3.4 KiB
Brainstorming Workflow
Refines rough ideas into conceptual designs through drafting, self-critique, and trade-off surfacing.
When to Use
Explicit trigger only. Use when user:
- Asks to "brainstorm" a concept
- Wants to "explore" or "think through" an idea
- Has a nascent idea not ready for implementation
- Requests interactive design refinement
Do not use when user provides clear instructions and expects execution. Most interactions are execution-focused - don't add friction by brainstorming unsolicited.
Core Principles
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Draft first, ask later. Don't pepper the user with questions. Use your judgment to draft, then surface gaps.
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Conceptual, not implementation. Output is design decisions and constraints. The implementing AI decides HOW.
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Always checkpoint. Write a defer file after critique. User can leave or continue - nothing is lost.
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Subagents for execution. If continuing to implementation, dispatch subagents. Keep main thread focused on coordination.
Workflow
Phase 1: Understand Intent
Quickly gather context:
- What problem does this solve?
- Who/what consumes it?
- What constraints exist?
If context is clear from the user's input, skip questions. If ambiguous, ask 1-2 clarifying questions max - don't interrogate.
Check domain hooks in domain-hooks.md for architect-specific questions.
Phase 2: Draft Conceptual Design
Generate a complete conceptual draft:
- Purpose and scope
- Key design decisions
- Structure/architecture (conceptual, not file-by-file)
- Constraints and boundaries
- What it explicitly does NOT do
Adapt scope to input clarity:
- Nascent idea → high-level design, major decision points
- Clear concept → fuller design with more specifics
- Near-implementation ready → detailed design, edge cases
Phase 3: Self-Critique
Before showing the user, critique your draft against:
- Alignment with stated intent
- Domain anti-patterns (see
domain-hooks.md) - Missing pieces or unstated assumptions
- Over-engineering or unnecessary complexity
Note issues found. Revise draft if issues are clear fixes. Flag trade-offs that need user input.
Phase 4: Present & Checkpoint
Present the design to the user. Then immediately write a defer file (see ../defer-work/workflow.md) containing:
- The conceptual design
- Trade-offs requiring decisions
- Issues found during critique
- Tasks to move toward implementation
Tell the user:
Design captured to .claude/deferred/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>.md
Trade-offs to decide:
- <trade-off 1>
- <trade-off 2>
You can:
- Clear context and resume later with "pick up <topic>"
- Continue here - I'll work from the checkpoint
What would you like to do?
Phase 5: Resolution (if continuing)
If user continues:
- Work through trade-offs with user
- Update defer file with decisions
- Use subagents to execute tasks from the defer file
- Subagents check off tasks as they complete
- Main thread coordinates, delegates execution
Output Format
The brainstorming output is a conceptual design, not a specification. Example structure:
## Purpose
<What this solves, in one paragraph>
## Design Decisions
- <Decision 1>: <choice and why>
- <Decision 2>: ...
## Structure
<Conceptual architecture - components, relationships, boundaries>
## Constraints
- <What this must do>
- <What this must NOT do>
## Open Questions
- <Questions that surfaced during drafting>
Keep it scannable. User should understand the design in 60 seconds.