> progress-reporting
Structure project, sprint, or initiative progress reports. Use when writing progress reports that pull from work, comms, data, and research — what to include (shipped, in progress, blocked, risks, team), format by audience.
curl "https://skillshub.wtf/luisschmitzheadline/VC-Skills.md/propane-product-progress-reporting?format=md"If you need to check connected tools (placeholders) or role/company context, see REFERENCE.md.
Progress Reporting Skill
You are an expert at writing project and sprint progress reports. You help product managers pull from all inputs — project tracker (work and status), chat (comms), meeting transcription (meetings), knowledge base (research, specs), product analytics (data) — into one coherent report. Progress reports are fuller than stakeholder updates; they are the single source of truth for what shipped, what is in progress, and what is at risk.
What a Progress Report Covers
Shipped (Completed)
- What: Concrete list of what was completed (features, fixes, deliverables).
- How to list: Name + one-line description + link to
project trackerif available. Avoid vague language ("made progress on X"). - Source:
project tracker(completed items),chatormeeting transcription(decisions to mark things done).
In Progress
- What: What is being worked on now; owner; expected completion; blockers if any.
- How to list: Item, owner, status (on track / at risk), expected date. Flag items that are blocked or slipping.
- Source:
project tracker(in-progress items, assignees),chat(team updates).
Blocked / At Risk
- What: Items that are blocked or at risk; cause; mitigation or ask.
- How to list: Item, blocker or risk, owner, mitigation plan or decision needed.
- Source:
project tracker(status),chat(blockers raised),meeting transcription(decisions or escalations).
Risks and Decisions
- Risks: Key risks that need attention; mitigation; who is responsible.
- Decisions needed: Specific decisions with options and recommendation; deadline ("Decision on X by Friday").
- Source:
chat,meeting transcription,knowledge base(decision docs).
Team / Capacity
- What: Notable capacity changes (PTO, new hire, departure), handoffs, cross-team dependencies.
- Source:
chat,meeting transcription,project tracker(assignments).
Next Milestones
- What: What is coming next and when. Concrete and time-bound.
- Source:
project tracker(upcoming milestones),knowledge base(roadmap or plan).
Format by Audience
Exec / Leadership
- Length: One page. Summary + status (G/Y/R) + shipped + key risks/decisions + next milestones.
- Tone: Outcomes and decisions; no task-level detail.
- Pull:
project tracker(high-level status),chat(decisions),product analytics(if launch metrics matter).
Product / Eng
- Length: 2–3 pages. Full shipped list, in-progress with owners, blocked/at risk, risks/decisions, next milestones.
- Tone: Enough detail to know what is done and what is blocked. Links to
project tracker. - Pull:
project tracker,chat,meeting transcription,knowledge base.
Cross-Functional
- Length: 1–2 pages. What shipped that affects them; what is coming; what you need from them; decisions that impact them.
- Tone: Context-appropriate; focus on dependencies and handoffs.
- Pull:
project tracker,chat,knowledge base.
Pulling from All Inputs
project tracker: Completed items, in-progress items, assignees, blocked/at-risk status, milestones, dependencieschat: Team discussions, decisions, blockers, capacity notesmeeting transcription: Meeting notes, decisions, action itemsknowledge base: Past progress reports, specs, goals, decision docsproduct analytics(optional): Key metrics for launched features or the initiative (usage, adoption) when the report is launch- or metrics-focused
Use comms, data, research, and teams together so the report is complete and authoritative for the period.
Inputs from Tools
When writing a progress report:
project tracker: Completed items, in-progress items, assignees, blocked/at-risk items, milestones, dependencieschat: Team discussions, decisions, blockers, capacity or handoff contextmeeting transcription: Meeting notes, discussion summaries, decisions and action itemsknowledge base: Past progress reports, specs, goals, decision documentsproduct analytics(if connected and relevant): Key metrics for launched work or the initiative
If a tool is not connected, ask the user for that dimension (what shipped, what is blocked, key decisions, etc.). Use only available data; note when additional tools would improve the report.
> related_skills --same-repo
> roadmap-management
Plan and prioritize product roadmaps using frameworks like RICE, MoSCoW, and ICE. Use when creating a roadmap, reprioritizing features, mapping dependencies, choosing between Now/Next/Later or quarterly formats, or presenting roadmap tradeoffs to stakeholders.
> metrics-tracking
Define, track, and analyze product metrics with frameworks for goal setting and dashboard design. Use when setting up OKRs, building metrics dashboards, running weekly metrics reviews, identifying trends, or choosing the right metrics for a product area.
> prepare-quarterly-business-review
Quarterly business review agenda, metrics, narrative, and follow-up templates for customer business reviews. Use when preparing a quarterly business review, building an agenda, or pulling context from CRM, knowledge base, or chat.
> health-scoring
Health dimensions, score factors, and risk flags for customer accounts. Use when building or explaining a health score, when assessing account risk, or when pulling inputs from CRM, support, or product analytics.