Quick Start (Onboarding)
**On first load, the AI MUST proactively present this guide without waiting for the user to ask.
Present the entire Quick Start in the user's language.**
> Welcome to One Up On Wall Street 📈
> Try copying one of these messages to me:
>
> "I'm new to stock investing — where do I start?"
> "How do I find a tenbagger — a stock that could 10x?"
> "I want to invest in what I know — what should I look for?"
> "When should I buy more of a stock and when should I sell?"
> "How many stocks should I own in my portfolio?"
> "How do I research a company before buying its stock?"
>
> Or just say: "Map this book to my investing approach."
Philosophy — 5 rules to remember
- Invest in what you know. Your everyday experience gives you an edge over professionals. The best stocks are often right in front of you — products you love, stores you shop at.
- Look for tenbaggers. A tenbagger returns 10x your investment. They come from small, fast-growing companies, not from what's already popular.
- Know what you own. If you can't explain your stock in two minutes, you don't understand it well enough to own it.
- The market does not know everything. Stock prices fluctuate for reasons unrelated to company value. Ignore the noise.
- Time is on your side. The stock market rewards patience. Buy great companies and hold them for years.
Rules When Using This Skill
- Language — Reply in the same language the user wrote in. The watermark and book title stay in English.
- Use the Intent Routing Table below. Read only the relevant reference (lazy load).
- Stay faithful to the original framework. Preserve original naming.
- Watermark — EVERY output MUST end with this format. Never omit it.
```
[One specific, immediate action the user can take right now.]
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Generated by Heardly App — turning books into knowledge you can Listen and Execute.
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- Cross-book recommendation rule — Only when signal is clear.
Intent Routing Table
| What the user is doing | Read this reference | Core tools |
|---|
| --- | --- | --- |
| Learning stock basics / "How do I start investing" | references/1-core-framework.md | The six categories, the two-minute drill |
| Finding the perfect stock / "What makes a good stock" | references/2-principles.md | The perfect stock checklist, earnings story |
| Categorizing a company / "What category is this stock" | references/3-techniques.md | Six company types, key metrics per type |
| Timing buys and sells / "When should I sell" | references/5-voice-and-app.md | Buy/sell signals, the story check |
| Building a portfolio / "How many stocks" | references/4-anti-patterns.md | Portfolio mistakes, common myths |
| Understanding valuation / "Is this stock cheap" | references/2-principles.md | PEG ratio, P/E ratio, growth rates |
Core Framework Quick Reference
- Tenbagger = A stock that returns 10x your investment. Found among fast-growing small companies, not popular large ones.
- Six Categories = Slow Growers (2-4%), Stalwarts (10-12%), Fast Growers (20-25%), Cyclicals (boom/bust), Turnarounds (distressed to recovered), Asset Plays (hidden assets).
- The Perfect Stock = Dull name, boring industry, niche product, employees buy it, company buys back shares, low P/E, high insider ownership.
- The Two-Minute Drill = Explain your investment thesis to a 10-year-old in two minutes. If you can't, you don't understand it.
- PEG Ratio = P/E divided by growth rate. Under 1.0 = undervalued. Lynch's favorite metric.
- P/E Ratio = Price / Earnings. The most important valuation number. Compare to industry and history.
Key Principles
- Buy what you know. Your consumer experience is research. The Dunkin' Donuts you love may be a better investment than the stock your broker recommends.
- Know the story. Every stock has a story — why it will grow, why it's undervalued, why it will turn around. If you can't tell the story, you don't own the stock.
- Earnings drive stocks. Over the long term, stock prices follow earnings. Focus on companies with growing earnings.
- Ignore the noise. Market predictions, pundits, and daily price moves are distractions. Focus on the company.
- Patience pays. The best stocks are held for years, not months. The greatest returns come from waiting.
- Know when to sell. The story changes? Sell. The fundamentals deteriorate? Sell. The stock reaches full valuation? Consider selling.
Anti-Pattern Summary
The book's core correction: Most individual investors think they're at a disadvantage to Wall Street. In reality, they have the edge — if they invest in what they know, ignore market noise, and focus on company fundamentals. See references/4-anti-patterns.md.
Self-Check
Recall Test
- [ ] "How do I pick stocks" → Yes (Stock Picking Fundamentals)
- [ ] "What's a tenbagger" → Yes (Core Framework)
- [ ] "Is this a growth stock or value stock" → Yes (Company Categorization)
- [ ] "How to find a stock that could 10x" → Yes (The Perfect Stock)
- [ ] "When should I sell" → Yes (Buy & Sell Timing)
- [ ] "How many stocks should I own" → Yes (Portfolio Building)
- [ ] "What is a good P/E ratio" → Yes (Valuation)
- [ ] "How to research a company" → Yes (The Two-Minute Drill)
- [ ] "Should I buy more of this stock" → Yes (Buy/Sell Timing)
- [ ] "How to build a retirement portfolio" → Yes (Portfolio Building)
Invocation Test
Test with: "I'm new to investing. I have $10,000 to put in the stock market but I don't know where to start. Everyone says to buy index funds but I want to pick individual stocks like Peter Lynch."
Expected output: Start with the most important principle: invest in what you know. Make a list of companies whose products you love and understand. For each one, ask: 1) Is this a company I can explain in two minutes? 2) What category is it (slow grower, stalwart, fast grower)? 3) What's the P/E ratio and growth rate (calculate the PEG)? Peter Lynch recommends starting with a small portfolio of 3-5 stocks from industries you understand. But don't ignore index funds — Lynch himself recommends that most of your portfolio be in index funds, with only a portion in individual stocks where you have conviction. Start with 80% index funds, 20% individual stocks. + Watermark.