Skillquality 0.46

engagement-setup

Guide the first weeks of a consulting engagement from contract signature through a running project. Covers kickoff workshop design, discovery phase planning, stakeholder mapping, and standing up workstreams and cadences. Use when launching a new engagement, onboarding a new clien

Price
free
Protocol
skill
Verified
no

What it does

Engagement Setup

Take a consulting engagement from "we just won this work" to "the engagement is running." This covers the first weeks of a consulting engagement: planning the kickoff, mapping stakeholders, designing discovery, and establishing the operating rhythm. For designing standalone facilitated sessions later in the engagement (strategy offsites, innovation sprints), see workshop-facilitation.

The goal is shared understanding and momentum, not a stack of templates. Every artifact here should earn its place by driving alignment or unblocking work.

Phase 1: Pre-Kickoff Preparation

Before anyone gets in a room, do the homework.

Stakeholder Identification

Build the stakeholder inventory early. You need it for kickoff invitation lists, interview scheduling, and knowing who can actually make decisions.

Internal stakeholders (client side):

Name/RoleFunctionRelationship to InitiativeCurrent Stance
C-suite / VP / Director / ManagerSponsor / Decision-maker / Contributor / AffectedChampion / Supporter / Neutral / Skeptic / Opponent

External stakeholders (partners, regulators, vendors):

Name/RoleOrganizationRelationshipCurrent Stance
Client / Regulator / Partner / Vendor

Stakeholder groups (when individuals are too many to track):

GroupSizeInfluenceImpact on ThemPriority
High/Med/LowHigh/Med/Low1-5

Influence-Interest Analysis

Map everyone on the power-interest grid. This determines your engagement strategy for each person.

                    HIGH INTEREST
                         |
    +--------------------+--------------------+
    |                    |                    |
    |   KEEP SATISFIED   |   MANAGE CLOSELY   |
    |                    |                    |
    |   Regular updates  |   Active engagement|
    |   Address concerns |   Co-creation      |
    |                    |   Regular 1:1s     |
HIGH+--------------------+--------------------+
POWER                    |
    |                    |                    |
    |   MONITOR          |   KEEP INFORMED    |
    |                    |                    |
    |   Periodic check   |   Regular comms    |
    |   Watch for shifts |   Feedback loops   |
    |                    |   Town halls       |
    +--------------------+--------------------+
                    LOW INTEREST

Score each stakeholder:

StakeholderPower (1-5)Interest (1-5)QuadrantStrategy
Manage Closely / Keep Satisfied / Keep Informed / Monitor

Alignment and Resistance Assessment

Before kickoff, get a read on where people actually stand versus where you need them.

StakeholderCurrent PositionDesired PositionGapDifficulty
Opponent / Skeptic / Neutral / Supporter / ChampionSize of shift neededHigh/Med/Low

For anyone showing resistance, diagnose the type:

StakeholderResistance TypeRoot CauseSeverityMitigation
Rational / Emotional / Political / CulturalWhy they resistHigh/Med/LowApproach

Map influence networks. Who listens to whom? Where are the informal power centers?

StakeholderInfluencesInfluenced ByCoalition Opportunity
Who they swayWho sways themPotential alliance

Kickoff Materials

Prepare and share 24-48 hours before the kickoff:

  1. Agenda with time blocks and objectives for each section
  2. Project charter template (to be completed collaboratively, not presented as fait accompli)
  3. Stakeholder map (sanitized version appropriate for the audience)
  4. Working arrangements draft for discussion
  5. Expectations document covering what you need from the client
  6. Initial communication plan

Phase 2: Kickoff Workshop

The kickoff is about alignment, not information transfer. If people leave with different understandings of the problem, scope, or how you'll work together, the kickoff failed.

