Frameworks
A framework here is a method you run over the product graph you already have. It names the parts that matter and, where it scores, ranks them, so a familiar approach like RICE or MoSCoW works on your real entities, not a copy of them. Grouped by where they fit in the product-creation lifecycle.
What a framework is
A framework here is a method you run over the graph you already have, not a template you copy into a blank document. Each one names the parts it cares about, the jobs and pains in a Value Proposition Canvas, the responsible and accountable roles in a RACI, and the scoring ones also name the inputs they weigh, like reach and effort in RICE.
Running one
Pointing a framework at a set of entities creates an exercise: one named pass, like a Q3 prioritisation or a canvas for a single segment. What the pass finds about each entity is recorded on the relationship to it, not stamped onto the entity. So your features stay features. The same feature can be a must in one exercise and a could in another, and you can score opportunities or needs, not only features.
Why it stays useful
Because every pass is kept, the graph remembers how your thinking moved. You can re-run a framework without overwriting the last result, hold two exercises side by side, and trace any score back to the run that produced it. The analysis lives beside the entity, never inside it.
Want to run one from the terminal, the SDK, or an agent? Open any framework below for its Deep Dive, or see the CLI reference.
Understand the people and problems
Decide where to play and how to win
Test assumptions, shape the work
Design, engineer, ship
Reach the market, retain the audience
Run the business that surrounds the product
Frameworks
A framework here is a method you run over the product graph you already have. It names the parts that matter and, where it scores, ranks them, so a familiar approach like RICE or MoSCoW works on your real entities, not a copy of them. Grouped by where they fit in the product-creation lifecycle.
What a framework is
A framework here is a method you run over the graph you already have, not a template you copy into a blank document. Each one names the parts it cares about, the jobs and pains in a Value Proposition Canvas, the responsible and accountable roles in a RACI, and the scoring ones also name the inputs they weigh, like reach and effort in RICE.
Running one
Pointing a framework at a set of entities creates an exercise: one named pass, like a Q3 prioritisation or a canvas for a single segment. What the pass finds about each entity is recorded on the relationship to it, not stamped onto the entity. So your features stay features. The same feature can be a must in one exercise and a could in another, and you can score opportunities or needs, not only features.
Why it stays useful
Because every pass is kept, the graph remembers how your thinking moved. You can re-run a framework without overwriting the last result, hold two exercises side by side, and trace any score back to the run that produced it. The analysis lives beside the entity, never inside it.
Want to run one from the terminal, the SDK, or an agent? Open any framework below for its Deep Dive, or see the CLI reference.
Understand the people and problems
Decide where to play and how to win
Test assumptions, shape the work
Design, engineer, ship
Reach the market, retain the audience
Run the business that surrounds the product