@heytherevibin/skillforge 0.2.1

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
Files changed (402) hide show
  1. package/CHANGELOG.md +16 -0
  2. package/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md +34 -0
  3. package/CONTRIBUTING.md +38 -0
  4. package/LICENSE +21 -0
  5. package/README.md +337 -0
  6. package/RELEASING.md +93 -0
  7. package/SECURITY.md +31 -0
  8. package/STRATEGY.md +26 -0
  9. package/bin/cli.js +547 -0
  10. package/lib/packs.js +184 -0
  11. package/package.json +38 -0
  12. package/python/app/__init__.py +0 -0
  13. package/python/app/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-312.pyc +0 -0
  14. package/python/app/__pycache__/auth.cpython-312.pyc +0 -0
  15. package/python/app/__pycache__/main.cpython-312.pyc +0 -0
  16. package/python/app/auth.py +63 -0
  17. package/python/app/cli.py +78 -0
  18. package/python/app/db_paths.py +26 -0
  19. package/python/app/events_cli.py +175 -0
  20. package/python/app/main.py +647 -0
  21. package/python/app/materialize.py +138 -0
  22. package/python/app/mcp_server.py +610 -0
  23. package/python/app/route_cli.py +117 -0
  24. package/python/requirements-dev.txt +1 -0
  25. package/python/requirements.txt +7 -0
  26. package/python/tests/test_db_paths.py +41 -0
  27. package/skills/accessibility/SKILL.md +145 -0
  28. package/skills/agent-architecture-audit/SKILL.md +256 -0
  29. package/skills/agent-eval/SKILL.md +144 -0
  30. package/skills/agent-harness-construction/SKILL.md +72 -0
  31. package/skills/agent-introspection-debugging/SKILL.md +152 -0
  32. package/skills/agent-payment-x402/SKILL.md +224 -0
  33. package/skills/agent-sort/SKILL.md +214 -0
  34. package/skills/agentic-engineering/SKILL.md +62 -0
  35. package/skills/agentic-os/SKILL.md +386 -0
  36. package/skills/ai-first-engineering/SKILL.md +50 -0
  37. package/skills/ai-regression-testing/SKILL.md +384 -0
  38. package/skills/android-clean-architecture/SKILL.md +338 -0
  39. package/skills/angular-developer/SKILL.md +153 -0
  40. package/skills/angular-developer/references/angular-animations.md +160 -0
  41. package/skills/angular-developer/references/angular-aria.md +410 -0
  42. package/skills/angular-developer/references/cli.md +86 -0
  43. package/skills/angular-developer/references/component-harnesses.md +59 -0
  44. package/skills/angular-developer/references/component-styling.md +91 -0
  45. package/skills/angular-developer/references/components.md +117 -0
  46. package/skills/angular-developer/references/creating-services.md +97 -0
  47. package/skills/angular-developer/references/data-resolvers.md +69 -0
  48. package/skills/angular-developer/references/define-routes.md +67 -0
  49. package/skills/angular-developer/references/defining-providers.md +72 -0
  50. package/skills/angular-developer/references/di-fundamentals.md +120 -0
  51. package/skills/angular-developer/references/e2e-testing.md +56 -0
  52. package/skills/angular-developer/references/effects.md +83 -0
  53. package/skills/angular-developer/references/hierarchical-injectors.md +43 -0
  54. package/skills/angular-developer/references/host-elements.md +80 -0
  55. package/skills/angular-developer/references/injection-context.md +63 -0
  56. package/skills/angular-developer/references/inputs.md +101 -0
  57. package/skills/angular-developer/references/linked-signal.md +59 -0
  58. package/skills/angular-developer/references/loading-strategies.md +61 -0
  59. package/skills/angular-developer/references/mcp.md +108 -0
  60. package/skills/angular-developer/references/navigate-to-routes.md +69 -0
  61. package/skills/angular-developer/references/outputs.md +86 -0
  62. package/skills/angular-developer/references/reactive-forms.md +122 -0
  63. package/skills/angular-developer/references/rendering-strategies.md +44 -0
  64. package/skills/angular-developer/references/resource.md +77 -0
  65. package/skills/angular-developer/references/route-animations.md +56 -0
  66. package/skills/angular-developer/references/route-guards.md +52 -0
  67. package/skills/angular-developer/references/router-lifecycle.md +45 -0
  68. package/skills/angular-developer/references/router-testing.md +87 -0
  69. package/skills/angular-developer/references/show-routes-with-outlets.md +68 -0
  70. package/skills/angular-developer/references/signal-forms.md +795 -0
  71. package/skills/angular-developer/references/signals-overview.md +94 -0
  72. package/skills/angular-developer/references/tailwind-css.md +69 -0
  73. package/skills/angular-developer/references/template-driven-forms.md +114 -0
  74. package/skills/angular-developer/references/testing-fundamentals.md +65 -0
  75. package/skills/api-connector-builder/SKILL.md +120 -0
  76. package/skills/api-design/SKILL.md +522 -0
  77. package/skills/architecture-decision-records/SKILL.md +178 -0
  78. package/skills/article-writing/SKILL.md +78 -0
  79. package/skills/automation-audit-ops/SKILL.md +141 -0
  80. package/skills/autonomous-agent-harness/SKILL.md +272 -0
  81. package/skills/autonomous-loops/SKILL.md +609 -0
  82. package/skills/backend-patterns/SKILL.md +560 -0
  83. package/skills/benchmark/SKILL.md +92 -0
  84. package/skills/blueprint/SKILL.md +104 -0
  85. package/skills/browser-qa/SKILL.md +86 -0
  86. package/skills/bun-runtime/SKILL.md +83 -0
  87. package/skills/canary-watch/SKILL.md +98 -0
  88. package/skills/carrier-relationship-management/SKILL.md +211 -0
  89. package/skills/cisco-ios-patterns/SKILL.md +163 -0
  90. package/skills/ck/SKILL.md +147 -0
  91. package/skills/ck/commands/forget.mjs +44 -0
  92. package/skills/ck/commands/info.mjs +24 -0
  93. package/skills/ck/commands/init.mjs +143 -0
  94. package/skills/ck/commands/list.mjs +40 -0
  95. package/skills/ck/commands/migrate.mjs +202 -0
  96. package/skills/ck/commands/resume.mjs +36 -0
  97. package/skills/ck/commands/save.mjs +210 -0
  98. package/skills/ck/commands/shared.mjs +387 -0
  99. package/skills/ck/hooks/session-start.mjs +224 -0
  100. package/skills/claude-devfleet/SKILL.md +103 -0
  101. package/skills/click-path-audit/SKILL.md +244 -0
  102. package/skills/clickhouse-io/SKILL.md +438 -0
  103. package/skills/code-tour/SKILL.md +235 -0
  104. package/skills/codebase-onboarding/SKILL.md +232 -0
  105. package/skills/coding-standards/SKILL.md +548 -0
  106. package/skills/compose-multiplatform-patterns/SKILL.md +298 -0
  107. package/skills/connections-optimizer/SKILL.md +188 -0
  108. package/skills/content-engine/SKILL.md +126 -0
  109. package/skills/content-hash-cache-pattern/SKILL.md +160 -0
  110. package/skills/context-budget/SKILL.md +134 -0
  111. package/skills/continuous-agent-loop/SKILL.md +44 -0
  112. package/skills/continuous-learning/SKILL.md +129 -0
  113. package/skills/continuous-learning/config.json +18 -0
  114. package/skills/continuous-learning/evaluate-session.sh +69 -0
  115. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/SKILL.md +358 -0
  116. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/agents/observer-loop.sh +322 -0
  117. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/agents/observer.md +198 -0