Agenda Structure

Part 1: Introduction (15 min)
- Introductions (not just names... roles, what each person cares about)
- Project purpose and background
- Meeting objectives

Part 2: Problem and Scope (30 min)
- Problem statement (get agreement before moving on)
- Scope boundaries (in-scope and out-of-scope, explicitly)
- Success criteria
- Key constraints

Part 3: Approach and Plan (30 min)
- Methodology (how you'll work, not a sales pitch)
- Phase structure and milestones
- Timeline overview
- Dependencies and assumptions

Part 4: Governance (20 min)
- Team roles and decision rights
- Steering committee composition
- Meeting cadence
- Escalation paths

Part 5: Working Arrangements (15 min)
- Communication protocols
- Document sharing and version control
- Access requirements
- Working styles and norms

Part 6: Next Steps (10 min)
- Action items with owners and dates
- Next meeting scheduled before anyone leaves
- Open questions parking lot

Facilitation Principles

  • Set a collaborative tone from the start. You're working with them, not presenting to them.
  • Align on the problem before jumping to approach. If you skip this, you'll pay for it later.
  • Confirm scope boundaries explicitly. Verbal assumptions become scope disputes.
  • Exchange expectations in both directions. What do you need from the client (access, decisions, resources, availability)? What can they expect from you?
  • Establish decision rights clearly. Who can approve scope changes? Who resolves disagreements?
  • Build personal connections. Engagement success tracks relationship quality more than methodology quality.
  • Surface risks early. The kickoff is the safest time to name uncomfortable truths.
  • Ensure all decision-makers are present or represented. If the sponsor doesn't show up, you have a problem.

Project Charter

Complete this collaboratively during the kickoff. It's the contract between the team on what you're doing and how.

Project Charter: [Project Name]

1. PROJECT OVERVIEW

Background:
[Why this project exists]

Problem Statement:
[What problem you're solving]

Objectives:
| Objective | Success Metric |
|-----------|----------------|
| | How you'll measure it |

2. SCOPE

In Scope:
- [Deliverable or activity]

Out of Scope:
- [Explicit exclusion]

3. TIMELINE

| Milestone | Target Date |
|-----------|-------------|
| Kickoff | |
| Discovery complete | |
| Analysis complete | |
| Recommendations | |
| Final delivery | |

4. GOVERNANCE

Core Team:
| Role | Name | Organization |
|------|------|--------------|
| Project Sponsor | | Client |
| Project Lead | | Client |
| Engagement Manager | | Firm |

Steering Committee:
| Member | Role | Responsibility |
|--------|------|----------------|
| | | Strategic decisions |

Meeting Cadence:
| Meeting | Frequency | Attendees |
|---------|-----------|-----------|
| Steering Committee | Monthly | Sponsor, Partner |
| Project Team | Weekly | Core team |
| Status Update | Bi-weekly | Extended team |

5. RISKS AND DEPENDENCIES

| Risk | Impact | Mitigation |
|------|--------|------------|
| | H/M/L | |

Dependencies:
- [Dependency]

6. COMMUNICATION PLAN

| Audience | What | How | When |
|----------|------|-----|------|
| Steering Committee | Status, decisions | Meeting + email | Monthly |
| Extended Team | Updates | Email | Weekly |
| Working Team | Day-to-day | Slack/Teams | Daily |

7. SIGN-OFF

| Role | Name | Date |
|------|------|------|
| Client Sponsor | | |
| Firm Partner | | |
| Engagement Manager | | |

Phase 3: Discovery Design

Discovery starts immediately after kickoff (often in the same week). The goal is understanding the current state deeply enough to form hypotheses worth testing.

Discovery Plan

Design the approach based on what you need to learn:

MethodPurposeParticipantsTiming
Executive interviewsStrategic context, priorities, political landscapeC-suite, senior leadersWeek 1
Working sessionsDetailed requirements, process understandingMiddle management, subject matter expertsWeek 1-2
Data reviewQuantitative baseline, trend analysisN/A (analyst work)Week 1-2
Process observationSee how work actually happens (not how people describe it)Operations, front-line staffWeek 2
SurveyBroad feedback, validate interview themes at scaleOrganization-wideWeek 2

Interview Guides

Executive Interviews (45 min)

Opening (5 min)

  • Thank participant, explain purpose
  • Confirm confidentiality (what will and won't be attributed)

Strategic Context (15 min)

  1. What is your vision for [area] over the next [X] years?
  2. What are the biggest challenges preventing you from achieving this?
  3. How does this initiative fit into your strategic priorities?
  4. What does success look like for you personally?

