PM Skills Marketplace is a GitHub-hosted library of product-management skills, commands, and plugins designed to give AI assistants structured workflows for discovery, strategy, execution, launch, and growth.
This repository packages a marketplace of product-management-oriented AI skills, along with commands and plugins, for tools such as Claude Code and Claude Cowork. The README says it includes 68 PM skills and 42 chained workflows across 9 plugins, and that the skills are also compatible with other AI assistants that can read the same skill format. It is presented as a way to operationalize PM frameworks inside day-to-day AI workflows.
The repository is aimed at a familiar PM pain point: generic AI can generate text, but it does not inherently impose a structured product-thinking process. According to the README, PM Skills Marketplace addresses this by encoding established PM frameworks into guided workflows so users can move through discovery, assumption mapping, prioritization, strategy, and related tasks with more rigor and consistency.
Conceptually, the project works by organizing reusable skills into plugins and then chaining those skills into commands. Skills provide domain knowledge or a specific PM framework; commands are user-invoked workflows that combine multiple skills end to end; plugins bundle related skills and commands into installable packages. The README also says some skills are automatically loaded when relevant, while others can be forced by name, and that after a command finishes it may suggest the next workflow to continue the PM process.
It is likely drawing attention because it sits at the intersection of several high-interest themes: agentic AI, Claude Code plugins, product-management workflows, and practical “ship-with-AI” use cases. The repository is already strongly signaled by its metadata and README as a marketplace of reusable agent skills, and the README emphasizes ready-made starting points like discovery, strategy, PRD writing, launch planning, and north-star metrics, which are concrete entry points for many product teams.
The README itself points to alternative usage paths rather than named competing products: Claude Code, Claude Cowork, Codex CLI, and other AI assistants that can consume universal skill files. More broadly, the closest comparable approach is a workflow or prompt library for product management, but this repository distinguishes itself by packaging skills, commands, and plugins together instead of offering only prompts or only documentation.
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