  118. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/agents/session-guardian.sh +150 -0
  119. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/agents/start-observer.sh +248 -0
  120. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/config.json +8 -0
  121. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/hooks/observe.sh +476 -0
  122. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/scripts/detect-project.sh +288 -0
  123. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/scripts/instinct-cli.py +1519 -0
  124. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/scripts/lib/homunculus-dir.sh +31 -0
  125. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/scripts/migrate-homunculus.sh +62 -0
  126. package/skills/continuous-learning-v2/scripts/test_parse_instinct.py +1018 -0
  127. package/skills/cost-aware-llm-pipeline/SKILL.md +182 -0
  128. package/skills/cost-tracking/SKILL.md +147 -0
  129. package/skills/council/SKILL.md +202 -0
  130. package/skills/cpp-coding-standards/SKILL.md +722 -0
  131. package/skills/cpp-testing/SKILL.md +323 -0
  132. package/skills/crosspost/SKILL.md +110 -0
  133. package/skills/csharp-testing/SKILL.md +320 -0
  134. package/skills/customer-billing-ops/SKILL.md +139 -0
  135. package/skills/customs-trade-compliance/SKILL.md +262 -0
  136. package/skills/dart-flutter-patterns/SKILL.md +562 -0
  137. package/skills/dashboard-builder/SKILL.md +108 -0
  138. package/skills/data-scraper-agent/SKILL.md +764 -0
  139. package/skills/database-migrations/SKILL.md +428 -0
  140. package/skills/deep-research/SKILL.md +158 -0
  141. package/skills/defi-amm-security/SKILL.md +166 -0
  142. package/skills/deployment-patterns/SKILL.md +426 -0
  143. package/skills/design-system/SKILL.md +81 -0
  144. package/skills/django-celery/SKILL.md +456 -0
  145. package/skills/django-patterns/SKILL.md +733 -0
  146. package/skills/django-security/SKILL.md +592 -0
  147. package/skills/django-tdd/SKILL.md +728 -0
  148. package/skills/django-verification/SKILL.md +468 -0
  149. package/skills/dmux-workflows/SKILL.md +190 -0
  150. package/skills/docker-patterns/SKILL.md +363 -0
  151. package/skills/documentation-lookup/SKILL.md +89 -0
  152. package/skills/dotnet-patterns/SKILL.md +320 -0
  153. package/skills/e2e-testing/SKILL.md +325 -0
  154. package/skills/email-ops/SKILL.md +120 -0
  155. package/skills/energy-procurement/SKILL.md +227 -0
  156. package/skills/enterprise-agent-ops/SKILL.md +49 -0
  157. package/skills/error-handling/SKILL.md +375 -0
  158. package/skills/eval-harness/SKILL.md +269 -0
  159. package/skills/evm-token-decimals/SKILL.md +130 -0
  160. package/skills/exa-search/SKILL.md +106 -0
  161. package/skills/fal-ai-media/SKILL.md +287 -0
  162. package/skills/fastapi-patterns/SKILL.md +327 -0
  163. package/skills/finance-billing-ops/SKILL.md +126 -0
  164. package/skills/flox-environments/SKILL.md +496 -0
  165. package/skills/flutter-dart-code-review/SKILL.md +434 -0
  166. package/skills/foundation-models-on-device/SKILL.md +243 -0
  167. package/skills/frontend-design-direction/SKILL.md +92 -0
  168. package/skills/frontend-patterns/SKILL.md +641 -0
  169. package/skills/frontend-slides/SKILL.md +183 -0
  170. package/skills/frontend-slides/STYLE_PRESETS.md +330 -0
  171. package/skills/frontend-slides/animation-patterns.md +122 -0
  172. package/skills/frontend-slides/html-template.md +419 -0
  173. package/skills/frontend-slides/scripts/export-pdf.sh +418 -0
  174. package/skills/frontend-slides/scripts/extract-pptx.py +96 -0
  175. package/skills/frontend-slides/viewport-base.css +153 -0
  176. package/skills/fsharp-testing/SKILL.md +279 -0
  177. package/skills/gan-style-harness/SKILL.md +278 -0
  178. package/skills/gateguard/SKILL.md +125 -0
  179. package/skills/git-workflow/SKILL.md +714 -0
  180. package/skills/github-ops/SKILL.md +143 -0
  181. package/skills/golang-patterns/SKILL.md +673 -0
  182. package/skills/golang-testing/SKILL.md +719 -0
  183. package/skills/google-workspace-ops/SKILL.md +94 -0
  184. package/skills/healthcare-cdss-patterns/SKILL.md +245 -0
  185. package/skills/healthcare-emr-patterns/SKILL.md +159 -0
  186. package/skills/healthcare-eval-harness/SKILL.md +207 -0
  187. package/skills/healthcare-phi-compliance/SKILL.md +145 -0
  188. package/skills/hermes-imports/SKILL.md +87 -0
  189. package/skills/hexagonal-architecture/SKILL.md +275 -0
  190. package/skills/hipaa-compliance/SKILL.md +78 -0
  191. package/skills/homelab-network-readiness/SKILL.md +169 -0
  192. package/skills/homelab-network-setup/SKILL.md +129 -0
  193. package/skills/homelab-pihole-dns/SKILL.md +274 -0
  194. package/skills/homelab-vlan-segmentation/SKILL.md +311 -0
  195. package/skills/homelab-wireguard-vpn/SKILL.md +305 -0
  196. package/skills/hookify-rules/SKILL.md +128 -0
  197. package/skills/inventory-demand-planning/SKILL.md +246 -0
  198. package/skills/investor-materials/SKILL.md +95 -0
  199. package/skills/investor-outreach/SKILL.md +90 -0
  200. package/skills/ios-icon-gen/SKILL.md +157 -0
  201. package/skills/ios-icon-gen/scripts/generate_icons.swift +258 -0
  202. package/skills/ios-icon-gen/scripts/iconify_gen.sh +235 -0
  203. package/skills/iterative-retrieval/SKILL.md +209 -0
  204. package/skills/java-coding-standards/SKILL.md +382 -0
  205. package/skills/jira-integration/SKILL.md +292 -0
  206. package/skills/jpa-patterns/SKILL.md +150 -0
  207. package/skills/knowledge-ops/SKILL.md +153 -0
  208. package/skills/kotlin-coroutines-flows/SKILL.md +283 -0
  209. package/skills/kotlin-exposed-patterns/SKILL.md +718 -0
  210. package/skills/kotlin-ktor-patterns/SKILL.md +688 -0
  211. package/skills/kotlin-patterns/SKILL.md +710 -0
  212. package/skills/kotlin-testing/SKILL.md +823 -0
  213. package/skills/laravel-patterns/SKILL.md +414 -0
  214. package/skills/laravel-plugin-discovery/SKILL.md +228 -0
  215. package/skills/laravel-security/SKILL.md +284 -0
  216. package/skills/laravel-tdd/SKILL.md +282 -0
  217. package/skills/laravel-verification/SKILL.md +178 -0
  218. package/skills/lead-intelligence/SKILL.md +320 -0
  219. package/skills/lead-intelligence/agents/enrichment-agent.md +85 -0
  220. package/skills/lead-intelligence/agents/mutual-mapper.md +75 -0
  221. package/skills/lead-intelligence/agents/outreach-drafter.md +98 -0
  222. package/skills/lead-intelligence/agents/signal-scorer.md +60 -0
  223. package/skills/liquid-glass-design/SKILL.md +279 -0
  224. package/skills/llm-trading-agent-security/SKILL.md +146 -0
  225. package/skills/logistics-exception-management/SKILL.md +221 -0
  226. package/skills/make-interfaces-feel-better/SKILL.md +151 -0
  227. package/skills/manim-video/SKILL.md +88 -0
  228. package/skills/manim-video/assets/network_graph_scene.py +52 -0
  229. package/skills/market-research/SKILL.md +74 -0
  230. package/skills/mcp-server-patterns/SKILL.md +68 -0
  231. package/skills/messages-ops/SKILL.md +103 -0
  232. package/skills/mle-workflow/SKILL.md +345 -0
  233. package/skills/motion-advanced/SKILL.md +596 -0
  234. package/skills/motion-foundations/SKILL.md +299 -0
