You'd work from back to front. First off, your clamp device
needs to hold down some amps of current (Vbm/1.5K) at a
safe voltage. Assign the gate some tolerable voltage and
you can size by that. Bearing in mind that pins not directly
attached, will have to have some voltage allocated to the
ESD steering diodes (ring scheme) which lowers the allowable
clamping voltage at the core clamp.
Once the clamp size is set, the trigger taper can be sized.
You will have an "on" clamping voltage and you need to pull
in to that clamping voltage before breakdown and/or thermal
damage is accrued. Look at a simulated HBM (and/or other
threat waveform / source of interest) and the peak pin
excursion while waiting for trigger, against any foundry
transient overstress rules for gate ox, for a time bound.
This is what your front inverter has to smack the clamp
gate around, in. The inverter gain and trigger cap value
figure into this. If you have cap area then direct trigger
(Miller cap) is faster and more efficient, but often some
taper chain is more area efficient (though slower).