id]-[feature-name]
    
  3. If already on a feature branch: Verify it's the correct branch for this PRD

Development Environment Setup

  • Dependencies: Install any new dependencies required by the PRD
  • Configuration: Set up any configuration needed for development
  • Test data: Prepare test data or mock services

Step 3 Checkpoint (REQUIRED)

You MUST display this confirmation before proceeding to Step 4:

## Environment Setup ✅
- **Branch**: `[current-branch-name]`- **Status**: [Created new branch / Already on correct branch / Staying on main (reason)]

DO NOT proceed to Step 4 until branch setup is confirmed.

Step 4: Hand Off to prd-next

Once the implementation context is set up, present this message to the user:

## Ready for Implementation 🚀

**PRD**: [PRD Name] (#[PRD Number])
**Branch**: `[branch-name]`
**Status**: Ready for development

---

To identify and start working on your first task, run `/prd-next`.

⚠️ STOP HERE - DO NOT:

  • Identify or recommend tasks to work on
  • Analyze implementation priorities or critical paths
  • Start any implementation work
  • Continue beyond presenting the handoff message

/prd-next handles all task identification and implementation guidance.

Success Criteria

This command should:

  • ✅ Successfully identify the target PRD for implementation
  • ✅ Validate that the PRD is ready for development work
  • ✅ Set up proper implementation context (branch, environment)
  • ✅ Hand off to /prd-next for task identification
  • ✅ Bridge the gap between PRD planning and development setup

Notes

  • This command focuses on setup only - it validates readiness, creates the branch, and prepares the environment
  • Once setup is complete, /prd-next handles all task identification, implementation guidance, and progress tracking
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