> "In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing. The worst thing you can do is nothing." — Theodore Roosevelt
🧠 Want the full framework library with bias detection and decision policies?
Full version → agentofalpha.com
Brings structure to high-stakes decisions so you stop going in circles. Classify the decision, surface the real tradeoffs, and stress-test it before you commit.
Included in Lite:
Upgrade to Full for:
Tell me the decision you're facing. Include:
I'll run you through the framework.
Before applying any framework, classify the decision. This tells you how much time and rigor to invest.
| Type | Reversibility | Stakes | How to Decide |
|---|---|---|---|
| ------ | ------------- | -------- | --------------- |
| Type 1 — One-Way Door | Hard or impossible to reverse | High | Slow down. Full analysis. Get it right. |
| Type 2 — Two-Way Door | Easily reversible | Low-Medium | Decide fast. Bias to action. You can course-correct. |
| Type 3 — Recurring | Varies | Varies | Build a rule. Stop deciding this over and over. |
| Type 4 — Delegatable | Reversible | Low | Hand it off. You shouldn't be deciding this at all. |
Ask yourself:
Delegate when ALL of these are true:
A basic pro/con list is weak because all factors are treated as equal. This version weights them.
Name each option clearly. If you only have one option and one "status quo," that's fine — write both down.
What actually matters for this decision? List 3-6 criteria. Examples:
Assign a weight to each criterion (1-5):
Score each option against each criterion (1-10):
Calculate: Weighted score = Σ (criterion weight × option score)
After calculating scores — how do you feel about the winner?
If the math says Option A but your gut says Option B, that's data. Name the feeling. Ask: "What criterion did I underweight or miss?"
Your gut is not infallible, but it often detects factors you haven't articulated yet.
Decision: [What we're deciding]
Criteria & Weights:
- [Criterion 1]: Weight X/5
- [Criterion 2]: Weight X/5
- [Criterion 3]: Weight X/5
Scoring:
| Criterion (Weight) | Option A | Option B |
|--------------------|----------|----------|
| [Criterion 1] (×X) | X | X |
| [Criterion 2] (×X) | X | X |
| [Criterion 3] (×X) | X | X |
| **Weighted Total** | **XX** | **XX** |
Winner by score: [Option]
Gut check: [Does the winner feel right? Any flag?]
This is the most important step most people skip.
Imagine it's 12 months from now. You made this decision. It failed spectacularly.
Not a minor setback — a real failure. What went wrong?
Step 1: Write failure scenarios
List 5-7 specific ways this decision could go badly. Don't be optimistic — be honest. Think about:
Step 2: Rate each scenario
For each failure scenario:
Step 3: Focus on High + Catastrophic
Any scenario rated "High likelihood + Significant/Catastrophic impact" needs a mitigation plan or needs to change your decision.
Step 4: Update your decision
After the pre-mortem:
Pre-Mortem: [Decision]
Failure Scenarios:
1. [Scenario] | Likelihood: [L/M/H] | Impact: [Minor/Significant/Catastrophic]
→ Mitigation: [How to reduce likelihood or damage]
2. [Scenario] | Likelihood: [L/M/H] | Impact: [Minor/Significant/Catastrophic]
→ Mitigation: [How to reduce likelihood or damage]
[Continue for each scenario]
Kill Criteria (set in advance):
- If [observable signal], we reverse or pivot by [date]
Updated Confidence: [Do you feel better or worse about the decision after this exercise?]
## Decision: [Clear statement of what we're deciding]
**Classification:** Type [1/2/3/4] — [One-way door / Two-way door / Recurring / Delegatable]
**Urgency:** [How quickly does this need to be decided?]
---
### Options Considered
- Option A: [Brief description]
- Option B: [Brief description]
[Additional options if any]
---
### Weighted Analysis
[Table from Phase 2]
**Score winner:** Option [X] with [XX] vs [XX]
---
### Pre-Mortem Summary
**Top risks identified:**
1. [Biggest risk + mitigation]
2. [Second risk + mitigation]
**Kill criteria:** [What would make you reverse this within 90 days?]
---
### Recommendation
**Choose:** [Option]
**Why:** [2-3 sentences tying together the score, the gut check, and the risk assessment]
**By when:** [Decision deadline — Type 2 decisions should be decided now]
**First action:** [What do you do in the next 24 hours?]
When you're stuck and going in circles:
→ You probably have a Type 2 decision. Decide with 70% of the information you wish you had. The cost of delay is exceeding the cost of a suboptimal choice.
When everyone's agreeing too fast:
→ Run the pre-mortem. Assign one person to actively argue against the leading option before you commit.
When it feels wrong but the analysis says go:
→ Name the feeling. What criterion did you underweight? Adjust the model or adjust the decision — but don't ignore the signal.
When you're making the same decision repeatedly:
→ This is Type 3. Stop deciding case-by-case. Write a policy.
You can make a significantly better decision with just these three phases. Classification prevents you from over-thinking easy decisions and under-thinking hard ones. The weighted analysis surfaces the real tradeoffs. The pre-mortem catches what optimism hides.
What you won't get here:
The full version is used by founders and executives facing strategic pivots, hiring calls, investment decisions, and product prioritization — any choice where the cost of being wrong is high.
🧠 Want the full framework library with bias detection and decision policies?
Full version → agentofalpha.com
"Help me decide whether to take this job offer""We're choosing between two vendors — walk me through it""Should we build or buy this feature?""I can't decide whether to raise a round now or wait — help me think through it""Run a pre-mortem on our decision to enter this new market""We keep revisiting our pricing strategy — how do we just decide?"共 1 个版本