Claude-skill-registry develop-design-rationale
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git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/data/develop-design-rationale" ~/.claude/skills/majiayu000-claude-skill-registry-develop-design-rationale && rm -rf "$T"
skills/data/develop-design-rationale/SKILL.mdname: develop-design-rationale description: Documents the reasoning behind design decisions including alternatives considered, trade-offs evaluated, and principles applied. Use when making significant UX decisions, aligning with stakeholders on design direction, or preserving design context for future reference. phase: develop version: "2.0.0" updated: 2026-01-26 license: Apache-2.0 metadata: category: specification frameworks: [triple-diamond, lean-startup, design-thinking] author: product-on-purpose
Design Rationale
A design rationale document captures the "why" behind design decisions—the context, constraints, alternatives considered, and reasoning that led to a particular solution. While designs themselves show what was built, rationale documents preserve institutional knowledge about why it was built that way.
When to Use
- When making significant UX decisions that affect user experience
- Before design reviews to prepare stakeholder discussions
- When multiple valid approaches exist and the choice needs justification
- To onboard new team members to existing design decisions
- When revisiting past decisions to understand original reasoning
- During design system evolution to document pattern choices
Instructions
When asked to document design rationale, follow these steps:
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State the Decision Begin with a clear, one-sentence summary of what design decision was made. This becomes the title and reference point for the document.
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Describe the Context Explain the situation that prompted this decision. What problem were you solving? What constraints existed? What user needs informed the direction? Include relevant research findings.
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List Options Considered Document at least 2-3 alternatives that were evaluated. For each option, describe what it would look like and its key characteristics. Be fair to all options—avoid strawmen.
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Define Evaluation Criteria Specify how options were assessed: usability heuristics, technical feasibility, brand alignment, user research findings, business requirements, or design principles.
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Explain the Reasoning Walk through why the chosen option best meets the criteria. Be explicit about trade-offs—what you gained and what you sacrificed. Acknowledge where the decision is reversible vs. irreversible.
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Document Trade-offs Accepted Every design decision involves trade-offs. Name what you gave up and why it was acceptable. This honesty helps future teams understand constraints.
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Note Follow-up Considerations Capture anything that needs attention later: metrics to watch, conditions that might warrant revisiting the decision, or related decisions to make.
Output Format
Use the template in
references/TEMPLATE.md to structure the output.
Quality Checklist
Before finalizing, verify:
- Decision is clearly stated in one sentence
- Context explains the "why now" and constraints
- Multiple alternatives are documented fairly
- Evaluation criteria are explicit
- Reasoning addresses why chosen option beats alternatives
- Trade-offs are honestly acknowledged
- Document is useful to someone inheriting this design
Examples
See
references/EXAMPLE.md for a completed example.