From nickcrew-claude-ctx-plugin
Provides structured decision frameworks (pros/cons, weighted scoring, RICE, Eisenhower, pre-mortem) for complex choices like career moves, product prioritization, or vendor selection.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/nickcrew-claude-ctx-plugin:decision-makerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
This skill applies proven decision-making frameworks—pros/cons analysis, weighted scoring matrices, RICE prioritization, the Eisenhower urgency-importance matrix, and pre-mortem analysis—to help you cut through ambiguity and make defensible, well-reasoned choices. By externalizing the decision into a structured format you reduce cognitive bias, surface hidden trade-offs, and create a record of ...
This skill applies proven decision-making frameworks—pros/cons analysis, weighted scoring matrices, RICE prioritization, the Eisenhower urgency-importance matrix, and pre-mortem analysis—to help you cut through ambiguity and make defensible, well-reasoned choices. By externalizing the decision into a structured format you reduce cognitive bias, surface hidden trade-offs, and create a record of your reasoning that can be revisited or shared with stakeholders.
| Framework | Best For | Output |
|---|---|---|
| Pros / Cons | Simple binary choices, fast gut-check | Two-column list |
| Weighted Scoring Matrix | Multi-option, multi-criteria trade-offs | Ranked score table |
| RICE | Feature or project prioritization | Priority-ranked backlog |
| Eisenhower Matrix | Task triage and time management | 4-quadrant urgency/importance grid |
| Pre-Mortem | Risk identification before committing | List of failure modes and mitigations |
Clarify the decision — State the decision in one clear sentence. Define what "success" looks like and the deadline by which you must decide.
Enumerate options — List every realistic option, including "do nothing" or "defer." Aim for at least two, no more than six manageable choices.
Choose a framework — Match the framework to the decision type: use Pros/Cons for simple binary choices; Weighted Scoring for multi-criteria comparisons; RICE for backlog prioritization; Eisenhower for task triage; Pre-Mortem for risk stress-testing.
Define criteria (Weighted Scoring) — Identify 3–7 criteria that matter most (e.g., cost, time-to-value, strategic fit, risk). Assign each a weight from 1–5 reflecting its relative importance.
Score each option — Rate every option against each criterion on a 1–10 scale. Multiply by weight. Sum the totals. Higher scores indicate better overall fit.
Apply RICE (if prioritizing work) — For each item calculate: Reach × Impact × Confidence ÷ Effort. Reach = users affected; Impact = 1–3 scale; Confidence = percentage (0–100); Effort = person-weeks.
Map urgency vs. importance (Eisenhower) — Plot tasks on a 2×2 grid: Do Now (urgent + important), Schedule (important, not urgent), Delegate (urgent, not important), Eliminate (neither).
Run a pre-mortem — Imagine it is 12 months from now and the chosen option has failed spectacularly. Brainstorm every plausible cause. Use this list to add mitigations or re-weight criteria.
Check for bias — Review the analysis for sunk-cost fallacy, status-quo bias, and confirmation bias. Ask: "Would I choose this if I were starting fresh?"
Document and decide — Write a one-paragraph decision summary: chosen option, top three reasons, top two risks and their mitigations, and a review date.
Input: "I have a stable senior engineer role at a Fortune 500 paying $160k. A Series B startup offered me a staff engineer role at $140k base + 0.4% equity. I have a mortgage and two kids. Help me decide."
Output:
Weighted Scoring Matrix
| Criteria | Weight | Fortune 500 (score) | Fortune 500 (weighted) | Startup (score) | Startup (weighted) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Financial security | 5 | 9 | 45 | 5 | 25 |
| Career growth | 4 | 5 | 20 | 9 | 36 |
| Compensation upside | 3 | 4 | 12 | 8 | 24 |
| Work-life balance | 4 | 7 | 28 | 5 | 20 |
| Mission alignment | 2 | 4 | 8 | 8 | 16 |
| Total | 113 | 121 |
Pre-Mortem (Startup): Startup runs out of runway (mitigate: verify 18+ months runway, ask for accelerated vesting cliff), role scope shrinks post-hire (mitigate: get title and scope in writing).
Recommendation: The startup scores marginally higher, but the margin is within noise given your dependence on financial stability. Negotiate: request a $150k base, 12-month cliff vesting, and written role definition before accepting. If negotiation fails, the stability of the Fortune 500 warrants staying.
Input: "We have 5 features to prioritize for Q3: (A) SSO login, (B) CSV export, (C) Mobile app, (D) Audit logs, (E) Bulk delete. We serve 2,000 enterprise users."
Output:
RICE Scores
| Feature | Reach | Impact | Confidence | Effort (wks) | RICE Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A – SSO Login | 1,800 | 3 | 90% | 3 | 1,620 |
| D – Audit Logs | 1,500 | 2 | 80% | 2 | 1,200 |
| B – CSV Export | 1,200 | 2 | 95% | 1 | 2,280 |
| E – Bulk Delete | 800 | 1 | 90% | 0.5 | 1,440 |
| C – Mobile App | 600 | 3 | 60% | 12 | 90 |
Recommended Priority: B → A → E → D → C. CSV Export delivers the highest RICE score at low effort. Mobile App scores last due to high effort and low confidence — defer to Q4 or a dedicated mobile initiative.
npx claudepluginhub nickcrew/claude-cortexPrioritizes lists of ideas, features, bugs, or initiatives using RICE framework (Reach × Impact × Confidence / Effort) with table ranking and recommendations. Use when deciding what to do first among options.
Scores and ranks backlog items using RICE, WSJF, ICE, MoSCoW, and Value-Effort frameworks. Use when prioritizing features, comparing initiatives, or justifying roadmap decisions.
References 9 prioritization frameworks (RICE, ICE, Kano, MoSCoW, Opportunity Score) with formulas, usage guides, and templates. Use for selecting, comparing, or learning prioritization methods.