Business
Product Requirement Prompt Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A product requirement prompt generator hands you the questions that turn a vague feature idea into a clear, buildable requirement. Choose how many you want and it returns a shuffled set — what problem does this solve and for whom, what is explicitly out of scope, what does done mean with acceptance criteria. Product managers use it to write a tight spec, run a requirements review, or pressure-test a feature before engineering starts. Each prompt targets a gap that commonly sinks a feature: unclear scope, no success metric, unhandled edge cases. Answer the ones relevant to your feature in writing, and the doc that results gives engineering, design, and stakeholders a shared, unambiguous target. The most expensive bugs are the ones written into the spec, so the few minutes spent answering these questions up front save days of rework chasing a feature nobody actually defined.
Read the complete guide — 4 min read
Loading usage…
Free forever — no account required
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Choose how many prompts you want.
- Generate a set for your feature.
- Answer the relevant ones in writing.
- Share the spec for review before build.
Use Cases
- •Writing a clear product spec
- •Running a requirements review
- •Pressure-testing a feature before build
- •Aligning engineering, design, and stakeholders
- •Avoiding scope and definition gaps
Tips
- →Define scope and what is out of scope.
- →Always set a measurable success metric.
- →Write concrete acceptance criteria.
- →Catch edge cases before engineering does.
FAQ
what makes a good requirement
A clear problem, a defined scope, a success metric, and concrete acceptance criteria. Ambiguity is what causes rework, so the spec should leave no important question open.
why answer these in writing
Writing forces clarity and creates a shared target for engineering, design, and stakeholders. The most expensive bugs are the ones baked into a vague spec.
how detailed should a spec be
Detailed enough to remove ambiguity, no more. Cover scope, success, edge cases, and done; skip padding. A tight, answerable spec beats a long, hand-wavy one.
You might also like
Popular tools from other categories that share themes with this one.