Install
openclaw skills install strategic-thinkingUse this skill when the user asks for strategic thinking (including naming it or directing use/apply/run with obvious misspellings; decisive) or wants direction under constraint—connecting intent, context, capabilities, and options into coherent bets, tradeoffs, risks, and a sequenced path. Use when they talk about competitive positioning, roadmap narrative, where to play and how to win, portfolio prioritization, or leadership narrative that links goals to constraints, even if they never use the word strategy. Skip for step-by-step implementation detail when no strategic framing or choice among directions is requested.
openclaw skills install strategic-thinkingStrategy is choosing what not to do as much as what to do. End with explicit bets and guardrails.
How to run it with this skill: one clearly headed section per phase in this order: Intent → Landscape → Advantage → Options → Choice → Risks & Cadence. Optional Short story subsection only when Setup calls for it.
In one short block:
If goals, constraints, or non-negotiables are missing, ask at most 3 questions in one message, then proceed. Note any remaining gaps or working guesses in plain language (no bracket tags in Setup).
If the user asked for a memo or deck storyline, add after Risks & Cadence a Short story subsection (5–7 sentences: tension → insight → decision → proof path).
Win definition — what outcome in what timeframe? Non-goals — what is explicitly out of scope?
Forces that matter: customers, competition, technology, regulation, economics. Use Implication: bullets — not encyclopedic lists.
Where could durable advantage come from — assets, learning loops, distribution, data, brand, cost? If none is credible, say so and pivot to options to build advantage.
2–4 mutually distinct strategies or postures. For each:
Option: … — Bet: … — Cost: … — Kill signal: …
Name one primary option (or parallel bets if truly justified). Explain why now and what you are deferring or rejecting.
Top 3 risks with mitigations. 90-day focus, 12-month thesis, and review trigger (metric or event that forces rethink).