  235. package/skills/motion-patterns/SKILL.md +435 -0
  236. package/skills/motion-ui/SKILL.md +574 -0
  237. package/skills/mysql-patterns/SKILL.md +411 -0
  238. package/skills/nanoclaw-repl/SKILL.md +32 -0
  239. package/skills/nestjs-patterns/SKILL.md +229 -0
  240. package/skills/netmiko-ssh-automation/SKILL.md +173 -0
  241. package/skills/network-bgp-diagnostics/SKILL.md +167 -0
  242. package/skills/network-config-validation/SKILL.md +210 -0
  243. package/skills/network-interface-health/SKILL.md +152 -0
  244. package/skills/nextjs-turbopack/SKILL.md +43 -0
  245. package/skills/nodejs-keccak256/SKILL.md +102 -0
  246. package/skills/nutrient-document-processing/SKILL.md +166 -0
  247. package/skills/nuxt4-patterns/SKILL.md +99 -0
  248. package/skills/openclaw-persona-forge/SKILL.md +288 -0
  249. package/skills/openclaw-persona-forge/gacha.py +224 -0
  250. package/skills/openclaw-persona-forge/gacha.sh +5 -0
  251. package/skills/openclaw-persona-forge/references/avatar-style.md +124 -0
  252. package/skills/openclaw-persona-forge/references/boundary-rules.md +53 -0
  253. package/skills/openclaw-persona-forge/references/error-handling.md +53 -0
  254. package/skills/openclaw-persona-forge/references/identity-tension.md +48 -0
  255. package/skills/openclaw-persona-forge/references/naming-system.md +39 -0
  256. package/skills/openclaw-persona-forge/references/output-template.md +166 -0
  257. package/skills/opensource-pipeline/SKILL.md +254 -0
  258. package/skills/perl-patterns/SKILL.md +503 -0
  259. package/skills/perl-security/SKILL.md +502 -0
  260. package/skills/perl-testing/SKILL.md +474 -0
  261. package/skills/plan-orchestrate/SKILL.md +253 -0
  262. package/skills/plankton-code-quality/SKILL.md +236 -0
  263. package/skills/postgres-patterns/SKILL.md +146 -0
  264. package/skills/product-capability/SKILL.md +140 -0
  265. package/skills/product-lens/SKILL.md +91 -0
  266. package/skills/production-audit/SKILL.md +206 -0
  267. package/skills/production-scheduling/SKILL.md +237 -0
  268. package/skills/project-flow-ops/SKILL.md +110 -0
  269. package/skills/prompt-optimizer/SKILL.md +398 -0
  270. package/skills/python-patterns/SKILL.md +749 -0
  271. package/skills/python-testing/SKILL.md +815 -0
  272. package/skills/pytorch-patterns/SKILL.md +395 -0
  273. package/skills/quality-nonconformance/SKILL.md +259 -0
  274. package/skills/quarkus-patterns/SKILL.md +721 -0
  275. package/skills/quarkus-security/SKILL.md +466 -0
  276. package/skills/quarkus-tdd/SKILL.md +810 -0
  277. package/skills/quarkus-verification/SKILL.md +478 -0
  278. package/skills/ralphinho-rfc-pipeline/SKILL.md +66 -0
  279. package/skills/redis-patterns/SKILL.md +402 -0
  280. package/skills/regex-vs-llm-structured-text/SKILL.md +219 -0
  281. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/SKILL.md +43 -0
  282. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/3d.md +86 -0
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  301. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/import-srt-captions.md +67 -0
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  303. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/measuring-dom-nodes.md +34 -0
  304. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/measuring-text.md +143 -0
  305. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/sequencing.md +106 -0
  306. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/tailwind.md +11 -0
  307. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/text-animations.md +20 -0
  308. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/timing.md +179 -0
  309. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/transcribe-captions.md +19 -0
  310. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/transitions.md +122 -0
  311. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/trimming.md +52 -0
  312. package/skills/remotion-video-creation/rules/videos.md +171 -0
  313. package/skills/repo-scan/SKILL.md +78 -0
  314. package/skills/research-ops/SKILL.md +111 -0
  315. package/skills/returns-reverse-logistics/SKILL.md +239 -0
  316. package/skills/rules-distill/SKILL.md +263 -0
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  319. package/skills/rust-patterns/SKILL.md +498 -0
  320. package/skills/rust-testing/SKILL.md +499 -0
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+ ---
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+ name: inventory-demand-planning
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+ description: >
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+ Codified expertise for demand forecasting, safety stock optimization,
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+ replenishment planning, and promotional lift estimation at multi-location
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+ retailers. Informed by demand planners with 15+ years experience managing
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+ hundreds of SKUs. Includes forecasting method selection, ABC/XYZ analysis,
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+ seasonal transition management, and vendor negotiation frameworks.
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+ Use when forecasting demand, setting safety stock, planning replenishment,
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+ managing promotions, or optimizing inventory levels.
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+ license: Apache-2.0
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+ version: 1.0.0
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+ origin: the toolset
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+ metadata:
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+ author: evos
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+ clawdbot:
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+ emoji: ""
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+ ---
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+
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+ # Inventory Demand Planning
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+
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+ ## Role and Context
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+
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+ You are a senior demand planner at a multi-location retailer operating 40–200 stores with regional distribution centers. You manage 300–800 active SKUs across categories including grocery, general merchandise, seasonal, and promotional assortments. Your systems include a demand planning suite (Blue Yonder, Oracle Demantra, or Kinaxis), an ERP (SAP, Oracle), a WMS for DC-level inventory, POS data feeds at the store level, and vendor portals for purchase order management. You sit between merchandising (which decides what to sell and at what price), supply chain (which manages warehouse capacity and transportation), and finance (which sets inventory investment budgets and GMROI targets). Your job is to translate commercial intent into executable purchase orders while minimizing both stockouts and excess inventory.
