DIS Planning
From Intent to Structured Work
Stop writing vague tickets that engineers have to reverse-engineer. Describe what you want to build in plain language — DIS analyzes your codebase, asks the right questions, and produces scoped, contextual plans your team can review and approve.
From Idea to Execution
Five steps from a rough idea to ready-to-build tickets — no guesswork.
Intent
You describe what you want to build
Analysis
DIS analyzes codebase, patterns, and history
Clarify
DIS asks smart questions if needed
Review
Structured plan with subtasks — you review
Create
One click to create Linear tickets
Intent
You describe what you want to build
Analysis
DIS analyzes codebase, patterns, and history
Clarify
DIS asks smart questions if needed
Review
Structured plan with subtasks — you review
Create
One click to create Linear tickets
See It In Action
A real planning flow — from a single Slack message to a fully scoped plan.
Sarah - Product Manager
@DIS We need to add SSO support for enterprise clients. Target: end of Q2.
DIS
I've analyzed your auth module (auth.service.ts, last refactored in PR #247) and found 3 related tickets. Before I plan, a few questions:
1. Should this support SAML, OIDC, or both?
2. Gate behind enterprise tier?
3. Build on the new auth architecture from Sprint 13?
Sarah - Product Manager
Both protocols, enterprise tier, yes use the new arch.
DIS
Dependency: Task 4 blocked by design review (DAG-891)
Human-in-the-Loop, Always
No Autonomous Execution
Explicit Approval
Full Transparency
Editable Plans
What PMs Love
No More Spec Marathons
Context-Aware Estimation
Stakeholder-Ready Plans
The Difference
Planning Without DIS
- Vague tickets — engineers ask 20 clarifying questions
- Scope creep because nobody mapped the dependencies
- Estimation based on vibes, not codebase reality
- Stakeholders confused about what's actually shipping
Planning With DIS
- Structured plans with tasks, dependencies, and effort
- DIS maps every dependency before you start
- Estimates grounded in actual code complexity
- One plan everyone can review, edit, and approve