Kwp Product Management Roadmap Update Workflow

Update, create, or reprioritize your product roadmap

Published by rebyteai

Featured Workflow Product Management

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Documentation

kwp-product-management-roadmap-update-workflow

This is a workflow skill for the product-management category.

Sub-Skills

The following skills are available in this workflow:

  • rebyteai/kwp-product-management-competitive-analysis
  • rebyteai/kwp-product-management-feature-spec
  • rebyteai/kwp-product-management-metrics-tracking
  • rebyteai/kwp-product-management-roadmap-management
  • rebyteai/kwp-product-management-stakeholder-comms
  • rebyteai/kwp-product-management-user-research-synthesis

Workflow Instructions

Roadmap Update

If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see CONNECTORS.md.

Update, create, or reprioritize a product roadmap.

Workflow

1. Understand Current State

If ~~project tracker is connected:

  • Pull current roadmap items with their statuses, assignees, and dates
  • Identify items that are overdue, at risk, or recently completed
  • Surface any items without clear owners or dates

If no project management tool is connected:

  • Ask the user to describe their current roadmap or paste/upload it
  • Accept any format: list, table, spreadsheet, screenshot, or prose description

2. Determine the Operation

Ask what the user wants to do:

Add item: New feature, initiative, or work item to the roadmap

  • Gather: name, description, priority, estimated effort, target timeframe, owner, dependencies
  • Suggest where it fits based on current priorities and capacity

Update status: Change status of existing items

  • Options: not started, in progress, at risk, blocked, completed, cut
  • For "at risk" or "blocked": ask for the blocker and mitigation plan

Reprioritize: Change the order or priority of items

  • Ask what changed (new information, strategy shift, resource change, customer feedback)
  • Apply a prioritization framework if helpful — see the roadmap-management skill for RICE, MoSCoW, ICE, and value-vs-effort frameworks
  • Show before/after comparison

Move timeline: Shift dates for items

  • Ask why (scope change, dependency slip, resource constraint)
  • Identify downstream impacts on dependent items
  • Flag items that move past hard deadlines

Create new roadmap: Build a roadmap from scratch

  • Ask about timeframe (quarter, half, year)
  • Ask about format preference (Now/Next/Later, quarterly columns, OKR-aligned)
  • Gather the list of initiatives to include

3. Generate Roadmap Summary

Produce a roadmap view with:

Status Overview

Quick summary: X items in progress, Y completed this period, Z at risk.

Roadmap Items

For each item, show:

  • Name and one-line description
  • Status indicator (on track / at risk / blocked / completed / not started)
  • Target timeframe or date
  • Owner
  • Key dependencies

Group items by:

  • Timeframe (Now / Next / Later) or quarter, depending on format
  • Or by theme/goal if the user prefers

Risks and Dependencies

  • Items that are blocked or at risk, with details
  • Cross-team dependencies and their status
  • Items approaching hard deadlines

Changes This Update

If this is an update to an existing roadmap, summarize what changed:

  • Items added, removed, or reprioritized
  • Timeline shifts
  • Status changes

4. Follow Up

After generating the roadmap:

  • Offer to format for a specific audience (executive summary, engineering detail, customer-facing)
  • Offer to draft communication about roadmap changes
  • If project management tool is connected, offer to update ticket statuses

Output Format

Use a clear, scannable format. Tables work well for roadmap items. Use text status labels: Done, On Track, At Risk, Blocked, Not Started.

Tips

  • A roadmap is a communication tool, not a project plan. Keep it at the right altitude — themes and outcomes, not tasks.
  • When reprioritizing, always ask what changed. Priority shifts should be driven by new information, not whim.
  • Flag capacity issues early. If the roadmap has more work than the team can handle, say so.
  • Dependencies are the biggest risk to roadmaps. Surface them explicitly.
  • If the user asks to add something, always ask what comes off or moves. Roadmaps are zero-sum against capacity.

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