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Short version: use your Project Questionnaire and Core Features Blocks to auto‑generate a concise, stakeholder‑ready Project Requirements Document (PRD) in Overbooked with one click. Then review, refine with the rich text editor AI or inside the chat window, add acceptance criteria, and export or sign off. This guide walks through the end‑to‑end flow, provides reusable Questionnaire and Core Features templates you can paste into Blocks, and includes practical examples and best practices.
Long PRDs rarely get read; a compact PRD — a one to two page core requirements document — aligns teams faster. It should answer: what we’re building, why it matters, how we’ll measure success, and what success looks like for each core feature. Overbooked’s Blocks let you auto‑generate this document from the project context so stakeholders can move from discovery to delivery without endless back‑and‑forth.
Project Overview: one‑paragraph summary and the problem statement.
Goals & Success Metrics: 2–3 measurable outcomes (KPIs).
Personas / Target Users: short bullets about who the product serves.
Core Features (MoSCoW): prioritized list of features with a short description and acceptance criteria.
Dependencies & Risks: external needs, blockers, and assumptions.
Timeline / Milestones: high level milestones (AI‑generated by Overbooked Gantt) with owners.
Sign‑off: stakeholders, reviewers, and decision owners.
Inside your project, make sure you’ve filled the Questionnaire and Core Features Blocks (or use the example templates below). Then:
1) Open the PRD Block for the project.
2) Click “Generate” Boom! Overbooked pulls the Questionnaire answers, Core Features, Tech Stack, and any existing notes.
3) Review the generated PRD preview (editable inline).
4) Use the rich text editor AI to refine language, expand or compress sections, or generate acceptance criteria.
5) Open the chat window to ask follow‑up prompts (e.g., “Turn feature X into 3 user stories with acceptance criteria”). Make edits directly from the chat responses.
6) Export or send to clients via the sign‑off workflow.
Collect the basic project inputs in these Blocks: Questionnaire (audience, goals, constraints), Core Features (feature name, short description, priority), Tech Stack, and any inspiration links or assets. The quality of the PRD depends on the clarity of inputs but Overbooked can extrapolate reasonable defaults when some fields are missing.
Open the PRD Block and click the generator. Overbooked will produce the PRD core: overview, goals, personas, prioritized features, and a suggested timeline. This initial draft is designed to be short and actionable (1–2 pages).
Use the rich text editor’s AI features to rewrite sections for tone, clarity, or brevity (e.g., “Make the goals measurable with metrics and timelines”). You can also ask the chat window to expand a feature into user stories or acceptance criteria and paste the results back into the PRD with one click.
Good acceptance criteria make the PRD actionable for engineering and QA. For each core feature, add 2–4 acceptance criteria using this quick template:
As a [persona], I want [feature] so that [benefit].
Acceptance Criteria:
- Given [context], when [action], then [observable result].
- Test steps: [brief test steps]
- Owner: [team/person]
Review the Dependencies & Risks section generated from your Blocks. Add external integrations, API needs, third party services, and any data access requirements. Flag high‑risk items and assign owners.
Use the AI Gantt generator to propose milestones based on the PRD scope and tech stack. Accept, tweak, and export the milestones as CSV or sync to your issue tracker. Attach the PRD to the project timeline so milestones and issues stay linked.
Use this questionnaire to capture the client and project context. Paste it into the Questionnaire Block or use it as a meeting brief.
Project name:
One‑sentence project summary (what problem are we solving?):
Primary goal(s) / success metrics (3 max):
Target audience / personas (1–3 brief bullets):
Critical features or user needs (top 5):
Known constraints (budget, timeline, platforms):
Existing assets / integrations required (APIs, auth providers, data sources):
Design tone & brand notes (short):
Must‑have launch date or milestone dates:
Stakeholders & reviewers (names/emails):
Use a MoSCoW structure. Paste one row per feature. The PRD generator maps these to the PRD Core Features section.
Feature Name | Priority (M/S/C/W) | Short Description | Acceptance Criteria (one line) |
Signup & Auth | M | Allow users to sign up using email and OAuth providers | User can register, login, and reset password; email verified |
Project Dashboard | M | Overview of project progress, upcoming milestones, and blocked items | Dashboard shows milestones with percent complete and lists issues with blocked tag |
Page Generator | S | Generate sitemap and starter page copy from project brief | CSV export contains page rows with title, slug, meta descriptions |
Note: when you paste the Core Features list into Overbooked, the generator will attempt to normalize priorities into a MoSCoW table and suggest default owners and estimates (editable).
Project: New Product Landing Experience
Overview: Create a lightweight marketing site and demo workflow to validate demand and collect leads.
Goals & Metrics: 1) 1,000 signups in 30 days; 2) demo request conversion ≥ 5%; 3) page load < 2s.
Core Features (sample):
Signup & Auth (M) — basic auth & OAuth; ACs: registration, login, reset password, email verification.
Landing Pages (S) — sitemap + hero, features, pricing, contact; ACs: page content exported to CMS, meta tags present.
Demo Request Flow (C) — form + scheduling integration; ACs: form captures email, sends calendar link.
Refactor tone: select a paragraph and choose “Make it more formal/casual” in the editor.
Expand features: highlight a feature and ask the chat “Create 3 user stories with acceptance criteria” — copy the results into the PRD.
Reduce length: select the Overview and choose “Summarize to 1 sentence” to keep the PRD concise.
Bulk edits: use the chat to run global changes (e.g., change target audience phrasing), then accept or reject edits inline.
Keep the PRD short — 1–2 pages for the core document; embed links to deeper specs if needed.
Use MoSCoW prioritization to prevent scope creep.
Add at least 1 measurable success metric per goal.
Assign owners to dependencies and acceptance criteria before sign‑off.
Use the AI editor to convert ambiguous language into explicit testable statements.
Q: Can I edit the generated PRD outside Overbooked?
A: Yes. Export formats include Docx and Notion. We also provide CSV exports for milestones and acceptance criteria.
Q: What if my Questionnaire is incomplete?
A: The generator uses defaults and suggests follow‑up questions. It’s better with complete inputs but still produces a useful draft you can iterate on.
Q: Can the PRD generate user stories automatically?
A: Yes! use the chat to expand a core feature into user stories and acceptance criteria. Paste results back into the PRD block.
Copy the Questionnaire template and Core Features table above into your project Blocks. Then open the PRD Block and click the generator or ask in the chat: “Generate PRD from project.”
Generating a focused PRD from project context reduces ambiguity and speeds delivery. Use the Questionnaire and Core Features templates in this article, generate the PRD with one click in Overbooked, refine with the AI editor or chat window, then export or get your client notified.
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