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+
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+ ## When to Use
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+
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+ - Generating or reviewing demand forecasts for existing or new SKUs
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+ - Setting safety stock levels based on demand variability and service level targets
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+ - Planning replenishment for seasonal transitions, promotions, or new product launches
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+ - Evaluating forecast accuracy and adjusting models or overrides
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+ - Making buy decisions under supplier MOQ constraints or lead time changes
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+
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+ ## How It Works
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+
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+ 1. Collect demand signals (POS sell-through, orders, shipments) and cleanse outliers
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+ 2. Select forecasting method per SKU based on ABC/XYZ classification and demand pattern
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+ 3. Apply promotional lifts, cannibalization offsets, and external causal factors
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+ 4. Calculate safety stock using demand variability, lead time variability, and target fill rate
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+ 5. Generate suggested purchase orders, apply MOQ/EOQ rounding, and route for planner review
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+ 6. Monitor forecast accuracy (MAPE, bias) and adjust models in the next planning cycle
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+
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+ ## Examples
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+
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+ - **Seasonal promotion planning**: Merchandising plans a 3-week BOGO promotion on a top-20 SKU. Estimate promotional lift using historical promo elasticity, calculate the forward buy quantity, coordinate with the vendor on advance PO and logistics capacity, and plan the post-promo demand dip.
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+ - **New SKU launch**: No demand history available. Use analog SKU mapping (similar category, price point, brand) to generate an initial forecast, set conservative safety stock at 2 weeks of projected sales, and define the review cadence for the first 8 weeks.
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+ - **DC replenishment under lead time change**: Key vendor extends lead time from 14 to 21 days due to port congestion. Recalculate safety stock across all affected SKUs, identify which are at risk of stockout before the new POs arrive, and recommend bridge orders or substitute sourcing.
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+
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+ ## Core Knowledge
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+
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+ ### Forecasting Methods and When to Use Each
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+
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+ **Moving Averages (simple, weighted, trailing):** Use for stable-demand, low-variability items where recent history is a reliable predictor. A 4-week simple moving average works for commodity staples. Weighted moving averages (heavier on recent weeks) work better when demand is stable but shows slight drift. Never use moving averages on seasonal items — they lag trend changes by half the window length.
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+
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+ **Exponential Smoothing (single, double, triple):** Single exponential smoothing (SES, alpha 0.1–0.3) suits stationary demand with noise. Double exponential smoothing (Holt's) adds trend tracking — use for items with consistent growth or decline. Triple exponential smoothing (Holt-Winters) adds seasonal indices — this is the workhorse for seasonal items with 52-week or 12-month cycles. The alpha/beta/gamma parameters are critical: high alpha (>0.3) chases noise in volatile items; low alpha (<0.1) responds too slowly to regime changes. Optimize on holdout data, never on the same data used for fitting.
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+
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+ **Seasonal Decomposition (STL, classical, X-13ARIMA-SEATS):** When you need to isolate trend, seasonal, and residual components separately. STL (Seasonal and Trend decomposition using Loess) is robust to outliers. Use seasonal decomposition when seasonal patterns are shifting year over year, when you need to remove seasonality before applying a different model to the de-seasonalized data, or when building promotional lift estimates on top of a clean baseline.
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+
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+ **Causal/Regression Models:** When external factors drive demand beyond the item's own history — price elasticity, promotional flags, weather, competitor actions, local events. The practical challenge is feature engineering: promotional flags should encode depth (% off), display type, circular feature, and cross-category promo presence. Overfitting on sparse promo history is the single biggest pitfall. Regularize aggressively (Lasso/Ridge) and validate on out-of-time, not out-of-sample.
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+
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+ **Machine Learning (gradient boosting, neural nets):** Justified when you have large data (1,000+ SKUs × 2+ years of weekly history), multiple external regressors, and an ML engineering team. LightGBM/XGBoost with proper feature engineering outperforms simpler methods by 10–20% WAPE on promotional and intermittent items. But they require continuous monitoring — model drift in retail is real and quarterly retraining is the minimum.
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+
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+ ### Forecast Accuracy Metrics
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+
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+ - **MAPE (Mean Absolute Percentage Error):** Standard metric but breaks on low-volume items (division by near-zero actuals produces inflated percentages). Use only for items averaging 50+ units/week.
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+ - **Weighted MAPE (WMAPE):** Sum of absolute errors divided by sum of actuals. Prevents low-volume items from dominating the metric. This is the metric finance cares about because it reflects dollars.
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+ - **Bias:** Average signed error. Positive bias = forecast systematically too high (overstock risk). Negative bias = systematically too low (stockout risk). Bias < ±5% is healthy. Bias > 10% in either direction means a structural problem in the model, not noise.
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+ - **Tracking Signal:** Cumulative error divided by MAD (mean absolute deviation). When tracking signal exceeds ±4, the model has drifted and needs intervention — either re-parameterize or switch methods.
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+
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+ ### Safety Stock Calculation
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+
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+ The textbook formula is `SS = Z × σ_d × √(LT + RP)` where Z is the service level z-score, σ_d is the standard deviation of demand per period, LT is lead time in periods, and RP is review period in periods. In practice, this formula works only for normally distributed, stationary demand.
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+
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+ **Service Level Targets:** 95% service level (Z=1.65) is standard for A-items. 99% (Z=2.33) for critical/A+ items where stockout cost dwarfs holding cost. 90% (Z=1.28) is acceptable for C-items. Moving from 95% to 99% nearly doubles safety stock — always quantify the inventory investment cost of the incremental service level before committing.
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+
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+ **Lead Time Variability:** When vendor lead times are uncertain, use `SS = Z × √(LT_avg × σ_d² + d_avg² × σ_LT²)` — this captures both demand variability and lead time variability. Vendors with coefficient of variation (CV) on lead time > 0.3 need safety stock adjustments that can be 40–60% higher than demand-only formulas suggest.
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+
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+ **Lumpy/Intermittent Demand:** Normal-distribution safety stock fails for items with many zero-demand periods. Use Croston's method for forecasting intermittent demand (separate forecasts for demand interval and demand size), and compute safety stock using a bootstrapped demand distribution rather than analytical formulas.
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+
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+ **New Products:** No demand history means no σ_d. Use analogous item profiling — find the 3–5 most similar items at the same lifecycle stage and use their demand variability as a proxy. Add a 20–30% buffer for the first 8 weeks, then taper as own history accumulates.
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+
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+ ### Reorder Logic
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+
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+ **Inventory Position:** `IP = On-Hand + On-Order − Backorders − Committed (allocated to open customer orders)`. Never reorder based on on-hand alone — you will double-order when POs are in transit.
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+
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+ **Min/Max:** Simple, suitable for stable-demand items with consistent lead times. Min = average demand during lead time + safety stock. Max = Min + EOQ. When IP drops to Min, order up to Max. The weakness: it doesn't adapt to changing demand patterns without manual adjustment.
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+
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+ **Reorder Point / EOQ:** ROP = average demand during lead time + safety stock. EOQ = √(2DS/H) where D = annual demand, S = ordering cost, H = holding cost per unit per year. EOQ is theoretically optimal for constant demand, but in practice you round to vendor case packs, layer quantities, or pallet tiers. A "perfect" EOQ of 847 units means nothing if the vendor ships in cases of 24.
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+
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+ **Periodic Review (R,S):** Review inventory every R periods, order up to target level S. Better when you consolidate orders to a vendor on fixed days (e.g., Tuesday orders for Thursday pickup). R is set by vendor delivery schedule; S = average demand during (R + LT) + safety stock for that combined period.
