Refactor high-complexity React components in Dify frontend. Use when `pnpm analyze-component...
npx skills add liqiongyu/lenny_skills_plus --skill "team-rituals"
Install specific skill from multi-skill repository
# Description
Design a lightweight set of named, templated “Golden Rituals” (team operating cadence) and produce a Team Rituals Pack (ritual inventory, ritual specs + agendas, onboarding primer, rollout + iteration plan). Use for team rituals, operating cadence, meeting templates, team operating system, golden rituals. Category: Hiring & Teams.
# SKILL.md
name: "team-rituals"
description: "Design a lightweight set of named, templated “Golden Rituals” (team operating cadence) and produce a Team Rituals Pack (ritual inventory, ritual specs + agendas, onboarding primer, rollout + iteration plan). Use for team rituals, operating cadence, meeting templates, team operating system, golden rituals. Category: Hiring & Teams."
Team Rituals
Scope
Covers
- Designing a small set of high-leverage team rituals that drive alignment, execution, learning, and belonging
- Turning rituals into an operating system (not “more meetings”): named rituals, clear owners, repeatable templates, and explicit outputs
- Creating “Golden Rituals” that are Named, Templated, and Known by every new hire by their first Friday
When to use
- “Our meetings are chaotic; design a better team cadence.”
- “Define our team operating system / rituals / ceremonies.”
- “Create named, templated Golden Rituals and a one-pager for onboarding.”
- “We need better alignment and decision velocity without adding meeting load.”
When NOT to use
- You need to define company values, org design, or strategy from scratch (do that first; rituals should express decisions you’ve made)
- You need help facilitating a single workshop/meeting agenda only (this skill produces an end-to-end ritual system)
- You need HR/legal policy guidance (this is not compliance or legal advice)
- You’re trying to use rituals for surveillance or performance policing (this will backfire; redesign for trust and psychological safety)
Inputs
Minimum required
- Team type + size + composition (functions; cross-functional vs single function)
- Work mode: remote/hybrid/in-office + time zones
- What’s currently broken (symptoms) + what you want to improve (outcomes)
- Existing cadence/rituals (or “none”) and what people hate about them
- Constraints: meeting time budget, decision-making model, tooling (calendar/docs/chat)
Missing-info strategy
- Ask up to 5 questions from references/INTAKE.md (3–5 at a time).
- If inputs are still missing, proceed with clearly labeled assumptions and provide 2–3 options.
- Do not request secrets. If context is sensitive, ask for redacted/high-level descriptions.
Outputs (deliverables)
Produce a Team Rituals Pack in Markdown (in-chat; or as files if the user requests):
1) Context snapshot (team, work mode, constraints, goals)
2) Ritual inventory audit (current rituals + what to keep/change/kill)
3) Golden Rituals shortlist (3–7 named rituals mapped to outcomes)
4) Ritual specs + templates (one spec per Golden Ritual: purpose, cadence, owner, agenda, outputs, anti-patterns)
5) Onboarding primer (“Known by first Friday”: 1-page cheatsheet + where templates live)
6) Rollout plan (pilot, comms, calendar/docs setup, training)
7) Governance plan (review cadence, feedback loop, metrics, retirement/iteration rules)
8) Risks / Open questions / Next steps (always included)
Templates: references/TEMPLATES.md
Expanded guidance: references/WORKFLOW.md
Workflow (7 steps)
1) Intake + outcome definition (what the rituals are for)
- Inputs: user context; references/INTAKE.md.
- Actions: Clarify the top 2–3 outcomes (e.g., alignment, decision speed, execution reliability, learning). Set constraints (time budget, remote/async needs). Define what “good” feels like in 4–6 bullets.
- Outputs: Context snapshot + outcome list + constraints.
- Checks: You can explain the “why” in one sentence (“We’re doing this to _ without _.”).
2) Audit what exists (keep / change / kill)
- Inputs: current meeting list/cadence; pain points.
- Actions: Build a ritual inventory table. For each ritual: purpose, participants, cadence, outputs, and whether it’s working. Identify duplicates and “status-only” meetings.
- Outputs: Ritual inventory audit with a keep/change/kill recommendation.
- Checks: Every existing ritual has an explicit purpose and output; “kill” items have a replacement or rationale.
3) Design rules + time budget (make it a system, not meetings)
- Inputs: outcomes + audit.
- Actions: Define a small set of design rules (named, templated, artifact-first, owner-driven, async-by-default). Establish a weekly meeting time budget and decide what must be synchronous vs async.
- Outputs: Ritual design principles + time budget + naming scheme.
- Checks: Total sync time stays within budget; each ritual has an owner and an artifact output.
4) Select 3–7 “Golden Rituals” (the minimal set)
- Inputs: outcomes + principles + constraints.
- Actions: Propose 3–7 Golden Rituals that cover: alignment, decisions, execution, learning, and belonging (as needed). Name them with memorable, team-relevant names.
- Outputs: Golden Rituals shortlist + mapping table (ritual → outcome).
- Checks: Each Golden Ritual earns its slot; no “nice-to-have” meetings.
5) Write ritual specs + templates (make them repeatable)
- Inputs: Golden Rituals shortlist; references/TEMPLATES.md.
- Actions: For each Golden Ritual, produce a spec: purpose, cadence, roles, agenda/format, prep, outputs, follow-ups, and anti-patterns. Create the corresponding agenda/notes template.
- Outputs: One “Ritual Spec” per Golden Ritual + copy/paste templates.
- Checks: Rituals are Named and Templated; outputs are explicit (decisions, priorities, action list, learnings).
6) Make them “Known by first Friday” (onboarding + rollout)
- Inputs: Ritual specs; onboarding constraints.
- Actions: Create a 1-page onboarding primer and a rollout plan: pilot order, comms, calendar creation, where templates live, and how new hires learn the rituals in week 1.
- Outputs: Onboarding primer + rollout plan.
- Checks: A new hire can find the rituals, understand purpose, and run one using templates by their first Friday.
7) Governance + quality gate (iterate, don’t accumulate)
- Inputs: full draft pack.
- Actions: Define governance: ritual owners, quarterly review, feedback loop, and retirement rules. Run references/CHECKLISTS.md and score with references/RUBRIC.md. Add Risks / Open questions / Next steps.
- Outputs: Final Team Rituals Pack.
- Checks: The pack is minimal, adoptable, and has a way to evolve without ritual sprawl.
Quality gate (required)
- Use references/CHECKLISTS.md and references/RUBRIC.md.
- Always include: Risks, Open questions, Next steps.
Examples
Example 1 (fix chaotic cadence): “We’re a 12-person product+engineering team (remote across PST/EST). Meetings feel random and we keep missing decisions. Design Golden Rituals, write templates, and create a first-Friday onboarding primer.”
Expected: a small set of named rituals with templates, mapped to outcomes, plus rollout + governance.
Example 2 (new manager operating system): “I’m inheriting a team of 7 ICs with low accountability and unclear priorities. Create a weekly operating cadence with minimal meetings and clear artifact outputs.”
Expected: ritual inventory audit + a minimal Golden Rituals set + artifact-first templates.
Boundary example: “Fix our company culture.”
Response: ask what specifically is broken and at what scope; propose a small team-level ritual system only, or suggest doing values/strategy/org work first.
# Supported AI Coding Agents
This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:
Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.