Install
openclaw skills install @deciqai/death-spiralActivate when: user says 'we're losing market share,' 'our growth keeps slowing and I don't know why,' 'a competitor is gaining on us fast,' 'what's the worst-case trajectory here,' or a business shows two or more consecutive quarters of declining key metrics with no identified reversal mechanism. Do NOT activate when: decline is clearly seasonal or macro-cyclical with demonstrated historical recovery; or the company is pre-product/pre-revenue with no existing moat to audit.
openclaw skills install @deciqai/death-spiralA death spiral is a self-reinforcing negative feedback loop in competitive markets. Unlike ordinary decline — which is linear and potentially reversible — a death spiral is non-linear: each deterioration step actively causes the next to be worse and faster. The cycle begins when a competitor breaches a company's primary moat, then propagates through share loss → revenue decline → R&D contraction → product lag → further moat erosion.
Cross-skill composition: Use WITH [second-order-thinking] to trace downstream consequences early. Use BEFORE [margin-of-safety] to know which buffer to maintain. Use WITH [dynamic-core-competence] to diagnose which competence decay triggers the spiral.
When NOT to use: Decline is cyclical with demonstrated historical recovery; company is pre-product/pre-revenue; feedback loop has already completed (post-mortem use only).
In Coach mode, respond one step at a time. Each [WAIT] is a hard stop — output only that step's question, then stop.
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
Step 1 — Audit moat dimensions: Name 3–5 advantages (network effects, switching costs, data, brand, distribution, patents). Rate each: strength (strong/moderate/weak) + trend (stable/eroding/rapidly eroding).
Step 2 — Identify breach conditions: For each moat, name the specific competitor action or tech shift that would establish a durable advantage over it.
Step 3 — Check early-warning signals: Multi-quarter share decline? Rising CAC? Rising churn? Any confirmed = spiral may have started.
Step 4 — Calculate the cascade: breach → share loss → revenue decline → R&D cut → product lag → further breach. Estimate timeline per step.
Step 5 — Identify intervention window: Work backwards from "irreversibility" (typically when R&D falls below product-parity threshold). Design intervention 2–3 steps earlier.
Step 6 — Design intervention: Step 1–2: competitive response. Step 3–4: strategic repositioning. Step 5–6: platform shift.
Gate: Confirm structural (not cyclical) decline before proceeding. Stop-rule: Cannot name a specific breach scenario for each moat → audit incomplete, return to Step 2.
MOAT AUDIT: [Dimension] — Strength / Trend / Breach condition / Likelihood
EARLY WARNINGS: Share | CAC | Churn | R&D% (all trailing 4–6Q)
Verdict: [NOT active / possible / confirmed at step __]
CASCADE MAP: Steps 1–6 with magnitude + timeline estimates
INTERVENTION WINDOW: Last viable step __ | Current position __ | Time remaining __
INTERVENTION: Type | Actions | Resources | Success metrics
→ Method in Action: Kodak's Death Spiral (1994–2012)
Startup Pack: Apply pre-emptively — identify which early moats could be breached and design moat diversity before the first breach. For founders + early-stage investors.
Incumbent Pack: High current revenue masks early moat erosion. Audit moat health independently of current financials. For strategy teams + board directors.
Investor Pack: Death spiral risk is underweighted in equity models projecting from trailing revenue — especially for single-dimension moats with high R&D dependency.
→ Primary sources: references/sources.md
[D] = designed upfront | [O] = observed in real use. [O] entries are more valuable.
| Fake move | Reality |
|---|---|
| [D] "We're experiencing temporary market softness." | If decline creates conditions for further decline, "temporary" is a fatal misdiagnosis. Test: is the feedback loop active? |
| [D] "Our brand is too strong for this to be a serious threat." | Brand trust is a lagging function of product quality — not protective after 2–3 years of product lag. |
| [D] "We're investing in transformation — we'll catch up." | Test R&D % of revenue trend, not announcement. Investment funded by cuts elsewhere is not net new. |
| [D] "We have to focus on profitability — R&D can wait." | R&D cuts are the mechanism that makes product lag worse, which makes revenue shortfall worse. Self-amplifying. |
| [D] "We'll acquire the best competitor once we've stabilized." | Target's value is highest before the spiral; by "stabilized" the price may be unaffordable. |
| [D] "This is a pricing issue — we'll fix it with a promotion." | Promotions address demand curve position, not a moat. Accelerates revenue decline without fixing the product gap. |
| [D] "We'll focus on our core and let this new segment develop." | Cedes the emerging segment; entrant builds network effects they will use to re-enter your core. |
| → Add [O] entries here after each real use — paste the actual failure pattern | What went wrong and why |
Part of deciqAI Knowledge Skills — open-source thinking skills that make rigor executable for AI agents. Built by deciqAI · https://deciqai.com · Contributions welcome — see the template at the repo root.