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From skills-for-humanity
Runs weighted multi-criteria analysis to clarify trade-offs and score options against explicit criteria. Useful for comparing several alternatives systematically.
npx claudepluginhub human-avatar/skills-for-humanityHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/skills-for-humanity:s4h-decision-criteria-weightingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Intuitive decisions fail when too many criteria are in play and their relative importance
Use weighted criteria matrices to systematically compare options and make defensible technical decisions. Use when evaluating competing approaches or vendors.
Compares alternatives against weighted criteria for transparent decisions on vendors, tools, or strategies. Covers weighting methods, scoring, sensitivity analysis, and group facilitation.
Routes decision-making requests to the appropriate structured thinking tool: option-mapping, criteria-weighting, premortem-analysis, or reversibility-analysis.
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Intuitive decisions fail when too many criteria are in play and their relative importance isn't made explicit. This skill forces that explicitness. The goal is not to replace judgment — it is to make the judgment visible enough to inspect, challenge, and defend.
Step 1: State the Decision and List Real Options Name the decision. List the actual options being considered — not aspirational ones. If an option isn't genuinely available, remove it before it contaminates the analysis.
Framing check: Confirm the decision and its intended outcome before continuing. State what you've identified — the specific decision being made and the options on the table — in one sentence, then use AskUserQuestion:
Step 2: Identify 4-8 Criteria Name the criteria that define a good outcome for this specific decision. Criteria should be independent (not measuring the same thing twice), observable (you can score against them), and genuinely relevant (removing one would change the analysis).
Before narrowing: Show the complete generated set of candidate criteria to the user first. Use AskUserQuestion:
Step 3: Weight the Criteria Distribute exactly 100 points across the criteria. This forces trade-offs — you cannot weight everything highly. If everything matters equally, the distribution reveals a failure to think through what actually matters most.
Step 4: Score Each Option Score each option on each criterion from 1 to 5. Do this before calculating totals — the sequence matters. Scoring after you see where things are headed is reverse-engineering to confirm a preference, which defeats the exercise.
Step 5: Calculate Weighted Scores Weighted score = sum of (weight × score) for each criterion. Calculate for all options.
Step 6: Sense-Check If the math agrees with your intuition, good. If it disagrees, investigate: is the intuition catching something the criteria missed, or is the intuition rationalising a preference? Either is possible. Don't dismiss either.
Before proceeding, use the AskUserQuestion tool. State your interpretation of the situation in 1–2 sentences — what is being analyzed and what the core question is — then ask:
Proceed based on their selection. If the user reframes, incorporate the correction before running any analysis.
Decision: [Statement]
Criteria and weights:
| Criterion | Weight (total = 100) |
|---|---|
Scored matrix:
| Option | [Criterion 1] (×W) | [Criterion 2] (×W) | ... | Weighted Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Sense-check:
[Does the result match intuition? If not — what is the intuition picking up that the matrix doesn't capture, or what is the intuition getting wrong?]
Recommendation:
[Option name] — [one sentence rationale]
The value of this exercise is in the weighting step, not the scoring. Most decision disagreements are disagreements about what matters, not about how options perform. Making weights explicit moves the conversation to the right place.
After delivering this output, use AskUserQuestion to offer the next move:
/s4h-decision-premortem-analysis — Stress-test the winning option before committing/s4h-decision-reversibility-analysis — Assess how reversible the top option is/s4h-ethics-check — Check whether the top option is ethically sound