Install
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/decision-memoWrite a crisp decision memo that drives a clear decision, not a discussion. Use when asked to write a decision memo, a recommendation memo, a one/six-pager for a decision, or to get leadership to decide something. Produces a decision memo — the decision & recommendation up front, the context, options with trade-offs, what you'd need to believe, risks, and the explicit ask with a deadline.
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/decision-memoA decision memo exists to get a decision made — fast, on the record, by the right person. The failure mode is a memo that reads like a discussion: lots of context, no recommendation, no ask. This skill front-loads the recommendation and the decision being requested, then supports it — so the reader can say yes, no, or "here's my concern" in five minutes.
Ask for these only if they aren't already provided:
To: [decider] · From: [you] · Date: [date] · Decision needed by: [date]
1. Recommendation (TL;DR) — the recommendation in 2–3 sentences, first. What you want them to approve, and the one-line why.
2. The decision — the question being decided, framed so the answer is a clear choice.
3. Context — the minimum background needed to evaluate it (link the rest). Why this is on the table now.
4. Options & trade-offs — a table; be fair to the options you're not recommending (a stacked deck reads as one):
| Option | Pros | Cons | Cost / effort |
|---|
5. Why this recommendation — the reasoning, and what you'd have to believe for it to be wrong (the assumptions it rests on).
6. Risks & mitigations — the real downsides and how you'd handle them. A reversible decision deserves less agonising than an irreversible one — say which it is.
7. The ask — exactly what you need from the reader: approve / pick an option / give input — by the deadline.
Narrative decision-memo practice (Amazon-style one/six-pagers; one-way vs. two-way door decisions).