Install
openclaw skills install decision-risk-registerBuild a lightweight risk register for a chosen or leading option with risk statements, likelihood, impact, warning indicators, mitigations, contingencies, owners, and review dates.
openclaw skills install decision-risk-registerDecision Risk Register helps a user prepare for a medium-stakes decision by listing what could go wrong, how likely and severe each risk is, what early warning signs to watch, and what mitigation or contingency plan is realistic. It focuses on monitoring the chosen or leading option, not scoring multiple options or forcing a final decision.
This is a structured thinking tool. It does not make high-stakes legal, medical, financial, employment, safety, or specialized professional decisions for the user. When consequences are severe or technical, it should recommend appropriate expert input.
Use this skill when the user asks about:
Trigger phrases: "decision risk register template", "What are the risks of this decision", "Help me make a risk register", "What could go wrong if I do this", "How do I mitigate this plan"
Copy and paste one of these prompts to get started:
Vendor or project decision: "I am leaning toward hiring a freelance developer for a 3-month project at $15k. Before I commit, can you help me build a risk register — what could go wrong, how likely and severe, what warning signs to watch, and what mitigations or contingencies I should plan?"
Personal or household decision: "We're considering moving to a new city for a job offer. Help me create a risk register for this decision: what could go wrong with the move, the job, housing, family adjustment, and finances. Give me warning indicators and contingency plans."
Event or launch planning: "I'm organizing a community event for 200 people in two months. Build a risk register covering weather, vendor no-shows, budget overruns, low attendance, and safety concerns. Include early warning signs and mitigation actions."
Produce a decision risk register containing:
Ask for the decision, leading option, planned action, deadline, context, constraints, and what success would look like. If the user has not chosen an option, focus on the leading option or ask them to name the option they want to risk-check.
Prompt for obvious risks, hidden risks, dependency risks, people risks, cost risks, time risks, quality risks, reputation risks, safety risks, compliance risks, and opportunity-cost risks. Keep the categories relevant to the user's context.
Rewrite vague worries into specific statements using: "If [event or condition] happens, then [impact] occurs." Separate causes, events, and impacts where possible.
Rate each risk with simple labels such as low, medium, or high for probability, impact, detectability, and urgency. Explain that the scores are judgment aids, not precise predictions.
For each important risk, identify early warning signs, trigger metrics, deadlines, conversations, missing evidence, or external signals that would show the risk is increasing.
Separate actions to reduce risk before commitment from actions to take if the risk occurs. Keep mitigations realistic, owned, and time-bound.
Assign an owner or reviewer for each risk, even if the owner is the user. Add review dates or checkpoints tied to the decision timeline.
End with a concise confidence note: go, go with mitigations, review-first, delay, or no-go. Do not force a decision; explain the main uncertainty and what evidence would improve confidence.
Use this structure: