product-on-purpose

Spike Summary

A curated collection of 24 best-practice, plug-and-play product management “agent skills” plus templates and workflow bundles for consistent, professional PM outputs.

product-on-purpose 263 37 Updated 4mo ago

Resources

1
GitHub

Install

npx skillscat add product-on-purpose/pm-skills/skills-develop-spike-summary

Install via the SkillsCat registry.

SKILL.md

name: develop-spike-summary
description: Documents the results of a time-boxed technical or design exploration (spike). Use after completing a spike to capture learnings, findings, and recommendations for the team.
phase: develop
version: "2.0.0"
updated: 2026-01-26
license: Apache-2.0
metadata:
category: coordination
frameworks: [triple-diamond, lean-startup, design-thinking]
author: product-on-purpose

Spike Summary

A spike summary documents the results of a time-boxed exploration — a focused investigation to reduce uncertainty before committing to implementation. Spikes answer specific questions like "Can we integrate with this API?" or "Is this technology viable for our use case?" The summary captures findings so the team can make informed decisions without the spike participants needing to repeat explanations.

When to Use

  • After completing a time-boxed technical exploration
  • When evaluating technology choices or vendor options
  • After proof-of-concept work that needs to inform team decisions
  • When investigating feasibility of a proposed solution
  • Before committing engineering resources to a new approach

Instructions

When asked to document a spike, follow these steps:

  1. State the Question Clearly
    Articulate the specific question the spike was designed to answer. Good spike questions are focused and answerable with the time-box available. If the question evolved during the spike, document both the original and final versions.

  2. Define the Time-Box
    Document the time allocated (e.g., 3 days) and actual time spent. If the spike exceeded its time-box, explain why and note any remaining work.

  3. Describe the Approach
    Explain what was tried, in what order, and why. This helps future readers understand the methodology and whether alternative approaches were considered.

  4. Present Findings with Evidence
    Document what was learned, supported by concrete evidence — code samples, performance benchmarks, screenshots, or API responses. Distinguish between verified findings and hypotheses that need more testing.

  5. Make a Clear Recommendation
    Answer the original question directly: proceed, do not proceed, or proceed with conditions. Avoid hedging — the team needs actionable guidance.

  6. Document Artifacts
    Link to any code, prototypes, diagrams, or documentation created during the spike. These artifacts often have ongoing value beyond the summary.

  7. Capture Open Questions
    Note what the spike didn't answer and what additional investigation might be needed.

Output Format

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

Quality Checklist

Before finalizing, verify:

  • Original question is clearly stated
  • Time-box is documented (allocated vs. actual)
  • Findings are supported by evidence, not just opinions
  • Recommendation directly answers the question
  • Artifacts (code, diagrams) are linked or attached
  • Open questions identify remaining unknowns

Examples

See references/EXAMPLE.md for a completed example.