From executive-mentor
Guides tough business decisions (layoffs, pivots, shutdowns) via reversibility test, 10/10/10 framework, Andy Grove test, and stakeholder mapping.
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**Command:** `/em:hard-call <decision>`
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Command: /em:hard-call <decision>
For the decisions that keep you up at 3am. Firing a co-founder. Laying off 20% of the team. Killing a product that customers love. Pivoting. Shutting down.
These decisions don't have a right answer. They have a less wrong answer. This framework helps you find it.
Not because the data is unclear. Often, the data is clear. They're hard because:
The longer you avoid a hard call, the worse the situation usually gets. The company that needed a 10% cut 6 months ago now needs a 25% cut. The co-founder conversation that should have happened at month 4 is happening at month 14.
Most hard decisions are late decisions.
The most important question first: can you undo this?
For irreversible decisions, the bar for certainty is higher. You must do more due diligence before acting. Not because you might be wrong — but because you can't take it back.
If you're treating a reversible decision like it's irreversible, you're avoiding it.
Ask three questions about each option:
The 10-minute feeling is usually the least reliable guide. The 10-year view usually clarifies what the right call actually is.
Most hard decisions look obvious at 10 years. The question is whether you can tolerate the 10-minute pain.
Andy Grove's test for strategic decisions: "If we got replaced tomorrow and a new CEO came in, what would they do?"
A fresh set of eyes, no emotional investment in the current path, no sunk cost. What's the obvious right call from the outside?
If the answer is clear to an outsider, the question becomes: why haven't you done it yet?
For each option, map who's affected and how:
| Stakeholder | Option A Impact | Option B Impact | Their reaction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Affected employees | |||
| Remaining team | |||
| Customers | |||
| Investors | |||
| You |
This isn't about finding the option that hurts nobody — there isn't one. It's about understanding the full picture before you decide.
Before making the decision: write the announcement. The email to the team, the message to the customer, the conversation you'll have.
If you can't write that announcement, you're not ready to make the decision.
Writing it forces you to confront the reality of what you're doing. It also surfaces whether your reasoning holds under examination. "We're making this change because…" — does that sentence ring true?
Hard decisions almost always get harder if communication is bad. The decision itself is not the only thing that matters — how it's done matters enormously.
For every hard call, plan:
references/hard_things.md)See references/hard_things.md — Co-Founder Conflicts for full framework.
Key questions to answer first:
The rule: If you've been thinking about this for more than 3 months, you already know the answer. The question is when, not whether.
Key questions:
The rule: Cut once, cut deep, cut with dignity. Uncertainty is worse than clarity.
Key questions:
The rule: Pivots should be pulled by evidence of new opportunity, not pushed by failure of the current path.
Key questions:
You know you've been avoiding a hard call if:
The cost of delay is almost always higher than the cost of the decision.
Every month you wait, the problem compounds. The co-founder who's not working out becomes more entrenched. The product line that needs to die consumes more resources. The person who needs to be let go affects the people around them.
Make the call. Make it clearly. Make it with dignity.