What is ForceVue

The core model in two minutes. Workspaces, initiatives, context, goals, and the documents ForceVue writes from them.

ForceVue is an AI product management tool for PMs, POs, and BAs. You give it your real context (research, feedback, competitors, constraints, goals), and it writes product documents from that context instead of from a blank prompt.

The whole product fits in one sentence: a workspace holds your initiatives, each initiative holds context and goals, and ForceVue uses all of that to generate documents.

The model

Workspaces

A workspace is the container for everything you do. You get a personal workspace the moment you sign up. Team plans add shared team workspaces, and consultant plans add client workspaces under a parent. Data never leaks between workspaces.

See Workspaces for the full tour.

Initiatives

An initiative is a product effort: a feature, a launch, a redesign, a quarter of work. Give it a clear title and a short description. Everything else (context, goals, documents) lives inside it.

See Initiatives.

Context items

Context items are the ingredients. Each one has a label (target users, user feedback, key competitors, a technical constraint, and so on), a title, and a Content field. You can attach context to a single initiative or to the whole workspace.

The quality of your context is the single biggest lever on the quality of your documents. See Context items.

Goals

Goals are the outcomes you want. ForceVue reads them when it writes, so a document stays pointed at what you are actually trying to achieve. Goals can sit on one initiative or across the workspace.

See Goals.

Documents

Documents are what ForceVue produces. Pick from twelve document types, including PRDs, epics, user stories, and launch plans, give it a title, and ForceVue assembles your context and goals into a first draft. You edit it in a rich text editor, refine sections with AI, and export to Markdown or PDF.

See Generating documents.

Who it's for

ForceVue is built for product people who write a lot of documentation: product managers, product owners, and business analysts at small and mid-sized SaaS companies. If you spend hours turning notes into PRDs, this is for you.

Where to go next