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+
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+ **Vendor Tier-Based Frequencies:** A-vendors (top 10 by spend) get weekly review cycles. B-vendors (next 20) get bi-weekly. C-vendors (remaining) get monthly. This aligns review effort with financial impact and allows consolidation discounts.
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+
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+ ### Promotional Planning
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+
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+ **Demand Signal Distortion:** Promotions create artificial demand peaks that contaminate baseline forecasting. Strip promotional volume from history before fitting baseline models. Keep a separate "promotional lift" layer that applies multiplicatively on top of the baseline during promo weeks.
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+
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+ **Lift Estimation Methods:** (1) Year-over-year comparison of promoted vs. non-promoted periods for the same item. (2) Cross-elasticity model using historical promo depth, display type, and media support as inputs. (3) Analogous item lift — new items borrow lift profiles from similar items in the same category that have been promoted before. Typical lifts: 15–40% for TPR (temporary price reduction) only, 80–200% for TPR + display + circular feature, 300–500%+ for doorbuster/loss-leader events.
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+
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+ **Cannibalization:** When SKU A is promoted, SKU B (same category, similar price point) loses volume. Estimate cannibalization at 10–30% of lifted volume for close substitutes. Ignore cannibalization across categories unless the promo is a traffic driver that shifts basket composition.
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+
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+ **Forward-Buy Calculation:** Customers stock up during deep promotions, creating a post-promo dip. The dip duration correlates with product shelf life and promotional depth. A 30% off promotion on a pantry item with 12-month shelf life creates a 2–4 week dip as households consume stockpiled units. A 15% off promotion on a perishable produces almost no dip.
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+
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+ **Post-Promo Dip:** Expect 1–3 weeks of below-baseline demand after a major promotion. The dip magnitude is typically 30–50% of the incremental lift, concentrated in the first week post-promo. Failing to forecast the dip leads to excess inventory and markdowns.
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+
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+ ### ABC/XYZ Classification
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+
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+ **ABC (Value):** A = top 20% of SKUs driving 80% of revenue/margin. B = next 30% driving 15%. C = bottom 50% driving 5%. Classify on margin contribution, not revenue, to avoid overinvesting in high-revenue low-margin items.
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+
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+ **XYZ (Predictability):** X = CV of demand < 0.5 (highly predictable). Y = CV 0.5–1.0 (moderately predictable). Z = CV > 1.0 (erratic/lumpy). Compute on de-seasonalized, de-promoted demand to avoid penalizing seasonal items that are actually predictable within their pattern.
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+
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+ **Policy Matrix:** AX items get automated replenishment with tight safety stock. AZ items need human review every cycle — they're high-value but erratic. CX items get automated replenishment with generous review periods. CZ items are candidates for discontinuation or make-to-order conversion.
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+
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+ ### Seasonal Transition Management
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+
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+ **Buy Timing:** Seasonal buys (e.g., holiday, summer, back-to-school) are committed 12–20 weeks before selling season. Allocate 60–70% of expected season demand in the initial buy, reserving 30–40% for reorder based on early-season sell-through. This "open-to-buy" reserve is your hedge against forecast error.
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+
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+ **Markdown Timing:** Begin markdowns when sell-through pace drops below 60% of plan at the season midpoint. Early shallow markdowns (20–30% off) recover more margin than late deep markdowns (50–70% off). The rule of thumb: every week of delay in markdown initiation costs 3–5 percentage points of margin on the remaining inventory.
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+
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+ **Season-End Liquidation:** Set a hard cutoff date (typically 2–3 weeks before the next season's product arrives). Everything remaining at cutoff goes to outlet, liquidator, or donation. Holding seasonal product into the next year rarely works — style items date, and warehousing cost erodes any margin recovery from selling next season.
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+
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+ ## Decision Frameworks
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+
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+ ### Forecast Method Selection by Demand Pattern
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+
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+ | Demand Pattern | Primary Method | Fallback Method | Review Trigger |
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+ |---|---|---|---|
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+ | Stable, high-volume, no seasonality | Weighted moving average (4–8 weeks) | Single exponential smoothing | WMAPE > 25% for 4 consecutive weeks |
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+ | Trending (growth or decline) | Holt's double exponential smoothing | Linear regression on recent 26 weeks | Tracking signal exceeds ±4 |
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+ | Seasonal, repeating pattern | Holt-Winters (multiplicative for growing seasonal, additive for stable) | STL decomposition + SES on residual | Season-over-season pattern correlation < 0.7 |
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+ | Intermittent / lumpy (>30% zero-demand periods) | Croston's method or SBA (Syntetos-Boylan Approximation) | Bootstrap simulation on demand intervals | Mean inter-demand interval shifts by >30% |
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+ | Promotion-driven | Causal regression (baseline + promo lift layer) | Analogous item lift + baseline | Post-promo actuals deviate >40% from forecast |
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+ | New product (0–12 weeks history) | Analogous item profile with lifecycle curve | Category average with decay toward actual | Own-data WMAPE stabilizes below analogous-based WMAPE |
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+ | Event-driven (weather, local events) | Regression with external regressors | Manual override with documented rationale | Re-evaluate when regressor-to-demand correlation falls below 0.6 or event-period forecast error rises >30% for 2 comparable events |
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+
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+ ### Safety Stock Service Level Selection
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+
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+ | Segment | Target Service Level | Z-Score | Rationale |
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+ |---|---|---|---|
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+ | AX (high-value, predictable) | 97.5% | 1.96 | High value justifies investment; low variability keeps SS moderate |
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+ | AY (high-value, moderate variability) | 95% | 1.65 | Standard target; variability makes higher SL prohibitively expensive |
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+ | AZ (high-value, erratic) | 92–95% | 1.41–1.65 | Erratic demand makes high SL astronomically expensive; supplement with expediting capability |
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+ | BX/BY | 95% | 1.65 | Standard target |
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+ | BZ | 90% | 1.28 | Accept some stockout risk on mid-tier erratic items |
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+ | CX/CY | 90–92% | 1.28–1.41 | Low value doesn't justify high SS investment |
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+ | CZ | 85% | 1.04 | Candidate for discontinuation; minimal investment |
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+
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+ ### Promotional Lift Decision Framework
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+
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+ 1. **Is there historical lift data for this SKU-promo type combination?** → Use own-item lift with recency weighting (most recent 3 promos weighted 50/30/20).
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+ 2. **No own-item data but same category has been promoted?** → Use analogous item lift adjusted for price point and brand tier.
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+ 3. **Brand-new category or promo type?** → Use conservative category-average lift discounted 20%. Build in a wider safety stock buffer for the promo period.
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+ 4. **Cross-promoted with another category?** → Model the traffic driver separately from the cross-promo beneficiary. Apply cross-elasticity coefficient if available; default 0.15 lift for cross-category halo.
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+ 5. **Always model the post-promo dip.** Default to 40% of incremental lift, concentrated 60/30/10 across the three post-promo weeks.
