director-readiness-advisor
Director-Readiness Advisor is an interactive coaching skill designed to guide product managers through the transition to director-level roles across four distinct phases: preparing for the role, actively interviewing, navigating the first six months after promotion, or recalibrating performance after time in the position. Use this skill when you need stage-specific, practical guidance that goes beyond generic advice, drawing on the Altitude & Horizon Framework to diagnose your actual challenges and deliver targeted recommendations.
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/deanpeters/Product-Manager-Skills /tmp/director-readiness-advisor && cp -r /tmp/director-readiness-advisor/skills/director-readiness-advisor ~/.claude/skills/director-readiness-advisorSKILL.md
## Purpose Guide PMs and Directors through the specific challenges of the PM-to-Director transition using adaptive questions and targeted coaching. Diagnoses where you are in the journey and delivers practical, war-story-backed guidance calibrated to your situation — not generic leadership advice. This is not a readiness checklist. It's a coaching conversation that names what's actually hard, why it's hard, and what to do about it. ## Key Concepts ### The Four Transition Situations The PM → Director transition looks different depending on where you are: 1. **Preparing to make the leap** — Still a PM, actively developing toward the role 2. **Interviewing for Director roles** — In an active internal or external search 3. **Newly landed** — Recently promoted or hired as Director (first 6 months) 4. **Recalibrating** — Been a Director for a while; something isn't working Each situation has distinct coaching priorities. The biggest mistake is applying "newly landed" advice to someone who's been in the role for two years, or "preparing" advice to someone mid-interview process. ### The Underlying Model This skill draws directly on the Altitude & Horizon Framework — see `skills/altitude-horizon-framework/SKILL.md` for the full mental model. Core concepts used here: - Altitude (scope) and Horizon (time) as the two axes that shift - The Waiter vs. Restaurant Operator distinction - Four transition zones: Thinking Altitude, Persona Shift, Hero Syndrome Recovery, Direction Creation - Named failure modes: Hero Syndrome, Allergic to Process, People-Pleaser Leadership, Instant Gratification Trap --- ### Facilitation Source of Truth Use [`workshop-facilitation`](../workshop-facilitation/SKILL.md) as the default interaction protocol for this skill. It defines: - Session heads-up + entry mode (Guided, Context dump, Best guess) - One-question turns with plain-language prompts - Progress labels (e.g., Context Q1/3) - Interruption handling and pause/resume behavior - Numbered recommendations at decision points - Quick-select numbered response options (include `Other (specify)` when useful) This file defines the domain-specific assessment content. If there is a conflict, follow this file's domain logic. --- ## Application This interactive skill asks **1 diagnostic question + up to 3 adaptive follow-up questions**, then delivers **3–5 enumerated, targeted recommendations** based on your situation. --- ### Step 0: Session Start **Agent says:** Before we start, you can choose how to run this session: 1. **Guided** — I'll ask questions one at a time and build recommendations from your answers (recommended for most situations) 2. **Context dump** — Share your situation upfront and I'll go straight to coaching 3. **Best guess** — Tell me nothing; I'll give you the highest-value advice for the most common transition situation (newly landed Director, 0–3 months in) --- ### Question 1: Where Are You? **Agent asks (Q1/3):** "Where are you in the PM-to-Director journey?" 1. **Preparing to make the leap** — Still in a PM role, actively building toward Director 2. **Interviewing for Director roles** — In an active internal promotion or external job search 3. **Newly landed** — Recently promoted or hired as Director (roughly first 6 months) 4. **Recalibrating** — Been a Director for a while; something isn't clicking the way it should **Or describe your situation directly.** --- ### Branch 1: Preparing to Make the Leap #### Question 1B (Q2/3): **Agent asks:** "What's the gap you most want to close before making the move?" 1. **Thinking altitude** — I still default to solving customer problems directly instead of designing systems 2. **Stakeholder navigation** — I struggle with organizational politics, executive dynamics, or cross-functional influence 3. **Strategic narrative** — I can't yet connect my work to company strategy convincingly in conversations with leadership 4. **Direction creation** — I wait for clarity from above rather than creating it for my team **Or describe your main development area.** #### Question 1C (Q3/3): **Agent asks:** "What's your runway — how close are you to making the move?" 1. **6+ months out** — Building deliberately; no immediate pressure 2. **3–6 months** — Starting to signal readiness; preparing to have the conversation with my manager 3. **Actively applying** — In motion now, interviewing or expecting to be soon **Or describe your timeline.** #### Branch 1 Recommendations: **Agent delivers (based on 1B + 1C):** *Example output for 1B = Strategic narrative + 1C = 3–6 months:* "Based on your gap (strategic narrative) and timeline (3–6 months), here are your highest-leverage moves: 1. **Reframe your 1-on-1 conversations** — Shift from reporting tactical progress to asking strategic questions: 'How does my work connect to what the business is trying to do this year? What's the organizational context I'm not seeing?' This builds strategic thinking muscle and signals readiness to your manager simultaneously. 2. **Build your cascade habit now** — Pick one company priority from the last QBR or all-hands and write a one-page translation: how does your team's work connect? Share it informally with your manager. You don't need permission to practice this skill. 3. **Audit your Hero Syndrome** — Track the next two weeks: how often do you jump in to solve problems that others could solve with your coaching instead? The ratio of rescuing to developing is a leading indicator of Director readiness. 4. **Don't over-index on Director thinking** — The most common mistake while still a PM: spending too much energy on altitude/horizon thinking at the expense of serving your current role. Play your PM role fully. Director readiness will show in the quality of your work, not in performing above your level. Choose a number to go deeper on any of these, or ask about something specific." --- ### Branch 2: Interviewing for Director Roles #### Question 2B (Q2/3):
Run a structured discovery flow from problem framing through opportunity mapping and validation planning.
Guide PM to Director to VP/CPO transition planning with role-fit diagnostics and onboarding guidance.
Turn strategy and validated opportunities into a sequenced roadmap with clear tradeoffs.
Select what to work on next using the right prioritization method for your context.
Build product strategy from positioning through opportunity and roadmap decisions.
Create a decision-ready PRD by chaining problem framing, requirements definition, and story scaffolding.
Evaluate acquisition channels using unit economics, customer quality, and scalability. Use when deciding whether to scale, test, or kill a growth channel.
Assess whether your product work is AI-first or AI-shaped. Use when evaluating AI maturity and choosing the next team capability to build.