Install
openclaw skills install decision-clarity-skillImprove decision quality by clarifying the real problem, exposing hidden assumptions, reasoning from fundamental facts, reducing unnecessary complexity, and ending with a cleaner recommendation or next step. Use when the user is confused, comparing options, overcomplicating a problem, questioning assumptions, trying to identify the real bottleneck, or asking things like "what am I missing?", "does this really have to be this way?", "what should I remove?", "what is the simplest explanation that still fits?", or "help me think this through".
openclaw skills install decision-clarity-skillUse this skill to turn ambiguous, high-value, complexity-prone problems into clearer decisions.
This skill combines three reasoning modes in a practical sequence:
Do not use this skill to sound philosophical. Use it to improve judgment.
Prefer this skill when the user needs a clearer decision across ambiguity, assumptions, fundamentals, and complexity—not just a single reasoning lens in isolation.
Produce answers that:
A strong answer should make the user feel:
Default to clarity before confidence.
Ask:
This skill is especially useful for:
Do not use this skill for:
Route to the smallest useful workflow.
Workflows/Clarify.mdWorkflows/Deconstruct.mdWorkflows/Simplify.mdWorkflows/Decide.mdFor non-trivial problems, use the full sequence:
For simpler problems, compress the sequence but preserve the logic.
Choose the lightest response mode that still improves the decision.
Use for short questions such as:
Output:
Use for startup, product, content, operations, and strategic decisions.
Output:
Use when the user presents an argument, thesis, or decision path that may be weak, confused, or overbuilt.
Output:
Do not force a long analysis when a shorter one is enough.
Do not solve the wrong problem well.
Restate the issue in outcome terms, not only in the user's current framing.
Examples:
If the question is framed at the wrong level, say so and correct it.
Look for assumptions in:
Useful prompts to yourself:
Break the problem into:
Prefer mechanism over narrative.
Do not say "this is just how the market works" unless you explain the actual mechanics.
Treat these as real unless evidence suggests otherwise:
Treat these as challengeable by default:
Never present a soft constraint as immutable without justification.
When comparing explanations or options, prefer the one that:
Do not simplify by deleting reality. Simplicity must remain sufficient.
Always end with one of:
Do not end with abstract reflection alone.
Do not stall. Instead:
Read only the relevant references when useful:
references/business.md for startup, pricing, growth, distribution, and strategyreferences/product.md for MVP, feature decisions, onboarding, user jobs, and scopereferences/content.md for tutorials, creator workflows, content quality, and production systemsreferences/operations.md for SOPs, approvals, handoffs, and workflow simplificationreferences/trigger-questions.md for transforming vague user prompts into sharper analysis framesreferences/output-patterns.md for stable response structurereferences/examples.md for concrete high-value examplesreferences/anti-patterns.md whenever the reasoning risks becoming overly abstract, endlessly inquisitive, falsely simple, or non-actionableA strong answer produced with this skill should:
If the answer sounds clever but does not improve the user's decision quality, it is not good enough.