Creative Intelligence Suite for AI-driven ideation, design thinking, innovation strategy, problem-solving, and storytelling. 5 named specialist agents with distinct methodologies — no setup required, all workflows available immediately.
40
18%
Does it follow best practices?
Impact
64%
1.14xAverage score across 3 eval scenarios
Passed
No known issues
Optimize this skill with Tessl
npx tessl skill review --optimize ./.agent-skills/bmad-idea/SKILL.mdQuality
Discovery
14%Based on the skill's description, can an agent find and select it at the right time? Clear, specific descriptions lead to better discovery.
This description relies heavily on marketing buzzwords and abstract concepts without specifying concrete actions or clear selection triggers. The mention of '5 named specialist agents' is implementation detail that doesn't help Claude understand when to use this skill. It would likely conflict with many other skills due to its overly broad scope.
Suggestions
Add a 'Use when...' clause with specific trigger scenarios, e.g., 'Use when the user asks for brainstorming sessions, creative workshops, or structured innovation frameworks like SCAMPER or Six Thinking Hats'
Replace abstract terms with concrete actions, e.g., 'Generates creative concepts using structured frameworks, facilitates design sprints, develops narrative arcs for presentations'
Specify the distinct methodologies of the 5 agents to create clearer trigger terms, e.g., 'Includes agents for: lateral thinking exercises, user journey mapping, competitive differentiation, narrative structure, and rapid prototyping ideation'
| Dimension | Reasoning | Score |
|---|---|---|
Specificity | Uses abstract buzzwords like 'ideation', 'design thinking', 'innovation strategy' without describing concrete actions. No specific verbs or outputs are mentioned - just vague domain labels. | 1 / 3 |
Completeness | Describes a vague 'what' (creative/innovation domains) but completely lacks a 'Use when...' clause or any explicit trigger guidance. The '5 named specialist agents' detail doesn't help Claude know when to select this skill. | 1 / 3 |
Trigger Term Quality | Contains some relevant keywords like 'ideation', 'design thinking', 'problem-solving', 'storytelling' that users might say, but these are broad and could apply to many contexts. Missing natural variations or specific use case terms. | 2 / 3 |
Distinctiveness Conflict Risk | Extremely generic terms like 'problem-solving', 'storytelling', and 'ideation' would conflict with virtually any creative, writing, or analytical skill. Nothing distinguishes this from general brainstorming or writing assistance. | 1 / 3 |
Total | 5 / 12 Passed |
Implementation
22%Reviews the quality of instructions and guidance provided to agents. Good implementation is clear, handles edge cases, and produces reliable results.
This skill content functions as a feature catalog rather than actionable guidance. It effectively lists available commands and agents with good visual organization, but fails to explain what any of them actually do, what inputs they expect, or how to use the underlying methodologies. Claude would know the commands exist but not how to execute meaningful creative workflows.
Suggestions
Add concrete examples showing input/output for at least one workflow (e.g., 'bmad-cis-brainstorming' with a sample topic and expected session structure)
Document the actual steps in multi-phase workflows like design thinking - what happens in each phase, what outputs are produced
Link to separate reference files containing the 36 brainstorming techniques and 25 story frameworks, or include a representative subset inline
Clarify what 'creative squad' actually does - show the sequence of agent handoffs and what each contributes
| Dimension | Reasoning | Score |
|---|---|---|
Conciseness | The content is reasonably efficient with good use of tables, but includes some redundancy (Quick Reference duplicates earlier tables, slash commands and workflows overlap significantly). The agent persona descriptions add flavor but limited actionable value. | 2 / 3 |
Actionability | The skill lists commands and agent names but provides no concrete guidance on what actually happens when you run them, what inputs are expected, what outputs are produced, or how to use the 36 brainstorming techniques or 25 story frameworks mentioned. It describes rather than instructs. | 1 / 3 |
Workflow Clarity | Despite mentioning '5-phase' design thinking and multi-agent workflows, there are no actual steps, sequences, or validation checkpoints documented. The 'creative squad' workflow claims to combine agents but doesn't explain how the handoffs work or what the process looks like. | 1 / 3 |
Progressive Disclosure | The content is well-organized with clear sections and tables, but it references detailed methodologies (36 techniques, 25 frameworks, 5-phase process) without linking to any documentation where these are explained. No external file references are provided for the detailed content. | 2 / 3 |
Total | 6 / 12 Passed |
Validation
100%Checks the skill against the spec for correct structure and formatting. All validation checks must pass before discovery and implementation can be scored.
Validation — 11 / 11 Passed
Validation for skill structure
No warnings or errors.
c033769
Table of Contents
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