Pm-skills deliver-acceptance-criteria
Generates structured Given/When/Then acceptance criteria for a user story or feature slice. Use when translating product requirements into testable scenarios that cover the happy path, edge cases, error states, and non-functional expectations for engineering handoff and QA.
git clone https://github.com/product-on-purpose/pm-skills
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/product-on-purpose/pm-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/deliver-acceptance-criteria" ~/.claude/skills/product-on-purpose-pm-skills-deliver-acceptance-criteria && rm -rf "$T"
skills/deliver-acceptance-criteria/SKILL.mdAcceptance Criteria
Acceptance criteria define the observable behavior that must be true for a story or feature to be considered done. This skill turns feature context into concise, testable Given/When/Then scenarios that engineers and QA can verify without guessing intent.
When to Use
- After a user story, PRD section, or feature slice is defined
- When a team needs clear pass/fail conditions for implementation
- When writing QA-ready criteria for sprint planning or handoff
- When a story has edge cases, error paths, or non-functional expectations that should be explicit
Instructions
When asked to create acceptance criteria, follow these steps:
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Confirm the story or feature scope Identify the exact slice of work. If the scope is unclear, ask for the user story, PRD section, or feature description before drafting criteria.
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Separate the happy path from exceptions Start with the primary success flow, then add edge cases and error states that are likely or costly if missed.
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Write each criterion as an observable scenario Use Given/When/Then language only. Keep each criterion independently testable and avoid implementation details.
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Cover recovery and failure behavior Describe what the user sees or can do when validation fails, a dependency is unavailable, or a save action cannot complete.
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Include non-functional expectations Add criteria for performance, accessibility, security, reliability, or auditability when they matter to the story.
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Avoid duplication and overlap Each criterion should test one outcome. If two criteria describe the same behavior, merge or split them until the intent is clear.
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Review for testability Ensure a reviewer can pass or fail each criterion without interpretation. If a statement is subjective, rewrite it into a measurable outcome.
Output Contract
Use
references/TEMPLATE.md as the output format. A complete response should:
- Restate the feature or story context
- Group criteria into happy path, edge cases, error states, and non-functional criteria
- Use explicit Given/When/Then statements for each criterion
- Note assumptions or open questions when context is incomplete
Quality Checklist
Before finalizing, verify:
- The criteria map to a specific story or feature slice
- The happy path is covered first
- Edge cases are explicit, not implied
- Error states include user-visible recovery behavior
- Non-functional criteria are included when relevant
- Each criterion is testable and has one clear outcome
- No implementation details leak into the acceptance criteria
Examples
See
references/EXAMPLE.md for a completed example based on a realistic e-commerce checkout flow.