PRD Generation
Generate a ship-ready product requirements document from your validated startup idea.
VibeCom's PRD Generation feature creates a comprehensive product requirements document (PRD) based on your validated idea, target customer, and competitive context.
What You Get
A VibeCom PRD includes:
- Problem statement — The specific pain the product solves
- Target user — ICP and primary use cases
- Goals & success metrics — What does success look like?
- User stories — Core workflows in "As a user, I want to..." format
- Feature requirements — Prioritized list of features (Must Have / Should Have / Nice to Have)
- Technical requirements — Infrastructure, integrations, and technical constraints
- Out of scope — What's explicitly excluded from v1
- Open questions — Decisions that still need to be made
How to Trigger It
From chat:
"Write a PRD for the MVP"
"Generate a product requirements document based on what we've discussed"
As a skill: Type /prd in the chat for a structured PRD.
PRD for Vibe Coders
If you're using Cursor, Claude Code, or another AI coding tool, you can paste the VibeCom PRD directly into your IDE as context. The PRD gives the coding AI a precise spec to build from, dramatically reducing hallucination and scope drift.
Recommended workflow:
- Validate your idea with VibeCom
- Generate the PRD with
/prd - Copy the PRD into your Cursor project as
SPEC.md - Reference it in your Cursor conversations: "Build according to SPEC.md"
Customizing the PRD
After generation, you can refine it:
"Make the PRD more focused on the mobile experience"
"Add a section on API requirements"
"Remove the enterprise features from the MVP scope"
"Rewrite the user stories for a B2B audience"
The PRD is a living document — update it as your thinking evolves.
Exporting the PRD
PRDs can be exported as:
- Markdown — For pasting into your IDE or Notion
- PDF — For sharing with stakeholders
Related Features
- Idea Validation Chat — Validate before generating the PRD
- Customer Discovery — ICP feeds into user stories
- GTM Strategy — What to build for the launch