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+
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+ ### Markdown Timing Decision
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+
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+ | Sell-Through at Season Midpoint | Action | Expected Margin Recovery |
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+ |---|---|---|
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+ | ≥ 80% of plan | Hold price. Reorder cautiously if weeks of supply < 3. | Full margin |
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+ | 60–79% of plan | Take 20–25% markdown. No reorder. | 70–80% of original margin |
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+ | 40–59% of plan | Take 30–40% markdown immediately. Cancel any open POs. | 50–65% of original margin |
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+ | < 40% of plan | Take 50%+ markdown. Explore liquidation channels. Flag buying error for post-mortem. | 30–45% of original margin |
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+
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+ ### Slow-Mover Kill Decision
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+
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+ Evaluate quarterly. Flag for discontinuation when ALL of the following are true:
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+ - Weeks of supply > 26 at current sell-through rate
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+ - Last 13-week sales velocity < 50% of the item's first 13 weeks (lifecycle declining)
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+ - No promotional activity planned in the next 8 weeks
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+ - Item is not contractually obligated (planogram commitment, vendor agreement)
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+ - Replacement or substitution SKU exists or category can absorb the gap
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+
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+ If flagged, initiate markdown at 30% off for 4 weeks. If still not moving, escalate to 50% off or liquidation. Set a hard exit date 8 weeks from first markdown. Do not allow slow movers to linger indefinitely in the assortment — they consume shelf space, warehouse slots, and working capital.
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+
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+ ## Key Edge Cases
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+
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+ Brief summaries are included here so you can expand them into project-specific playbooks if needed.
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+
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+ 1. **New product launch with zero history:** Analogous item profiling is your only tool. Select analogs carefully — match on price point, category, brand tier, and target demographic, not just product type. Commit a conservative initial buy (60% of analog-based forecast) and build in weekly auto-replenishment triggers.
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+
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+ 2. **Viral social media spike:** Demand jumps 500–2,000% with no warning. Do not chase — by the time your supply chain responds (4–8 week lead times), the spike is over. Capture what you can from existing inventory, issue allocation rules to prevent a single location from hoarding, and let the wave pass. Revise the baseline only if sustained demand persists 4+ weeks post-spike.
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+ 3. **Supplier lead time doubling overnight:** Recalculate safety stock immediately using the new lead time. If SS doubles, you likely cannot fill the gap from current inventory. Place an emergency order for the delta, negotiate partial shipments, and identify secondary suppliers. Communicate to merchandising that service levels will temporarily drop.
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+ 4. **Cannibalization from an unplanned promotion:** A competitor or another department runs an unplanned promo that steals volume from your category. Your forecast will over-project. Detect early by monitoring daily POS for a pattern break, then manually override the forecast downward. Defer incoming orders if possible.
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+ 5. **Demand pattern regime change:** An item that was stable-seasonal suddenly shifts to trending or erratic. Common after a reformulation, packaging change, or competitor entry/exit. The old model will fail silently. Monitor tracking signal weekly — when it exceeds ±4 for two consecutive periods, trigger a model re-selection.
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+ 6. **Phantom inventory:** WMS says you have 200 units; physical count reveals 40. Every forecast and replenishment decision based on that phantom inventory is wrong. Suspect phantom inventory when service level drops despite "adequate" on-hand. Conduct cycle counts on any item with stockouts that the system says shouldn't have occurred.
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+ 7. **Vendor MOQ conflicts:** Your EOQ says order 150 units; the vendor's minimum order quantity is 500. You either over-order (accepting weeks of excess inventory) or negotiate. Options: consolidate with other items from the same vendor to meet dollar minimums, negotiate a lower MOQ for this SKU, or accept the overage if holding cost is lower than ordering from an alternative supplier.
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+ 8. **Holiday calendar shift effects:** When key selling holidays shift position in the calendar (e.g., Easter moves between March and April), week-over-week comparisons break. Align forecasts to "weeks relative to holiday" rather than calendar weeks. A failure to account for Easter shifting from Week 13 to Week 16 will create significant forecast error in both years.
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+
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+ ## Communication Patterns
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+
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+ ### Tone Calibration
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+
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+ - **Vendor routine reorder:** Transactional, brief, PO-reference-driven. "PO #XXXX for delivery week of MM/DD per our agreed schedule."
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+ - **Vendor lead time escalation:** Firm, fact-based, quantifies business impact. "Our analysis shows your lead time has increased from 14 to 22 days over the past 8 weeks. This has resulted in X stockout events. We need a corrective plan by [date]."
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+ - **Internal stockout alert:** Urgent, actionable, includes estimated revenue at risk. Lead with the customer impact, not the inventory metric. "SKU X will stock out at 12 locations by Thursday. Estimated lost sales: $XX,000. Recommended action: [expedite/reallocate/substitute]."
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+ - **Markdown recommendation to merchandising:** Data-driven, includes margin impact analysis. Never frame it as "we bought too much" — frame as "sell-through pace requires price action to meet margin targets."
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+ - **Promotional forecast submission:** Structured, with baseline, lift, and post-promo dip called out separately. Include assumptions and confidence range. "Baseline: 500 units/week. Promotional lift estimate: 180% (900 incremental). Post-promo dip: −35% for 2 weeks. Confidence: ±25%."
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+ - **New product forecast assumptions:** Document every assumption explicitly so it can be audited at post-mortem. "Based on analogs [list], we project 200 units/week in weeks 1–4, declining to 120 units/week by week 8. Assumptions: price point $X, distribution to 80 doors, no competitive launch in window."
206
+
207
+ Brief templates appear above. Adapt them to your supplier, sales, and operations planning workflows before using them in production.
208
+
209
+ ## Escalation Protocols
210
+
211
+ ### Automatic Escalation Triggers
212
+
213
+ | Trigger | Action | Timeline |
214
+ |---|---|---|
215
+ | Projected stockout on A-item within 7 days | Alert demand planning manager + category merchant | Within 4 hours |
216
+ | Vendor confirms lead time increase > 25% | Notify supply chain director; recalculate all open POs | Within 1 business day |
217
+ | Promotional forecast miss > 40% (over or under) | Post-promo debrief with merchandising and vendor | Within 1 week of promo end |
218
+ | Excess inventory > 26 weeks of supply on any A/B item | Markdown recommendation to merchandising VP | Within 1 week of detection |
219
+ | Forecast bias exceeds ±10% for 4 consecutive weeks | Model review and re-parameterization | Within 2 weeks |
220
+ | New product sell-through < 40% of plan after 4 weeks | Assortment review with merchandising | Within 1 week |
221
+ | Service level drops below 90% for any category | Root cause analysis and corrective plan | Within 48 hours |
222
+
223
+ ### Escalation Chain
224
+
225
+ Level 1 (Demand Planner) → Level 2 (Planning Manager, 24 hours) → Level 3 (Director of Supply Chain Planning, 48 hours) → Level 4 (VP Supply Chain, 72+ hours or any A-item stockout at enterprise customer)
226
+
227
+ ## Performance Indicators
228
+
229
+ Track weekly and trend monthly:
230
+
231
+ | Metric | Target | Red Flag |
232
+ |---|---|---|
233
+ | WMAPE (weighted mean absolute percentage error) | < 25% | > 35% |
234
+ | Forecast bias | ±5% | > ±10% for 4+ weeks |
235
+ | In-stock rate (A-items) | > 97% | < 94% |
236
+ | In-stock rate (all items) | > 95% | < 92% |
237
+ | Weeks of supply (aggregate) | 4–8 weeks | > 12 or < 3 |
238
+ | Excess inventory (>26 weeks supply) | < 5% of SKUs | > 10% of SKUs |
239
+ | Dead stock (zero sales, 13+ weeks) | < 2% of SKUs | > 5% of SKUs |
240
+ | Purchase order fill rate from vendors | > 95% | < 90% |
241
+ | Promotional forecast accuracy (WMAPE) | < 35% | > 50% |
242
+
243
+ ## Additional Resources
244
+
245
+ - Pair this skill with your SKU segmentation model, service-level policy, and planner override audit log.
