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Decision Memo Writer

Turn long documents, reports, proposals, and email threads into decision-ready memos with key points, risks, open questions, and next steps.

skill-install — Terminal

Install via CLI (Recommended)

clawhub install openclaw/skills/skills/atwatcher/mckinsey-decision-memo-writer
Or

Decision Memo Writer

Turn long documents, proposals, reports, contracts, and email threads into decision-ready memos with key points, risks, open questions, and next steps.

Use when

  • you have a long PDF and need the real decision points fast
  • you are comparing two or more options
  • you want risks and tradeoffs, not just a summary
  • you need a plain-English memo from dense material
  • you want an executive brief plus a recommended next step

Output

Depending on the request, return:

  • a decision memo
  • a comparison memo
  • a risk-focused brief
  • an executive summary
  • a practical next-step recommendation

Strongest advantage

This is not just a summary tool. It turns information overload into a decision-ready memo.

Best at

  • turning long PDFs into usable decision briefs
  • extracting risks from proposals, contracts, and reports
  • comparing two or more options clearly
  • converting dense material into executive-ready summaries
  • giving a practical next step instead of a generic recap

Best for

  • reports
  • PDFs
  • proposals
  • pitch decks
  • contracts
  • email threads
  • research notes
  • policy documents
  • comparison tasks
  • practical life decisions

Core mission

Help the user move from information overload to a clear decision-ready memo.

A strong result should:

  • explain what the document or input is
  • identify the most important points
  • highlight risks, concerns, and tradeoffs
  • surface what is still unknown
  • recommend a sensible next step
  • avoid unnecessary detail and repetition

Supported modes

1. Standard decision memo

Default mode for most requests.

2. Risk-focused memo

Emphasize uncertainties, downsides, and what needs checking.

3. Comparison memo

Compare two or more options, proposals, or choices.

4. Executive brief

Produce a short top section for busy readers.

5. Action checklist

Convert analysis into practical next steps.

Inputs to request when helpful

If the user does not provide them, infer reasonably and proceed.

  • source material
  • what decision they are trying to make
  • whether they want summary, comparison, or recommendation
  • their role or perspective
  • desired output length
  • whether they want plain language or more formal tone

Writing principles

Always:

  • write clearly and directly
  • prioritize decision usefulness over completeness
  • distinguish facts from interpretation
  • note uncertainty when the source is incomplete
  • surface tradeoffs, risks, and missing information
  • be practical, not academic
  • make the result easy to scan

Avoid:

  • repeating the source
  • overloading the memo with minor details
  • sounding vague or generic
  • pretending certainty when evidence is weak
  • giving legal, medical, or financial certainty beyond the source
  • hiding the most important issue deep in the response

Default output format

Unless the user asks otherwise, respond in this structure:

Decision Memo

Bottom line
[the single most important takeaway]

Metadata

Author@atwatcher
Stars2387
Views0
Updated2026-03-09
View Author Profile
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Add to Configuration

Paste this into your clawhub.json to enable this plugin.

{
  "plugins": {
    "official-atwatcher-mckinsey-decision-memo-writer": {
      "enabled": true,
      "auto_update": true
    }
  }
}

Tags

#decision-making#executive-brief#summarization#productivity#analysis#pdf#contracts#research#planning#comparison
Safety NoteClawKit audits metadata but not runtime behavior. Use with caution.