ia-document-review
by @iliaal
Structural review of documents for gaps, clarity, completeness, and organization. Use when a brainstorm, plan, spec, ADR, or any doc needs polish before the...
clawhub install compound-eng-document-reviewπ About This Skill
name: ia-document-review class: workflow description: >- Structural review of documents for gaps, clarity, completeness, and organization. Use when a brainstorm, plan, spec, ADR, or any doc needs polish before the next workflow step. For exploring new ideas from scratch, use brainstorming instead.
Document Review
Improve brainstorm or plan documents through structured review.
Step 1: Get the Document
If a document path is provided: Read it, then proceed to Step 2.
If no document is specified: Ask which document to review, or look for the most recent brainstorm/plan in docs/brainstorms/ or docs/plans/.
Step 2: Assess
Read through the document and ask:
These questions surface issues. Don't fix yet--just note what you find.
Step 3: Activate Review Lenses
Based on the document's content, activate specialized review perspectives. Scan for signals and apply matching lenses:
| Lens | Signals | What it checks | |------|---------|----------------| | Product | User-facing features, customer language, market claims, scope decisions | Problem framing, value proposition clarity, whether scope matches stated goals | | Design | UI/UX references, user flows, wireframes, interaction descriptions | Flow completeness, interaction gaps, accessibility considerations | | Security | Auth/authorization, API endpoints, PII, payments, tokens, encryption | Auth model gaps, data exposure risks, missing threat considerations | | Scope guardian | Multiple priority tiers (P0/P1/P2), large requirement count (>8), stretch goals | Scope creep, premature abstractions, features disguised as requirements | | Adversarial | >5 distinct requirements, explicit architectural decisions, high-stakes domains | Unstated assumptions, optimistic estimates, single points of failure, missing failure modes |
Activate a lens when ANY of its signals match. Most documents trigger 1-2 lenses; brainstorm notes may trigger none. When a lens is active, weave its checks into the assessment and evaluation steps rather than running it as a separate pass.
Step 4: Evaluate
Score the document against these criteria:
| Criterion | What to Check | |-----------|---------------| | Clarity | Problem statement is clear, no vague language ("probably," "consider," "try to") | | Completeness | Required sections present, constraints stated, open questions flagged | | Specificity | Concrete enough for next step (brainstorm β can plan, plan β can implement) | | YAGNI | No hypothetical features, simplest approach chosen |
If invoked within a workflow (after /ia-brainstorm or /ia-plan), also check:
Step 5: Identify the Critical Improvement
Among everything found in Steps 2-4, does one issue stand out? If something would significantly improve the document's quality, this is the "must address" item. Highlight it prominently.
Step 6: Make Changes
Present your findings, then:
1. Auto-fix minor issues (vague language, formatting) without asking 2. Ask approval before substantive changes (restructuring, removing sections, changing meaning) 3. Update the document inline--no separate files, no metadata sections
Simplification Guidance
Simplification is purposeful removal of unnecessary complexity, not shortening for its own sake.
Simplify when:
Don't simplify:
Step 7: Reader Test (Optional)
For standalone documents that must be self-contained (onboarding guides, ADRs, external-facing docs), dispatch a zero-context sub-agent to simulate a first-time reader. The sub-agent has no conversation history β it sees only what a future reader would see.
How to run the test:
1. Predict 5-10 reader questions from the document's stated goals β one per major section or decision. Mix three kinds:
- Concrete retrieval: "What command sets up the dev environment?"
- Decision rationale: "Why did we pick X over Y?"
- Ambiguity probe: "Could a reader interpret
Interpret results:
Skip for context-dependent docs (brainstorm notes, plan files, internal working docs) where the reader will always have prior context. The sub-agent test only adds value when the real reader has no other channel.
Step 8: Offer Next Action
After changes are complete, ask:
1. Refine again - Another review pass 2. Review complete - Document is ready
Iteration Guidance
After 2 refinement passes, recommend completion--diminishing returns are likely. If the user wants to continue, allow up to 4 passes total. After 4, stop and report "review converged -- further changes require new direction." Do not continue past 4 even on user request without a fresh framing.
Return control to the caller (workflow or user) after selection.