Run a Virtual Think Tank — a structured multi-persona debate — before planning or making architectural/design/strategic decisions. Use this skill whenever the user is about to plan a system, make a technology choice, evaluate trade-offs, decide on an approach, or faces any decision where multiple perspectives would sharpen the outcome. Also trigger when the user says "think tank", "debate this", "perspectives on", "trade-offs", "should I use X or Y", "help me decide", "before we plan", or asks for pros/cons of competing approaches. This skill should run BEFORE any implementation planning begins — it produces a structured analysis that feeds into better plans.
A pre-planning skill that simulates a moderated expert debate to surface trade-offs, blind spots, and perspectives before committing to a plan. Inspired by real think tanks: the output is NOT a single answer but a structured analysis of approaches, trade-offs, and consensus points that helps the human make a better-informed decision.
When facing architectural, strategic, or design decisions, a single perspective (even a well-informed one) tends to gravitate toward conventional wisdom and miss important trade-offs. A think tank forces consideration of multiple angles — technical, organizational, philosophical — before planning begins. The result is plans that account for more of reality.
The think tank uses multiple personas debating within a single context — not separate agents. This keeps all perspectives aware of each other's arguments, enables real-time synthesis, and produces a coherent output. The personas argue, concede points, build on each other's ideas, and occasionally surprise everyone (including the user).
Before assembling the panel, clearly understand what's being decided. Ask the user (if not already clear):
Restate the problem back to the user in a crisp problem statement before proceeding. This ensures the think tank debates the right question.
Build a panel of 4–6 personas. The composition matters — diversity of perspective is the whole point.
Panel structure:
1 Moderator — A knowledgeable, neutral figure who keeps the debate focused, synthesizes, and pushes for clarity. Pick someone known for balanced analysis in the relevant domain. The moderator opens and closes the session, asks provocative follow-up questions, and calls out when panelists are talking past each other.
2–3 Domain voices — People (real or fictional) with known, distinct positions on the topic. These are the core debaters. They should genuinely disagree on something substantive — not just have mild preferences.
1 Wildcard / Outside thinker — Someone who hasn't written directly about this topic but brings transferable wisdom from another domain. This is where the unexpected insights come from. A management theorist in a technical debate. A philosopher in a product discussion. A novelist in an architecture review. The wildcard prevents the conversation from being too predictable.
1 Practitioner voice (optional) — Someone who has actually done the thing at scale, in production, with real users. Keeps the debate grounded.
Important persona guidelines:
Structure the debate as a moderated discussion, not a series of independent monologues. The personas should respond to each other, not just state their positions in isolation.
The user is a participant, not a spectator. The user sits "at the table" — the moderator and panelists should address them directly, ask them questions, and incorporate their answers into the ongoing debate. The user is the decision-maker; the panel is there to serve them. Treat the user the way a real think tank would treat the person who commissioned it: with respect for their context knowledge and authority over the final decision.
Debate structure:
Opening statements (~1 paragraph each) — Each panelist states their initial position on the problem. Keep these concise — the real value comes from the interaction.
First check-in with the user — After opening statements, the moderator pauses and turns to the user:
Moderated discussion (2–4 rounds) — The moderator poses focused questions that drive the debate into useful territory:
Panelists can question the user directly. During the moderated discussion, panelists may turn to the user to ask clarifying questions when they need more context to argue effectively. For example:
Wildcard interjection — The outside thinker offers a reframing or analogy from their domain. This often shifts the conversation in productive ways.
Second check-in with the user — Before converging, the moderator checks in again:
Convergence check — The moderator identifies:
Tone guidelines:
After the debate, produce a structured summary. This is what feeds into the planning phase.
Output format:
## Think Tank Summary: [Problem Statement]
### Panel
[List panelists and their roles/perspectives]
### Key Debate Highlights
[2-3 of the most illuminating exchanges or insights from the debate — the moments where something shifted or crystallized. Include moments where user input changed the direction of the discussion.]
### User-Revealed Context
[Key constraints, preferences, or realities the user shared during the debate that shaped the panel's thinking. This section ensures nothing the user said gets lost.]
### Consensus Points
[Things all or most panelists agreed on — these are high-confidence inputs to planning]
### Core Trade-offs
[The real axes of disagreement, stated as trade-offs rather than as one side being right]
- Trade-off 1: [X] vs [Y] — choosing X gives you [...] but costs you [...]
- Trade-off 2: ...
### Conditional Recommendations
[Recommendations framed as "if-then" rather than absolutes]
- If [condition], then [approach] because [reasoning]
- If [condition], then [approach] because [reasoning]
### Risks & Blind Spots
[Things the panel identified as under-discussed or easy to overlook]
### Open Questions
[Questions that couldn't be resolved in the debate and need more information or experimentation to answer]
### Suggested Next Steps
[Concrete actions: things to research, prototype, test, or decide before planning]
After presenting the summary, ask the user:
The think tank output should be treated as input to the plan — not as the plan itself. The human makes the decision; the think tank provides the analysis.