Current State (15 min) 5. How would you describe the current state of [area]? 6. What works well that we should preserve? 7. What are the most significant pain points? 8. What has been tried before? What worked and what didn't?

Stakeholders and Organization (10 min) 9. Who are the key people we need to engage? 10. What organizational changes might be needed? 11. What concerns or resistance should we anticipate? 12. What questions should we be asking that we haven't? 13. Anyone else we should speak with? Documents we should review?

Process Interviews (45 min)

Process Overview

  1. Walk me through how [process] works today, start to finish
  2. What are the key steps and hand-offs?
  3. Who is involved at each stage?

Pain Points 4. Where does the most time get spent? 5. Where do errors or rework happen most often? 6. What constraints or bottlenecks exist?

Requirements 7. What would the ideal process look like? 8. What capabilities are must-haves versus nice-to-haves? 9. What systems or tools are critical?

Volume and Metrics 10. How many [transactions/cases/units] per period? 11. What are current cycle times? 12. What metrics are tracked today? Which ones actually drive behavior?

Data Request

Structure your ask clearly. Vague data requests produce vague data.

CategoryData NeededFormatOwnerDue Date
FinancialRevenue by segment, cost breakdownSpreadsheetCFO office
OperationalProcess volumes, cycle times, error ratesSpreadsheetOps lead
OrganizationalOrg chart, headcount by function, role descriptionsAnyHR
TechnologySystem inventory, integration mapAnyCTO office
ExternalMarket data, competitive benchmarksReportStrategy team

If client data is messy or incomplete, provide templates. Don't assume they'll know what format you need.

Synthesizing Discovery

After interviews and data collection, synthesize into findings that drive the next phase:

Discovery Summary: [Project Name]

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
[2-3 paragraphs: what you learned, what it means, what to do next]

CURRENT STATE ASSESSMENT

Strengths (preserve these):
- [What works well]

Pain Points (with root causes, not just symptoms):
- [Pain point: impact and underlying cause]

Opportunities:
- [Opportunity with estimated impact]

KEY FINDINGS

Finding 1: [Title]
Evidence: [Interview quotes, data points]
Implication: [What this means for the engagement]

QUANTITATIVE HIGHLIGHTS

| Metric | Current | Benchmark | Gap |
|--------|---------|-----------|-----|
| | | | |

INITIAL HYPOTHESES

Based on discovery:
1. [Hypothesis to test in analysis phase]
2. [Hypothesis]
3. [Hypothesis]

RISKS IDENTIFIED

| Risk | Likelihood | Impact | Mitigation |
|------|------------|--------|------------|
| | H/M/L | H/M/L | |

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR NEXT PHASE
[Where to focus analysis and why]

Phase 4: Standing Up the Engagement

With kickoff done and discovery underway, establish the operating rhythm that will carry the engagement.

Workstream Structure

For engagements with multiple workstreams, define clearly:

WorkstreamLeadScopeKey DeliverablesDependencies
What this workstream coversWhat it producesWhat it needs from other workstreams

Engagement Cadences

Set up recurring rhythms immediately. Don't wait for "things to settle."

CadencePurposeFrequencyAttendeesDurationOwner
Daily standupCoordination, blockersDailyWorking team15 minEngagement manager
Workstream syncProgress, cross-cutting issuesWeeklyWorkstream leads30 minEngagement manager
Client statusProgress, decisions neededWeekly or bi-weeklyCore team + client lead45 minEngagement manager
Steering committeeStrategic decisions, escalationsMonthly or milestone-basedSponsors, partners60 minPartner
Team retrospectiveWorking effectivenessBi-weekly or end of phaseConsulting team30 minTeam lead

Working Arrangements

Capture the operational details that prevent friction:

Communication:
- Primary channel: [Slack/Teams/Email]
- Expected response time: [X hours during business hours]
- Status updates: [Format and frequency]
- Escalation: [How and to whom]

