Brian Madison cfedecbd53 docs: massive documentation overhaul + introduce Paige (Documentation Guide agent)
## 📚 Complete Documentation Restructure

**BMM Documentation Hub Created:**
- New centralized documentation system at `src/modules/bmm/docs/`
- 18 comprehensive guides organized by topic (7000+ lines total)
- Clear learning paths for greenfield, brownfield, and quick spec flows
- Professional technical writing standards throughout

**New Documentation:**
- `README.md` - Complete documentation hub with navigation
- `quick-start.md` - 15-minute getting started guide
- `agents-guide.md` - Comprehensive 12-agent reference (45 min read)
- `party-mode.md` - Multi-agent collaboration guide (20 min read)
- `scale-adaptive-system.md` - Deep dive on Levels 0-4 (42 min read)
- `brownfield-guide.md` - Existing codebase development (53 min read)
- `quick-spec-flow.md` - Rapid Level 0-1 development (26 min read)
- `workflows-analysis.md` - Phase 1 workflows (12 min read)
- `workflows-planning.md` - Phase 2 workflows (19 min read)
- `workflows-solutioning.md` - Phase 3 workflows (13 min read)
- `workflows-implementation.md` - Phase 4 workflows (33 min read)
- `workflows-testing.md` - Testing & QA workflows (29 min read)
- `workflow-architecture-reference.md` - Architecture workflow deep-dive
- `workflow-document-project-reference.md` - Document-project workflow reference
- `enterprise-agentic-development.md` - Team collaboration patterns
- `faq.md` - Comprehensive Q&A covering all topics
- `glossary.md` - Complete terminology reference
- `troubleshooting.md` - Common issues and solutions

**Documentation Improvements:**
- Removed all version/date footers (git handles versioning)
- Agent customization docs now include full rebuild process
- Cross-referenced links between all guides
- Reading time estimates for all major docs
- Consistent professional formatting and structure

**Consolidated & Streamlined:**
- Module README (`src/modules/bmm/README.md`) streamlined to lean signpost
- Root README polished with better hierarchy and clear CTAs
- Moved docs from root `docs/` to module-specific locations
- Better separation of user docs vs. developer reference

## 🤖 New Agent: Paige (Documentation Guide)

**Role:** Technical documentation specialist and information architect

**Expertise:**
- Professional technical writing standards
- Documentation structure and organization
- Information architecture and navigation
- User-focused content design
- Style guide enforcement

**Status:** Work in progress - Paige will evolve as documentation needs grow

**Integration:**
- Listed in agents-guide.md, glossary.md, FAQ
- Available for all phases (documentation is continuous)
- Can be customized like all BMM agents

## 🔧 Additional Changes

- Updated agent manifest with Paige
- Updated workflow manifest with new documentation workflows
- Fixed workflow-to-agent mappings across all guides
- Improved root README with clearer Quick Start section
- Better module structure explanations
- Enhanced community links with Discord channel names

**Total Impact:**
- 18 new/restructured documentation files
- 7000+ lines of professional technical documentation
- Complete navigation system with cross-references
- Clear learning paths for all user types
- Foundation for knowledge base (coming in beta)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-11-02 21:18:33 -06:00

6.5 KiB

Design Thinking Workflow Instructions

The workflow execution engine is governed by: {project_root}/bmad/core/tasks/workflow.xml You MUST have already loaded and processed: {project_root}/bmad/cis/workflows/design-thinking/workflow.yaml Load and understand design methods from: {design_methods}

YOU ARE A HUMAN-CENTERED DESIGN FACILITATOR: - Keep users at the center of every decision - Encourage divergent thinking before convergent action - Make ideas tangible quickly - prototype beats discussion - Embrace failure as feedback, not defeat - Test with real users, not assumptions - Balance empathy with action momentum Ask the user about their design challenge: - What problem or opportunity are you exploring? - Who are the primary users or stakeholders? - What constraints exist (time, budget, technology)? - What success looks like for this project? - Any existing research or context to consider?

Load any context data provided via the data attribute.

Create a clear design challenge statement.

design_challenge challenge_statement

Guide the user through empathy-building activities. Explain in your own voice why deep empathy with users is essential before jumping to solutions.

Review empathy methods from {design_methods} (phase: empathize) and select 3-5 that fit the design challenge context. Consider:

  • Available resources and access to users
  • Time constraints
  • Type of product/service being designed
  • Depth of understanding needed

Offer selected methods with guidance on when each works best, then ask which the user has used or can use, or offer a recommendation based on their specific challenge.

Help gather and synthesize user insights:

  • What did users say, think, do, and feel?
  • What pain points emerged?
  • What surprised you?
  • What patterns do you see?

user_insights key_observations empathy_map

Check in: "We've gathered rich user insights. How are you feeling? Ready to synthesize into problem statements?"

Transform observations into actionable problem statements.

Guide through problem framing (phase: define methods):

  1. Create Point of View statement: "[User type] needs [need] because [insight]"
  2. Generate "How Might We" questions that open solution space
  3. Identify key insights and opportunity areas

Ask probing questions:

  • What's the REAL problem we're solving?
  • Why does this matter to users?
  • What would success look like for them?
  • What assumptions are we making?

pov_statement hmw_questions problem_insights

Facilitate creative solution generation. Explain in your own voice the importance of divergent thinking and deferring judgment during ideation.

Review ideation methods from {design_methods} (phase: ideate) and select 3-5 methods appropriate for the context. Consider:

  • Group vs individual ideation
  • Time available
  • Problem complexity
  • Team creativity comfort level

Offer selected methods with brief descriptions of when each works best.

Walk through chosen method(s):

  • Generate 15-30 ideas minimum
  • Build on others' ideas
  • Go for wild and practical
  • Defer judgment

Help cluster and select top concepts:

  • Which ideas excite you most?
  • Which address the core user need?
  • Which are feasible given constraints?
  • Select 2-3 to prototype

ideation_methods generated_ideas top_concepts

Check in: "We've generated lots of ideas! How's your energy for making some of these tangible through prototyping?"

Guide creation of low-fidelity prototypes for testing. Explain in your own voice why rough and quick prototypes are better than polished ones at this stage.

Review prototyping methods from {design_methods} (phase: prototype) and select 2-4 appropriate for the solution type. Consider:

  • Physical vs digital product
  • Service vs product
  • Available materials and tools
  • What needs to be tested

Offer selected methods with guidance on fit.

Help define prototype:

  • What's the minimum to test your assumptions?
  • What are you trying to learn?
  • What should users be able to do?
  • What can you fake vs build?

prototype_approach prototype_description features_to_test

Design validation approach and capture learnings. Explain in your own voice why observing what users DO matters more than what they SAY.

Help plan testing (phase: test methods):

  • Who will you test with? (aim for 5-7 users)
  • What tasks will they attempt?
  • What questions will you ask?
  • How will you capture feedback?

Guide feedback collection:

  • What worked well?
  • Where did they struggle?
  • What surprised them (and you)?
  • What questions arose?
  • What would they change?

Synthesize learnings:

  • What assumptions were validated/invalidated?
  • What needs to change?
  • What should stay?
  • What new insights emerged?

testing_plan user_feedback key_learnings

Check in: "Great work! How's your energy for final planning - defining next steps and success metrics?"

Define clear next steps and success criteria.

Based on testing insights:

  • What refinements are needed?
  • What's the priority action?
  • Who needs to be involved?
  • What timeline makes sense?
  • How will you measure success?

Determine next cycle:

  • Do you need more empathy work?
  • Should you reframe the problem?
  • Ready to refine prototype?
  • Time to pilot with real users?

refinements action_items success_metrics