curiosity-loop-decision-making
npx skills add https://github.com/samarv/shanon --skill curiosity-loop-decision-making
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Skill 文档
A Curiosity Loop is a lightweight, structured process for de-risking decisions by soliciting targeted input from a curated group of peers. Unlike generic “advice-seeking,” which often results in non-contextual or biased suggestions, this framework forces specificity and reveals “surprises” you might have missed.
The Process
1. Formulate a Specific Question
A good question must be specific, solicit rationale, and remain unbiased. Avoid “garbage in, garbage out” by giving respondents a concrete anchor.
- Bad Question: “What should I do with my career next?” (Too vague, high cognitive load for the recipient).
- Good Question: “I am a marketer considering a web-dev bootcamp to pivot into engineering. Given my background and the current hiring market for junior devs, do you think this is a viable path? Why or why not?”
2. Curate the Loop
Select 5â10 people to ensure you receive at least 3â5 high-quality responses. Balance your list across two dimensions:
- Subject Matter Experts: People who understand the industry, role, or technical domain.
- Personal Experts: People who know your strengths, values, and tendencies and can provide insight into “fit.”
3. Design for Low Friction
Present your options in a way that allows a busy person to respond in under 5 minutes (e.g., while sitting on their couch).
- Use a “Top X of Y” format: Provide a list of options and ask them to pick 2 or 3.
- Ask for “The Why”: The rationale is more valuable than the choice itself.
4. Close the Loop
- Process the data: Look for outliers, strong disagreements, or surprises. Do not treat the majority vote as a directive; treat it as a data point for your “inner scorecard.”
- Send a “Thank You” with impact: Tell the participants how their specific input changed your decision. This transforms a “favor” into a meaningful interaction.
Outreach Template
Use this structure for an email or DM to your “Personal Board of Directors.”
Subject: Quick input on [Topic/Decision]
Hi [Name],
Iâm currently weighing a few options regarding [Topic] and Iâm running a “Curiosity Loop” to get some outside perspective. Iâm reaching out to you specifically because [Reason: e.g., I trust your truthful advice / You have deep context on X].
The Context: I am deciding between [Option A] and [Option B].
The Ask: Could you take 2 minutes to look at this list of 5 possible directions and tell me which two resonate most with you and why?
[List of Options]
No need for a long replyâjust a few bullet points is perfect. Thanks!
Examples
Example 1: Prioritizing Content/Product Topics
Context: You have 9 potential features to build or 9 topics for a presentation. Application: Email 10 peers. Ask: “Which 2 of these would you actually pay for/attend, and what is one you think I should stay far away from?” Output: You discover that a topic you thought was “safe” is actually considered “boring” by experts, and a niche topic has high emotional resonance.
Example 2: Major Life/Career Impasse
Context: Deciding when a child should inherit an estate or when to quit a stable job for a startup. Input: Ask 5 trusted mentors who have navigated this specific milestone. Application: Instead of asking “What did you do?”, ask “What is a factor I am likely missing regarding the [timing/financial/emotional] aspect of this?” Output: You identify a “blind spot”âsuch as the “peak of executive function” at age 30âthat shifts your decision criteria entirely.
Common Pitfalls
- Biasing the Sample: Starting with “Iâm leaning toward Option A, what do you think?” This triggers a “pleasing bias” where people simply agree with you.
- Over-Asking: Using this for small, daily decisions. Reserve Curiosity Loops for quarterly “big picture” moves or major debates where you feel genuinely stuck.
- Treating Input as a Vote: The goal is to “look around corners,” not to let a committee run your life. If 4 people say “Stay at your job” but your personal values demand “Adventure,” ignore the 4 people.
- Ignoring the “Non-Winning” Feedback: People often suggest staying away from controversial topics. Sometimes, the “stay away” feedback is the signal that you’ve found a topic worth exploring deeper.