# Step 7: Defining Core Experience ## MANDATORY EXECUTION RULES (READ FIRST): - 🛑 NEVER generate content without user input - 📖 CRITICAL: ALWAYS read the complete step file before taking any action - partial understanding leads to incomplete decisions - 🔄 CRITICAL: When loading next step with 'C', ensure the entire file is read and understood before proceeding - ✅ ALWAYS treat this as collaborative discovery between UX facilitator and stakeholder - 📋 YOU ARE A UX FACILITATOR, not a content generator - 💬 FOCUS on defining the core interaction that defines the product - 🎯 COLLABORATIVE discovery, not assumption-based design - ✅ YOU MUST ALWAYS SPEAK OUTPUT In your Agent communication style with the config `{communication_language}` ## EXECUTION PROTOCOLS: - 🎯 Show your analysis before taking any action - ⚠️ Present A/P/C menu after generating defining experience content - 💾 ONLY save when user chooses C (Continue) - 📖 Update output file frontmatter, adding this step to the end of the list of stepsCompleted. - 🚫 FORBIDDEN to load next step until C is selected ## COLLABORATION MENUS (A/P/C): This step will generate content and present choices: - **A (Advanced Elicitation)**: Use discovery protocols to develop deeper experience insights - **P (Party Mode)**: Bring multiple perspectives to define optimal core experience - **C (Continue)**: Save the content to the document and proceed to next step ## PROTOCOL INTEGRATION: - When 'A' selected: Execute {project-root}/_bmad/core/workflows/advanced-elicitation/workflow.xml - When 'P' selected: Execute {project-root}/_bmad/core/workflows/party-mode/workflow.md - PROTOCOLS always return to this step's A/P/C menu - User accepts/rejects protocol changes before proceeding ## CONTEXT BOUNDARIES: - Current document and frontmatter from previous steps are available - Core experience from step 3 provides foundation - Design system choice from step 6 informs implementation - Focus on the defining interaction that makes the product special ## YOUR TASK: Define the core interaction that, if nailed, makes everything else follow in the user experience. ## DEFINING EXPERIENCE SEQUENCE: ### 1. Identify the Defining Experience Focus on the core interaction: "Every successful product has a defining experience - the core interaction that, if we nail it, everything else follows. **Think about these famous examples:** - Tinder: "Swipe to match with people" - Snapchat: "Share photos that disappear" - Instagram: "Share perfect moments with filters" - Spotify: "Discover and play any song instantly" **For {{project_name}}:** What's the core action that users will describe to their friends? What's the interaction that makes users feel successful? If we get ONE thing perfectly right, what should it be?" ### 2. Explore the User's Mental Model Understand how users think about the core task: "**User Mental Model Questions:** - How do users currently solve this problem? - What mental model do they bring to this task? - What's their expectation for how this should work? - Where are they likely to get confused or frustrated? **Current Solutions:** - What do users love/hate about existing approaches? - What shortcuts or workarounds do they use? - What makes existing solutions feel magical or terrible?" ### 3. Define Success Criteria for Core Experience Establish what makes the core interaction successful: "**Core Experience Success Criteria:** - What makes users say 'this just works'? - When do they feel smart or accomplished? - What feedback tells them they're doing it right? - How fast should it feel? - What should happen automatically? **Success Indicators:** - [Success indicator 1] - [Success indicator 2] - [Success indicator 3]" ### 4. Identify Novel vs. Established Patterns Determine if we need to innovate or can use proven patterns: "**Pattern Analysis:** Looking at your core experience, does this: - Use established UX patterns that users already understand? - Require novel interaction design that needs user education? - Combine familiar patterns in innovative ways? **If Novel:** - What makes this different from existing approaches? - How will we teach users this new pattern? - What familiar metaphors can we use? **If Established:** - Which proven patterns should we adopt? - How can we innovate within familiar patterns? - What's our unique twist on established interactions?" ### 5. Define Experience Mechanics Break down the core interaction into details: "**Core Experience Mechanics:** Let's design the step-by-step flow for [defining experience]: **1. Initiation:** - How does the user start this action? - What triggers or invites them to begin? **2. Interaction:** - What does the user actually do? - What controls or inputs do they use? - How does the system respond? **3. Feedback:** - What tells users they're succeeding? - How do they know when it's working? - What happens if they make a mistake? **4. Completion:** - How do users know they're done? - What's the successful outcome? - What's next?" ### 6. Generate Defining Experience Content Prepare the content to append to the document: #### Content Structure: When saving to document, append these Level 2 and Level 3 sections: ```markdown ## 2. Core User Experience ### 2.1 Defining Experience [Defining experience description based on conversation] ### 2.2 User Mental Model [User mental model analysis based on conversation] ### 2.3 Success Criteria [Success criteria for core experience based on conversation] ### 2.4 Novel UX Patterns [Novel UX patterns analysis based on conversation] ### 2.5 Experience Mechanics [Detailed mechanics for core experience based on conversation] ``` ### 7. Present Content and Menu Show the generated defining experience content and present choices: "I've defined the core experience for {{project_name}} - the interaction that will make users love this product. **Here's what I'll add to the document:** [Show the complete markdown content from step 6] **What would you like to do?** [A] Advanced Elicitation - Let's refine the core experience definition [P] Party Mode - Bring different perspectives on the defining interaction [C] Continue - Save this to the document and move to visual foundation ### 8. Handle Menu Selection #### If 'A' (Advanced Elicitation): - Execute {project-root}/_bmad/core/workflows/advanced-elicitation/workflow.xml with the current defining experience content - Process the enhanced experience insights that come back - Ask user: "Accept these improvements to the defining experience? (y/n)" - If yes: Update content with improvements, then return to A/P/C menu - If no: Keep original content, then return to A/P/C menu #### If 'P' (Party Mode): - Execute {project-root}/_bmad/core/workflows/party-mode/workflow.md with the current defining experience - Process the collaborative experience insights that come back - Ask user: "Accept these changes to the defining experience? (y/n)" - If yes: Update content with improvements, then return to A/P/C menu - If no: Keep original content, then return to A/P/C menu #### If 'C' (Continue): - Append the final content to `{planning_artifacts}/ux-design-specification.md` - Update frontmatter: append step to end of stepsCompleted array - Load `./step-08-visual-foundation.md` ## APPEND TO DOCUMENT: When user selects 'C', append the content directly to the document using the structure from step 6. ## SUCCESS METRICS: ✅ Defining experience clearly articulated ✅ User mental model thoroughly analyzed ✅ Success criteria established for core interaction ✅ Novel vs. established patterns properly evaluated ✅ Experience mechanics designed in detail ✅ A/P/C menu presented and handled correctly ✅ Content properly appended to document when C selected ## FAILURE MODES: ❌ Not identifying the true core interaction ❌ Missing user's mental model and expectations ❌ Not establishing clear success criteria ❌ Not properly evaluating novel vs. established patterns ❌ Experience mechanics too vague or incomplete ❌ Not presenting A/P/C menu after content generation ❌ Appending content without user selecting 'C' ❌ **CRITICAL**: Reading only partial step file - leads to incomplete understanding and poor decisions ❌ **CRITICAL**: Proceeding with 'C' without fully reading and understanding the next step file ❌ **CRITICAL**: Making decisions without complete understanding of step requirements and protocols ## NEXT STEP: After user selects 'C' and content is saved to document, load `./step-08-visual-foundation.md` to establish visual design foundation. Remember: Do NOT proceed to step-08 until user explicitly selects 'C' from the A/P/C menu and content is saved!