capacity-planner¶
Sizing tool for ops teams that handle queued work — Support, CX, Customer Success, BizOps, IT ops, Finance ops. Built on Erlang-C queueing theory, Little's Law, and the operational-leadership canon (Fournier, Larson, Cleveland, Reinertsen). Deterministic, stdlib-only, no LLM calls.
Purpose¶
You are an ops leader sized 15 → 35 with no idea how the 35-person org will actually behave at peak load. Or you are at 88% utilization and SLA is starting to slip. Or you have a hiring budget approved and need to sequence it across four quarters without burning out the existing team. This skill answers those questions with arithmetic, not vibes.
It produces three artifacts:
- Capacity sizing at 70/80/90% utilization against P50/P90/P99 demand, with P(SLA breach) at each point and a SAFE/WATCH/AT_RISK/CRITICAL risk band.
- Utilization health at the per-member traffic-light level plus a team verdict (HEALTHY/SQUEEZED/OVERLOADED/UNBALANCED).
- 12-month quarterly hiring plan accounting for ramp curves, attrition, QoQ demand growth, and span-of-control manager triggers.
When to use¶
- Annual ops capacity planning (October-November for the following fiscal year).
- Quarterly re-sizing if demand changed >15% or attrition spiked.
- Pre-budget defense — the math that justifies the headcount ask to your CFO.
- Diagnostic when an ops team is missing SLA and you need to know whether it's a sizing problem, a process problem, or a bottleneck problem.
- M&A / new-segment launch modeling — sizing a new team or combined org.
Workflow¶
- Intake demand. Pull P50/P90/P99 daily ticket/case volume from your work system (Zendesk, Intercom, JSM, ServiceNow, Salesforce). If you only have averages, stop and pull the distribution. Single- point demand estimates are the most expensive anti-pattern in ops.
- Model throughput. Run
capacity_modeler.pywith your demand, AHT, SLA target, current FTE, and shrinkage. Use--profilefor your function (support / cx / bizops / finance-ops / it-ops). Read the 80%-utilization row — that's your sizing point. - Flag utilization risk. Run
utilization_analyzer.pyagainst your current team's actual utilization data. Anyone >85% sustained is a throughput-collapse risk per Reinertsen. Spread >30 percentage points across team means UNBALANCED — fix that before hiring. - Sequence hiring. Run
hiring_sequencer.pywith current FTE, target EOY, ramp time, attrition, and growth. It will front-load hires (Q1 35%, Q4 15%), apply ramp curves, and trigger a manager hire when span of control crosses 7 ICs/manager. - Walk the Forcing-question library (see below). One question at a time. Do not skip ahead. Answers must be written down before you commit the plan.
Scripts¶
scripts/capacity_modeler.py— Erlang-C sizing with shrinkage adjustment and P50/P90/P99 breach probabilities.--profilefor industry defaults.scripts/utilization_analyzer.py— per-member traffic-light + team-level health verdict with variance detection.scripts/hiring_sequencer.py— 12-month quarterly plan with ramp, attrition, growth, max-hires-per-quarter constraint, and manager-trigger logic.
All three accept --input <path> (JSON), --output {markdown,json},
--sample (built-in example), and --help. Stdlib only.
References¶
references/queueing_theory_canon.md— Erlang, Little, Hopp & Spearman, Reinertsen, Kingman, Cleveland, ITIL, Armony et al. (8 sources). The math.references/ops_workforce_planning_canon.md— Fournier, Larson, Google SRE Workbook, Frei, Lawler, Bersin, Gartner, Grove (8 sources). The people factors.references/capacity_anti_patterns.md— 11 named anti-patterns with cited sources, tool guards, and the meta-discipline that Lencioni + Goldratt + Christensen impose. (8+ named sources.)
Assets¶
assets/capacity_brief_template.md— 20-minute fill-out template with JSON skeletons for all three tools and an output checklist.
Assumptions¶
This skill assumes:
- Work is queued (tickets, cases, work items) — not project-style. If your team's work isn't queued, this is the wrong skill.
- Demand has a stationary-enough distribution within a quarter. Step-changes (new product launch, M&A, regulatory shift) require re-running mid-quarter.
- You have at least 90 days of historical demand data to compute P50/P90/P99. If not, generate the distribution from your sales / user-base forecast first.
- Service is single-class within a queue. If you have hard priority tiers (P1/P2/P3 with class-specific SLAs), model each as a separate queue and sum.
- Channels are modeled coherently. Multi-channel teams use the
appropriate
--profilewith built-in shrinkage premium.