246
+ - Store post-mortems for promotion misses, vendor delays, and forecast overrides next to the planning workflow so the edge cases stay actionable.
@@ -0,0 +1,95 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: investor-materials
3
+ description: Create and update pitch decks, one-pagers, investor memos, accelerator applications, financial models, and fundraising materials. Use when the user needs investor-facing documents, projections, use-of-funds tables, milestone plans, or materials that must stay internally consistent across multiple fundraising assets.
4
+ ---
5
+
6
+ # Investor Materials
7
+
8
+ Build investor-facing materials that are consistent, credible, and easy to defend.
9
+
10
+ ## When to Activate
11
+
12
+ - creating or revising a pitch deck
13
+ - writing an investor memo or one-pager
14
+ - building a financial model, milestone plan, or use-of-funds table
15
+ - answering accelerator or incubator application questions
16
+ - aligning multiple fundraising docs around one source of truth
17
+
18
+ ## Golden Rule
19
+
20
+ All investor materials must agree with each other.
21
+
22
+ Create or confirm a single source of truth before writing:
23
+ - traction metrics
24
+ - pricing and revenue assumptions
25
+ - raise size and instrument
26
+ - use of funds
27
+ - team bios and titles
28
+ - milestones and timelines
29
+
30
+ If conflicting numbers appear, stop and resolve them before drafting.
31
+
32
+ ## Core Workflow
33
+
34
+ 1. inventory the canonical facts
35
+ 2. identify missing assumptions
36
+ 3. choose the asset type
37
+ 4. draft the asset with explicit logic
38
+ 5. cross-check every number against the source of truth
39
+
40
+ ## Asset Guidance
41
+
42
+ ### Pitch Deck
43
+ Recommended flow:
44
+ 1. company + wedge
45
+ 2. problem
46
+ 3. solution
47
+ 4. product / demo
48
+ 5. market
49
+ 6. business model
50
+ 7. traction
51
+ 8. team
52
+ 9. competition / differentiation
53
+ 10. ask
54
+ 11. use of funds / milestones
55
+ 12. appendix
56
+
57
+ If the user wants a web-native deck, pair this skill with `frontend-slides`.
58
+
59
+ ### One-Pager / Memo
60
+ - state what the company does in one clean sentence
61
+ - show why now
62
+ - include traction and proof points early
63
+ - make the ask precise
64
+ - keep claims easy to verify
65
+
66
+ ### Financial Model
67
+ Include:
68
+ - explicit assumptions
69
+ - bear / base / bull cases when useful
70
+ - clean layer-by-layer revenue logic
71
+ - milestone-linked spending
72
+ - sensitivity analysis where the decision hinges on assumptions
73
+
74
+ ### Accelerator Applications
75
+ - answer the exact question asked
76
+ - prioritize traction, insight, and team advantage
77
+ - avoid puffery
78
+ - keep internal metrics consistent with the deck and model
79
+
80
+ ## Red Flags to Avoid
81
+
82
+ - unverifiable claims
83
+ - fuzzy market sizing without assumptions
84
+ - inconsistent team roles or titles
85
+ - revenue math that does not sum cleanly
86
+ - inflated certainty where assumptions are fragile
87
+
88
+ ## Quality Gate
89
+
90
+ Before delivering:
91
+ - every number matches the current source of truth
92
+ - use of funds and revenue layers sum correctly
93
+ - assumptions are visible, not buried
94
+ - the story is clear without hype language
95
+ - the final asset is defensible in a partner meeting
@@ -0,0 +1,90 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: investor-outreach
3
+ description: Draft cold emails, warm intro blurbs, follow-ups, update emails, and investor communications for fundraising. Use when the user wants outreach to angels, VCs, strategic investors, or accelerators and needs concise, personalized, investor-facing messaging.
4
+ ---
5
+
6
+ # Investor Outreach
7
+
8
+ Write investor communication that is short, concrete, and easy to act on.
9
+
10
+ ## When to Activate
11
+
12
+ - writing a cold email to an investor
13
+ - drafting a warm intro request
14
+ - sending follow-ups after a meeting or no response
15
+ - writing investor updates during a process
16
+ - tailoring outreach based on fund thesis or partner fit
17
+
18
+ ## Core Rules
19
+
20
+ 1. Personalize every outbound message.
21
+ 2. Keep the ask low-friction.
22
+ 3. Use proof instead of adjectives.
23
+ 4. Stay concise.
24
+ 5. Never send copy that could go to any investor.
25
+
26
+ ## Voice Handling
27
+
28
+ If the user's voice matters, run `brand-voice` first and reuse its `VOICE PROFILE`.
29
+ This skill should keep the investor-specific structure and ask discipline, not recreate its own parallel voice system.
30
+
31
+ ## Hard Bans
32
+
33
+ Delete and rewrite any of these:
34
+ - "I'd love to connect"
35
+ - "excited to share"
36
+ - generic thesis praise without a real tie-in
37
+ - vague founder adjectives
38
+ - begging language
39
+ - soft closing questions when a direct ask is clearer
40
+
41
+ ## Cold Email Structure
42
+
43
+ 1. subject line: short and specific
44
+ 2. opener: why this investor specifically
45
+ 3. pitch: what the company does, why now, and what proof matters
46
+ 4. ask: one concrete next step
47
+ 5. sign-off: name, role, and one credibility anchor if needed
48
+
49
+ ## Personalization Sources
50
+
51
+ Reference one or more of:
52
+ - relevant portfolio companies
53
+ - a public thesis, talk, post, or article
54
+ - a mutual connection
55
+ - a clear market or product fit with the investor's focus
56
+
57
+ If that context is missing, state that the draft still needs personalization instead of pretending it is finished.
58
+
59
+ ## Follow-Up Cadence
60
+
61
+ Default:
62
+ - day 0: initial outbound
63
+ - day 4 or 5: short follow-up with one new data point
64
+ - day 10 to 12: final follow-up with a clean close
65
+
66
+ Do not keep nudging after that unless the user wants a longer sequence.
67
+
68
+ ## Warm Intro Requests
69
+
70
+ Make life easy for the connector:
71
+ - explain why the intro is a fit
72
+ - include a forwardable blurb
73
+ - keep the forwardable blurb under 100 words
74
+
75
+ ## Post-Meeting Updates
76
+
77
+ Include:
78
+ - the specific thing discussed
79
+ - the answer or update promised
80
+ - one new proof point if available
81
+ - the next step
82
+
83
+ ## Quality Gate
84
+
85
+ Before delivering:
86
+ - the message is genuinely personalized
87
+ - the ask is explicit
88
+ - the proof point is concrete
89
+ - filler praise and softener language are gone
90
+ - word count stays tight
@@ -0,0 +1,157 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: ios-icon-gen
3
+ description: Generate iOS app icons as PNG imagesets for Xcode asset catalogs from SF Symbols (5000+ Apple-native) or Iconify API (275k+ open source icons from 200+ collections). Use when generating icons, creating icon assets, adding icons to asset catalog, or searching for icons for iOS projects.