Document Sharing:
- Platform: [SharePoint/Google Drive/Box]
- Folder structure: [Link or description]
- Naming convention: [Convention]
- Version control: [Approach]

Meetings:
- Default time zone: [TZ]
- Recording policy: [Yes/No/Ask first]
- Notes responsibility: [Who, where stored]
- Decision log: [Where decisions are captured]

Access Requirements:
- [System/tool needed, who to request from]
- [Building/VPN access]
- [Data access permissions]

Engagement Strategy by Stakeholder

Now that you've mapped stakeholders and run the kickoff, set the ongoing engagement approach:

StakeholderObjectiveKey MessagesChannelFrequencyOwner
What you need from themTailored to their concerns1:1 / Meeting / EmailWeekly / Biweekly / MonthlyTeam member responsible

Coalition Building

Identify and activate your champions early:

ChampionSphere of InfluenceHow to EngageSupport They Need
Who they can mobilizeActivation approachResources / air cover / information

Plan quick wins that build credibility:

Quick WinTarget StakeholderExpected ImpactTimeline
Who benefitsCredibility / Trust / Proof of value

Escalation Triggers

Define what signals trouble and what to do about it:

SignalWhat It MeansResponseEscalate To
Client sponsor cancels two status meetingsEngagement losing priorityRequest 1:1 with sponsorPartner
Data requests unfulfilled after two weeksAccess or willingness problemEscalate through client leadEngagement manager
Stakeholder actively undermining in meetingsPolitical resistance1:1 conversation to understand concernsPartner

Principles

These aren't platitudes. They're the things that separate engagements that work from ones that don't.

On kickoffs:

  • Kickoff is about alignment, not information transfer. If you're presenting for 90 minutes, you're doing it wrong.
  • Get agreement on the problem before discussing the approach. Skipping this is the most common engagement mistake.
  • Confirm your expectations of the client explicitly. Access, decision timelines, team availability. Don't be polite about this.
  • Document assumptions. Every undocumented assumption is a future scope dispute.
  • Schedule the next meeting before closing. Momentum dies in the gap.

On discovery:

  • Discovery is about understanding, not validating what you already think. If your findings perfectly match your initial hypothesis, you weren't listening.
  • Interview more people than you think you need to. Breadth catches what depth misses.
  • Cross-validate everything. One person's perspective is an anecdote. Three perspectives with the same theme is a finding.
  • Follow up, don't rapid-fire. One thoughtful question followed by genuine listening beats ten questions read from a guide.
  • Focus on root causes. Ask "why" until you get past symptoms. Pain points without root causes produce recommendations that don't stick.
  • Flag data gaps early. Don't wait until analysis to discover you're missing critical information.

On stakeholders:

  • Informal influence often matters more than formal authority. The org chart lies.
  • Stakeholder positions shift. Revisit the map regularly.
  • Build coalitions of supporters before tackling resistors. Champions create social proof.
  • One-on-one conversations move difficult stakeholders more than group presentations.
  • Stakeholder mapping is confidential. Handle with care.
  • Listen before you advocate. Understanding someone's concerns is a prerequisite to addressing them.
  • Early engagement prevents late-stage resistance. The cost of inclusion is always lower than the cost of opposition.

On standing up the engagement:

  • Set cadences immediately. "We'll figure out the rhythm as we go" means no rhythm.
  • Working arrangements feel bureaucratic until the first miscommunication. Then they feel essential.
  • Quick wins in the first two weeks buy goodwill that carries you through the hard middle of the engagement.

Capabilities

skillsource-anotbskill-engagement-setuptopic-agent-skillstopic-anthropictopic-claudetopic-codextopic-consultingtopic-coworktopic-gemini-clitopic-management-consultingtopic-plugin

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Quality

0.46/ 1.00

deterministic score 0.46 from registry signals: · indexed on github topic:agent-skills · 22 github stars · SKILL.md body (18,087 chars)

Provenance

Indexed fromgithub
Enriched2026-04-23 07:01:04Z · deterministic:skill-github:v1 · v1
First seen2026-04-18
Last seen2026-04-23

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