Product & Design

Product Requirements Document (PRD)

A Product Requirements Document (PRD) defines what you're building, why you're building it, and who it's for. It serves as a central reference for all stakeh...

Product Requirements Document (PRD)

A Product Requirements Document (PRD) defines what you're building, why you're building it, and who it's for. It serves as a central reference for all stakeholders involved in product development.

Key Components

  • Product Vision: High-level statement of what the product aims to achieve
  • Target User Personas: Detailed descriptions of who will use the product
  • User Journeys: How users will interact with the product
  • Feature Requirements: Detailed specifications of functionality
  • Non-Functional Requirements: Performance, security, scalability considerations
  • Success Metrics: How you'll measure if the product meets its goals
  • MVP Scope: The minimum set of features needed for initial release

Best Practices

  • Focus on the "what" and "why," not the "how"
  • Use clear, unambiguous language
  • Include user stories ("As a [user], I want to [action] so that [benefit]")
  • Prioritize requirements clearly
  • Get input from multiple stakeholders
  • Keep the document updated as the product evolves

Resources

How It's Used in VibeReference

In Day 1 of the VibeReference workflow, you'll create a comprehensive PRD that guides the development of your SaaS application. This document serves as the foundation for both the technical implementation and the marketing strategy of your product.

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