Anti-patterns¶
See references/capacity_anti_patterns.md for the full taxonomy with
sources. Top eight:
- Plan-to-100%-utilization (Reinertsen Principle 12)
- Treat-ramp-as-instant (Larson)
- Ignore-attrition-in-12-month-plan (Bersin)
- Hire-ICs-forever-with-no-manager-trigger (Fournier)
- Size-to-P50-demand-only (Cleveland)
- No-shrinkage-adjustment (Cleveland, SRE Workbook)
- Single-channel-model-for-multi-channel-work (Gartner, Kingman)
- No-surge-plan-for-P99-events (Hopp & Spearman, Reinertsen)
Distinct from¶
c-level-advisor/vpe-advisormeasures engineering throughput via DORA 4 metrics, story points, deployment frequency, and cycle time bottlenecks. It is for engineering teams shipping code. This skill is for ops teams handling tickets/cases. Different unit of work, different math (Erlang-C vs. DORA), different bottleneck (queueing-blind staffing vs. WIP + lead time).c-level-advisor/chro-advisordoes strategic workforce planning (1-5 year capability portfolios, talent supply, leadership succession). This skill does operational 0-12 month capacity sizing against demand. Per Lawler: conflating them gets you hired into the wrong jobs.project-management/*tracks delivery throughput on projects (Jira velocity, sprint capacity). This skill sizes around steady- state queued work.- Sibling
process-mapperfinds the bottleneck. This skill sizes the team around a known bottleneck. Order of operations: process-mapper first → capacity-planner second. Hiring around the wrong constraint wastes the hires. business-growth/cs-coverage(if it exists) sizes Customer Success coverage by ARR/CSM ratio and segment. This skill sizes by queued work volume (tickets, cases, escalations). For a CS team that handles both relationship work AND a ticket queue, run both.
Forcing-question library (Matt Pocock grill discipline)¶
Discipline: walk these one at a time. Do not skip ahead. Answers must be written down. If you can't answer one, that is your next investigation.
Q1 — "What is your bottleneck, and have you confirmed it empirically?"¶
Recommended answer: a named, measured stage in the workflow with queue-time data showing where work waits. Not a vibe. Not "escalations take too long". An actual measured queue.
Why it's the first question: Goldratt (The Goal, 1984) — every
system has exactly one binding constraint at a time. Sizing around the
wrong constraint wastes hires entirely. If you do not know your
bottleneck, run process-mapper BEFORE this skill.
Canon: Eli Goldratt, The Goal (1984); Reinertsen, Principles of Product Development Flow (2009).
Q2 — "What service trade-off are you accepting?"¶
Recommended answer: a written, explicit choice — fast vs. empathetic, broad vs. deep, low-cost vs. high-quality. Frances Frei is unambiguous: you cannot win all four. The team that tries wins zero.
Why it matters: AHT, SLA, and shrinkage inputs are the operational expression of this trade-off. If they don't agree (e.g., you set AHT for "empathy" but SLA for "speed"), the plan is internally inconsistent.
Canon: Frances Frei & Anne Morriss, Uncommon Service (HBR Press, 2012).
Q3 — "What's your demand P90, and what's the gap to your P99?"¶
Recommended answer: two specific numbers from the last 90 days of data, with the calendar context of each (e.g., "P90 was 480 tickets/day on normal Tuesdays; P99 was 720 on the day after the November release"). A team sized to P50 misses SLA half the time. A team sized to P99 overstaffs by 30-50%. P90 is the right operating sizing point per Cleveland.
Canon: Brad Cleveland, Call Center Management on Fast Forward (4th ed., 2019); A.K. Erlang, The Theory of Probabilities and Telephone Conversations (1909).
Q4 — "At your planned utilization, what is P(SLA breach) at P90 and at P99?"¶
Recommended answer: two probabilities, computed (not guessed) from Erlang-C with your specific N, AHT, and SLA target. If P(breach at P90)
10% you are understaffed at the sizing point. If P(breach at P99) > 50% you have no surge plan and the next peak event will be visible to the CEO.
Canon: Erlang (1909); Hopp & Spearman, Factory Physics (3rd ed., 2008), VUT equation.
Q5 — "Have you budgeted replacement hires for the attrition you'll see this year?"¶
Recommended answer: yes, with a specific number. At 30% annual attrition (Bersin BPO midpoint), a 20-FTE team loses ~6 people this year. If your "add 5 net" plan is actually a "hire 11" plan, the recruiting volume changes drastically. Anti-pattern #3.
Canon: Bersin/Deloitte talent benchmarks (2015-2023); Edward Lawler, Strategic Workforce Planning (USC CEO, 2008).
Q6 — "When does span of control trigger a manager hire, and who is the candidate?"¶
Recommended answer: a specific quarter (from hiring_sequencer.py)
and at least one identified candidate (internal lead or external hire).
Past 7 ICs/manager, 1:1s degrade, feedback cycles slip, attrition
climbs. Past 10 you have a coverage crisis. Hire the manager BEFORE
crossing 10, not after.
Canon: Camille Fournier, The Manager's Path (O'Reilly, 2017), ch. 5; Andy Grove, High Output Management (1983).
Q7 — "What is your surge plan for the P99 day?"¶
Recommended answer: an explicit, documented plan — overflow tier, BPO contracted capacity, on-call rotation, executive escalation tree, OR a written degradation contract that says "on P99 days we extend SLA to X minutes and notify customers proactively". If the answer is "we'll figure it out", the P99 day is a fire visible to the board.
Canon: Hopp & Spearman, Factory Physics (2008); Reinertsen (2009) on capacity-margin discipline.
Walk these seven in order. One at a time. Write the answers down. The plan you submit is only as defensible as your answers to these seven questions.