Install
openclaw skills install @deciqai/maslow-hierarchyActivate when: "why isn't the bonus motivating them," "already paid well but disengaged," "what need does this product really serve," "team is in survival mode," "they need to feel safe before caring about the mission," or diagnosing why a standard incentive is failing. Do NOT activate when: formal motivational science is required (use SDT); cross-cultural nuance makes the five-level hierarchy unreliable; precise empirical rank-ordering of needs is load-bearing.
openclaw skills install @deciqai/maslow-hierarchyMaslow's Hierarchy proposes needs organize into levels of prepotency — lower needs must be at least partially met before higher needs become motivationally dominant. Five levels: physiological → safety → love/belonging → esteem → self-actualization. The empirically supported insight is deficiency-dominance: severely unmet lower needs crowd out higher-level motivation. The strict sequential hierarchy is empirically weak (Wahba & Bridwell 1976; Tay & Diener 2011) — use as a diagnostic heuristic, not a strict theory. Supplement with Self-Determination Theory for high-stakes design.
Composes with jobs-to-be-done · okr-goal-setting · founder-mindset · principal-agent · pmf-crossing-the-chasm.
Not when: formal motivational science is required; cross-cultural application is non-trivial; SDT fits better.
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 — State the situation: who is being motivated, desired behavior, current incentive, observed response.
Step 2 — Map need-state: for each level (physiological / safety / belonging / esteem / self-actualization) mark substantially met / partially met / unmet.
Step 3 — Identify incentive level: cash bonus → esteem+safety; title → esteem; growth opportunity → self-actualization; team-building → belonging; job security guarantee → safety; perks → physiological.
Step 4 — Diagnose mismatch: incentive targeting a level higher than the unmet need = mismatch (address basics first); incentive too low = mismatch (add higher engagement).
Step 5 — Choose intervention: address unmet lower-level need first (compensation/predictability for safety; relationships/inclusion for belonging), then match higher-level incentives to operative need (recognition/mastery for esteem; autonomy/growth for self-actualization).
Step 6 — Verify by direct conversation: ask the person what they want, compare to framework prediction, update intervention if data contradicts the model, schedule re-check.
Needs Diagnosis: <who> | Situation: desired behavior / current incentive / observed response | Need-state: Physiological / Safety / Belonging / Esteem / Self-actualization — each met/partial/unmet | Incentive target level | Mismatch Y/N + direction | Intervention: lower-level fix + higher-level match + owner + verification date
→ Method in Action: Maslow 1943 and the Subsequent Refinements
| Situation | Likely operative need | Common mismatch |
|---|---|---|
| Employee not engaging with stretch goal | Safety or Esteem | Stretch goal targets self-actualization without basics |
| Customer not buying despite product fit | Need lower than product level | Marketing targets higher-level than buyer's operative need |
| Team in crisis after layoffs | Safety dominates | Leadership pushes new initiatives instead of stability |
| Top performer leaving despite high pay | Esteem or self-actualization | Pay-only retention without higher-level engagement |
→ Primary sources: references/sources.md
[D] = designed upfront | [O] = observed in real use. [O] entries are more valuable.
| Fake move | Reality |
|---|---|
| [D] "Money should motivate them — we pay well" | Money addresses safety. If safety is met, more money has marginal effect. Unmet need is usually higher-level. |
| [D] "They have what they need" | Outside-observer needs assessment is unreliable. Ask. The person's perception is the operative reality. |
| [D] "The hierarchy is rigid — basics must come first" | Not rigid. People in difficult circumstances often pursue meaning and community simultaneously. |
| [D] "Self-actualization is for the privileged" | Empirically false. People at every income level pursue meaning and growth. |
| [D] "Maslow has been disproven" | The strict hierarchy has been refined — deficiency-dominance and multi-level needs remain useful. |
| [D] "I know what motivates my team" | Self-perception of others' motivation is systematically biased. Direct data outranks model inference. |
| [D] "Money + meaning = full motivation" | Belonging and esteem are also operative. Money + meaning without recognition or community is incomplete. |
| → 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.