/install process-interviewer
Process Interviewer
Use this skill when a user wants to automate, document, delegate, design, or turn a workflow into a skill, tool, bot, SOP, integration, or reusable process, and the process is not fully specified yet.
Trigger examples:
- "I want to automate this workflow"
- "Help me define this process"
- "Turn this into an SOP"
- "Create a skill for this"
- "Design a bot that handles..."
- "Document how we do..."
Purpose
Slow down before building. Extract the real process, decisions, edge cases, examples, quality criteria, and approval gates before creating an implementation plan or reusable system.
Core Rule
Do not start building while the interview is active. The goal is to understand the process. Build steps come later, after the user confirms the brief or explicitly asks to proceed.
Interview Behavior
- Ask one focused question at a time by default.
- After each answer, briefly summarize what is now understood, then ask the next concrete question.
- Use small batches only when questions are tightly related and low risk.
- Do not accept vague answers when examples would clarify the process.
- Detect contradictions, missing inputs, weak assumptions, unclear ownership, and unmade decisions.
- Ask context-specific questions instead of generic checklist questions.
- If a missing detail is critical, ask before proceeding.
- If a missing detail is minor, mark it as an assumption in the final brief.
Use this pattern during the interview:
What I understand so far: [brief summary].
Next question: [one concrete question].
Interview Phases
Cover these phases in order. Compress phases only when the user has already provided the information clearly.
1. Outcome and Context
Establish:
- What should be built, automated, documented, or delegated.
- Who owns the process.
- Who will use the output.
- What problem it solves.
- Why it matters now.
- What the final result should look like.
2. Current Process
Extract:
- What triggers the process.
- The current step-by-step flow.
- Tools, accounts, documents, files, messages, data sources, and credentials involved.
- Which steps are manual, repetitive, slow, risky, or error-prone.
- Who performs each step today.
3. Desired Output
Define:
- Exact outputs the process should produce.
- Format, language, tone, destination, and timing.
- Required level of detail.
- Success criteria.
- What bad output looks like.
4. Rules and Decisions
Map:
- Classification, prioritization, routing, or rejection rules.
- Required checks and validation.
- What can be assumed when information is missing.
- What must be asked before continuing.
- What should happen when inputs conflict.
5. Exceptions and Failure Cases
Identify:
- Common edge cases.
- Rare but high-impact cases.
- Missing permissions or unavailable tools.
- External service failures.
- Privacy, safety, legal, financial, or reputational risks.
- Escalation paths.
6. Real Examples
Before closing the interview, obtain at least one concrete example of:
- A realistic input.
- The ideal output.
If the user does not have an ideal output, help construct one collaboratively before finalizing the brief.
7. Final Confirmation
Ask:
Is there anything important I have not asked yet?
Only then produce the final brief.
Output Format
After the interview is complete, return a concise process brief with:
- Objective
- Owner and users
- Trigger
- Step-by-step workflow
- Inputs and data sources
- Tools, accounts, and credentials involved
- Outputs and destination
- Decision rules
- Edge cases and failure handling
- Approval gates
- Quality criteria
- Assumptions and unresolved risks
- Real input/output examples
- Recommended next action
Skill Brief Add-on
If the goal is to create or revise a skill, also include:
- Recommended skill name
- Trigger description written for reliable activation
- When the skill should activate
- When it should not activate
- Main instructions
- Workflow steps
- Output format
- Required resources, scripts, references, or assets
- At least two example user requests and expected behavior
- Mistakes to avoid
- Quality criteria
Approval Gates
Mark these actions as requiring explicit user approval:
- Sending emails, DMs, posts, comments, or public messages.
- Publishing, uploading, deleting, sharing, buying, selling, or spending credits.
- Installing plugins, skills, packages, connectors, or external tools.
- Logging into, linking, or changing third-party accounts.
- Making files public.
- Running destructive commands or changing schedulers/configuration.
Quality Criteria
The interview is complete only when:
- The process can be described step by step without major ambiguity.
- At least one realistic input and ideal output are captured.
- Approval gates are explicit.
- Important edge cases are known.
- Success criteria are testable.
- Another agent or person could read the brief and understand what to build.
Safety
This skill is for discovery and clarification only. It does not perform external actions, install tools, write to live systems, or publish outputs.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install process-interviewer - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/process-interviewer - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Process Interviewer?
Interview users before automating, documenting, or turning workflows into reusable systems. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 53 downloads so far.
How do I install Process Interviewer?
Run "/install process-interviewer" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Process Interviewer free?
Yes, Process Interviewer is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Process Interviewer support?
Process Interviewer is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Process Interviewer?
It is built and maintained by JaBasNaR (@juanbastias); the current version is v1.0.0.