User Stories Generation

VerifiedSafe

Creates user stories with acceptance criteria from feature descriptions. Useful for breaking down requirements into actionable tickets during sprint planning or when communicating with engineering teams.

Sby Skills Guide Bot
DevelopmentIntermediate
706/2/2026
Claude CodeCursorCopilot
#user-stories#acceptance-criteria#agile#requirements#sprint-planning

Recommended for

Our review

Generates user stories with clear acceptance criteria from product requirements or feature descriptions.

Strengths

  • Standardized 'As a... I want... so that...' format improves clarity
  • Given/When/Then acceptance criteria enable easy verification
  • Breaks down features into deliverable, estimable increments
  • Validates stories against INVEST criteria for quality

Limitations

  • Requires a well-defined feature description (PRD or notes) to start
  • May produce overly granular or vague stories if context is ambiguous
  • Cannot replace human judgment for prioritization and negotiation
When to use it

Use this skill after PRD approval, when breaking down features for sprint planning or writing tickets for engineering teams.

When not to use it

Do not use it for specifying detailed technical requirements or infrastructure tasks that lack direct user value.

Security analysis

Safe
Quality score90/100

This skill contains only instructional text for generating user stories. It does not instruct any tool usage, code execution, or data exfiltration. There is no risk of destructive or malicious actions.

No concerns found

Examples

Login feature breakdown
Create user stories for a login feature with email and password authentication, social login options, and forgot password flow.
Sprint planning for search functionality
I need user stories for a search feature in an e-commerce app. The feature should allow users to search by product name, category, and price range, and see relevant results with pagination.
User stories from PRD
Generate user stories based on this PRD: [paste PRD here]. Focus on the main user journeys and include acceptance criteria for each story.
<!-- PM-Skills | https://github.com/product-on-purpose/pm-skills | Apache 2.0 -->

name: user-stories description: Generates user stories with clear acceptance criteria from product requirements or feature descriptions. Use when breaking down features for sprint planning, writing tickets, or communicating requirements to engineering. license: Apache-2.0 metadata: category: specification frameworks: [triple-diamond, lean-startup, design-thinking] author: product-on-purpose version: "1.0.0"

User Stories

User stories are concise descriptions of functionality from the user's perspective. They capture who needs something, what they need, and why — without prescribing how to build it. Good user stories enable teams to break large features into estimable, deliverable increments while maintaining focus on user value.

When to Use

  • After PRD approval, when breaking down features for implementation
  • During sprint planning to create actionable work items
  • When writing tickets for engineering teams
  • When communicating requirements to stakeholders in accessible terms
  • When prioritizing a backlog based on user value

Instructions

When asked to create user stories, follow these steps:

  1. Understand the Feature Context Review the PRD or feature description. Understand the overall goal, target users, and scope boundaries. User stories should trace back to documented requirements.

  2. Identify User Personas Determine which users interact with this feature. Each story should be written for a specific persona, not generic "users." Different personas may need different stories for the same feature.

  3. Break Down by User Goal Decompose the feature into distinct user goals. Each story should deliver a complete, valuable capability — something the user can actually do when the story is done.

  4. Write Story Statements Use the format: "As a [persona], I want [action] so that [benefit]." The benefit clause is critical — it explains why this matters and helps prioritize.

  5. Define Acceptance Criteria Write specific, testable criteria using Given/When/Then format. Acceptance criteria define "done" — if all criteria pass, the story is complete.

  6. Apply INVEST Criteria Validate each story against INVEST: Independent, Negotiable, Valuable, Estimable, Small, Testable. Revise stories that don't meet these criteria.

  7. Add Context and Notes Include relevant design references, technical considerations, and dependencies. These help implementers understand the full picture.

Output Format

Use the template in references/TEMPLATE.md to structure the output.

Quality Checklist

Before finalizing, verify:

  • [ ] Each story follows "As a... I want... so that..." format
  • [ ] Stories are independent (can be built in any order)
  • [ ] Acceptance criteria use Given/When/Then format
  • [ ] Each criterion is testable (someone can verify pass/fail)
  • [ ] Stories are small enough to complete in one sprint
  • [ ] No implementation details in the story statement
  • [ ] Benefit clause explains why this matters to the user

Examples

See references/EXAMPLE.md for a completed example.

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