4
+ origin: community
5
+ ---
6
+
7
+ # iOS Icon Generator
8
+
9
+ Generate PNG icon imagesets for Xcode asset catalogs from two sources.
10
+
11
+ ## When to Activate
12
+
13
+ - Generating icon assets for an iOS/macOS Xcode project
14
+ - Searching for icons across open source collections
15
+ - Creating PNG imagesets (1x, 2x, 3x) for asset catalogs
16
+ - Replacing placeholder icons with production-quality assets
17
+ - Matching existing icon styles in an Xcode project
18
+
19
+ ## Core Principles
20
+
21
+ ### 1. Two Sources, One Output Format
22
+ Both sources produce identical Xcode-compatible imagesets. Choose based on need:
23
+
24
+ | Source | Icons | Requires | Best for |
25
+ |--------|-------|----------|----------|
26
+ | **Iconify API** | 275,000+ from 200+ collections | Internet | Wide selection, specific styles, open source icons |
27
+ | **SF Symbols** | 5,000+ Apple symbols | macOS only | Apple-native style, offline use |
28
+
29
+ ### 2. Always Match Existing Style
30
+ Before generating, check the project's existing icons for size, color, and weight consistency.
31
+
32
+ ### 3. Output Structure
33
+ Both methods produce a complete Xcode imageset:
34
+
35
+ ```
36
+ <output-dir>/<asset-name>.imageset/
37
+ Contents.json
38
+ <asset-name>.png # 1x (68px default)
39
+ <asset-name>@2x.png # 2x (136px default)
40
+ <asset-name>@3x.png # 3x (204px default)
41
+ ```
42
+
43
+ ## Examples
44
+
45
+ ### Step 1: Assess Requirements
46
+
47
+ Determine icon needs: what the icon represents, preferred style, target color, and size.
48
+
49
+ If the project already has icons, check existing style:
50
+ ```bash
51
+ # Check dimensions of existing icon
52
+ sips -g pixelWidth -g pixelHeight path/to/existing@2x.png
53
+ ```
54
+
55
+ ### Step 2: Search for Icons
56
+
57
+ **Iconify API (recommended for wide selection):**
58
+ ```bash
59
+ # Search all collections
60
+ $SKILL_DIR/scripts/iconify_gen.sh search "receipt"
61
+
62
+ # Search within a specific collection
63
+ $SKILL_DIR/scripts/iconify_gen.sh search "business card" --prefix mdi
64
+
65
+ # List available collections
66
+ $SKILL_DIR/scripts/iconify_gen.sh collections
67
+ ```
68
+
69
+ **SF Symbols (for Apple-native style):**
70
+ Browse the SF Symbols app or reference common names:
71
+
72
+ | Use Case | Symbol Name |
73
+ |----------|-------------|
74
+ | Document | `doc.text`, `doc.fill` |
75
+ | Receipt | `doc.text.below.ecg`, `receipt` |
76
+ | Person | `person.crop.rectangle`, `person.text.rectangle` |
77
+ | Camera | `camera`, `camera.fill` |
78
+ | Scan | `doc.viewfinder`, `qrcode.viewfinder` |
79
+ | Settings | `gearshape`, `slider.horizontal.3` |
80
+
81
+ ### Step 3: Preview (Optional)
82
+
83
+ ```bash
84
+ # Iconify preview
85
+ $SKILL_DIR/scripts/iconify_gen.sh preview mdi:receipt-text-outline
86
+ ```
87
+
88
+ ### Step 4: Generate
89
+
90
+ **Iconify API:**
91
+ ```bash
92
+ # Basic generation
93
+ $SKILL_DIR/scripts/iconify_gen.sh mdi:receipt-text-outline editTool_expenseReport
94
+
95
+ # Custom color and output location
96
+ $SKILL_DIR/scripts/iconify_gen.sh mdi:receipt-text-outline myIcon --color 007AFF --output ./Assets.xcassets/icons
97
+ ```
98
+
99
+ Options: `--size <pt>` (default: 68), `--color <hex>` (default: 8E8E93), `--output <dir>` (default: /tmp/icons)
100
+
101
+ **SF Symbols:**
102
+ ```bash
103
+ # Basic generation
104
+ swift $SKILL_DIR/scripts/generate_icons.swift doc.text.below.ecg editTool_expenseReport
105
+
106
+ # Custom color, weight, and output
107
+ swift $SKILL_DIR/scripts/generate_icons.swift person.crop.rectangle myIcon --color 007AFF --weight regular --output ./Assets.xcassets/icons
108
+ ```
109
+
110
+ Options: `--size <pt>` (default: 68), `--color <hex>` (default: 8E8E93), `--weight <name>` (default: thin), `--output <dir>` (default: /tmp/icons)
111
+
112
+ ### Step 5: Verify and Integrate
113
+
114
+ 1. Read the generated @2x PNG to verify visually
115
+ 2. Copy to asset catalog if not output there directly:
116
+ ```bash
117
+ cp -r /tmp/icons/<name>.imageset path/to/Assets.xcassets/<group>/
118
+ ```
119
+ 3. Build the project to verify Xcode picks up the new assets
120
+
121
+ ## Popular Iconify Collections
122
+
123
+ | Prefix | Name | Count | Style |
124
+ |--------|------|-------|-------|
125
+ | `mdi` | Material Design Icons | 7400+ | Filled + outline variants |
126
+ | `ph` | Phosphor | 9000+ | 6 weights per icon |
127
+ | `solar` | Solar | 7400+ | Bold, linear, outline |
128
+ | `tabler` | Tabler Icons | 6000+ | Consistent stroke width |
129
+ | `lucide` | Lucide | 1700+ | Clean, minimal |
130
+ | `ri` | Remix Icon | 3100+ | Filled + line variants |
131
+ | `carbon` | Carbon | 2400+ | IBM design language |
132
+ | `heroicons` | HeroIcons | 1200+ | Tailwind CSS companion |
133
+
134
+ Browse all: <https://icon-sets.iconify.design/>
135
+
136
+ ## Scripts Reference
137
+
138
+ | Script | Source | Path |
139
+ |--------|--------|------|
140
+ | `iconify_gen.sh` | Iconify API (275k+ icons) | `$SKILL_DIR/scripts/iconify_gen.sh` |
141
+ | `generate_icons.swift` | SF Symbols (5k+ icons) | `$SKILL_DIR/scripts/generate_icons.swift` |
142
+
143
+ ## Best Practices
144
+
145
+ - **Search before generating** -- browse available icons to find the best match
146
+ - **Match existing project style** -- check dimensions, color, and weight of existing icons before generating new ones
147
+ - **Use Iconify for variety** -- 200+ collections means you can find the exact style you need
148
+ - **Use SF Symbols for Apple consistency** -- they match system UI perfectly
149
+ - **Generate directly to asset catalog** -- use `--output ./Assets.xcassets/icons` to skip manual copying
150
+ - **Verify visually** -- always preview the @2x PNG before committing
151
+
152
+ ## Anti-Patterns
153
+
154
+ - Generating icons without checking existing project icon style
155
+ - Using default colors when the project has a defined color palette
156
+ - Generating at wrong sizes (check existing icons first)
157
+ - Committing generated icons without visual verification