Smithery Logo
MCPsSkillsDocsPricing
Login
Smithery Logo

Accelerating the Agent Economy

Resources

DocumentationPrivacy PolicySystem Status

Company

PricingAboutBlog

Connect

© 2026 Smithery. All rights reserved.

    neversight

    requirements-gathering

    neversight/requirements-gathering
    Planning
    2
    1 installs

    About

    SKILL.md

    Install

    Install via Skills CLI

    or add to your agent
    • Claude Code
      Claude Code
    • Codex
      Codex
    • OpenClaw
      OpenClaw
    • Cursor
      Cursor
    • Amp
      Amp
    • GitHub Copilot
      GitHub Copilot
    • Gemini CLI
      Gemini CLI
    • Kilo Code
      Kilo Code
    • Junie
      Junie
    • Replit
      Replit
    • Windsurf
      Windsurf
    • Cline
      Cline
    • Continue
      Continue
    • OpenCode
      OpenCode
    • OpenHands
      OpenHands
    • Roo Code
      Roo Code
    • Augment
      Augment
    • Goose
      Goose
    • Trae
      Trae
    • Zencoder
      Zencoder
    • Antigravity
      Antigravity
    ├─
    ├─
    └─

    About

    Guides comprehensive requirements gathering and analysis including stakeholder interviews, user story creation, use case documentation, acceptance criteria, requirements prioritization, and...

    SKILL.md

    Requirements Gathering

    Overview

    This skill guides you through systematic requirements gathering and documentation for software projects, from initial stakeholder analysis to detailed specifications and acceptance criteria.

    Requirements Gathering Workflow

    1. Planning & Stakeholder Analysis

    Identify Stakeholders:

    • Map stakeholder categories: executives, users, developers, operations
    • Assess influence, interest, and availability
    • Plan engagement strategy for each stakeholder group

    Select Elicitation Techniques:

    • Interviews: One-on-one discussions for deep insights (see elicitation-techniques.md)
    • Workshops: Collaborative sessions for alignment
    • Document Analysis: Review existing systems and documentation
    • Observation: Job shadowing to understand workflows
    • Surveys: Gather input from large user groups
    • Prototyping: Validate requirements with mockups

    2. Requirements Elicitation

    Conduct Stakeholder Sessions:

    • Prepare structured interview questions
    • Focus on current pain points and desired outcomes
    • Document business context, goals, and constraints
    • Capture exact quotes for later reference
    • Follow up with clarifications as needed

    Key Questions to Ask:

    • What problems are you trying to solve?
    • What does success look like?
    • Who will use this system and how?
    • What are your constraints (budget, timeline, technical)?
    • What are must-have vs nice-to-have features?

    3. Requirements Analysis & Documentation

    Document Requirements:

    Choose format based on project methodology:

    For Agile Projects - Use user stories (see agile-requirements.md):

    As a [role]
    I want [capability]
    So that [business value]
    
    Acceptance Criteria:
    - Given [context]
    - When [action]
    - Then [outcome]
    

    For Traditional Projects - Use structured specifications:

    • Business Requirements Document (BRD): High-level business needs
    • Functional Requirements: What system must do
    • Non-Functional Requirements: Performance, security, usability
    • Use Cases: Detailed user-system interactions

    Classify Requirements:

    • Functional vs Non-Functional
    • Business vs Technical vs User
    • Must-Have vs Should-Have vs Could-Have vs Won't-Have (MoSCoW)

    4. Requirements Prioritization

    Apply Prioritization Framework (see prioritization-frameworks.md):

    • MoSCoW: Must/Should/Could/Won't have (good for stakeholder alignment)
    • Value vs Effort: Plot on 2×2 matrix (quick wins vs long-term investments)
    • RICE: Reach × Impact × Confidence / Effort (data-driven scoring)
    • Kano Model: Basic/Performance/Delight features (user satisfaction focus)

    5. Validation & Refinement

    Review Requirements Quality:

    • Clear: Unambiguous, easy to understand
    • Complete: All necessary information included
    • Consistent: No contradictions
    • Testable: Can verify when implemented
    • Feasible: Technically and economically viable
    • Traceable: Linked to business goals

    Get Stakeholder Sign-Off:

    • Review with each stakeholder group
    • Address conflicts and gaps
    • Document approvals and changes
    • Maintain requirements traceability matrix

    Key Deliverables

    Depending on project needs, produce:

    • Stakeholder Analysis: Categories, needs, engagement plan
    • Interview Summaries: Key findings and quotes
    • User Stories/Use Cases: Detailed functionality descriptions
    • Requirements Document: BRD, SRS, or PRD
    • Requirements Traceability Matrix: Links requirements to business goals, design, tests
    • Product Roadmap: Prioritized feature timeline

    Reference Files

    Load these on demand based on specific needs:

    Process Guidance

    • elicitation-techniques.md - Detailed interview techniques, workshop facilitation, and observation methods
    • agile-requirements.md - User story writing, backlog management, sprint planning, and acceptance criteria
    • prioritization-frameworks.md - MoSCoW, RICE, Kano, Value/Effort frameworks with examples
    • requirements-gathering-process.md - End-to-end process from initiation to sign-off
    • best-practices.md - Quality standards, common pitfalls, and validation checklists

    Documentation Templates

    • requirements-traceability-matrix.md - Template and examples for tracking requirements
    • use-case-overview.md - Use case structure and examples

    Best Practices Summary

    Avoid Common Pitfalls:

    • ❌ Solution-focused: "Use React framework" → ✅ "Provide responsive web interface"
    • ❌ Vague language: "System should be fast" → ✅ "System responds within 2 seconds for 95% of requests"
    • ❌ Gold plating: Focus on business value, not nice-to-haves
    • ❌ Assuming knowledge: Document all assumptions and define terms
    • ❌ Skipping validation: Always review and get stakeholder sign-off

    Requirements Quality: Every requirement must be clear, complete, consistent, testable, feasible, necessary, prioritized, and traceable.

    Recommended Servers
    Metaview
    Metaview
    InfraNodus Knowledge Graphs & Text Analysis
    InfraNodus Knowledge Graphs & Text Analysis
    Bright Data
    Bright Data
    Repository
    neversight/skills_feed