
Define the decision and time horizon first
Before you open a checklist, name the decision (new buy, add, hold, trim, sell) and the horizon you are underwriting. Many “mistakes” are really misma...
Investment decision frameworks are repeatable rules for deciding what to do next—buy, add, hold, trim, or sell—when new information arrives. Instead of reacting to price moves or headlines, you define a thesis, pre-write what would change your mind, stress-test downside scenarios, and schedule reviews. Start small: one-sentence thesis, 3–5 assumptions, one invalidation trigger, and a review cadence. If you cannot write the trigger, treat that as a no-action signal until you can do it clearly.

Pick the smallest next action now: test your bias pattern, run a scenario, or copy a prompt before making a portfolio move.

Before you open a checklist, name the decision (new buy, add, hold, trim, sell) and the horizon you are underwriting. Many “mistakes” are really misma...

A framework only works when it can tell you “stop.” Keep a one-sentence thesis, 3–5 key assumptions, and a specific invalidation trigger tied to busin...

Use base/bull/bear scenarios to map how the thesis breaks: demand shock, margin compression, funding risk, or competitive loss. Size from downside tol...
Before you open a checklist, name the decision (new buy, add, hold, trim, sell) and the horizon you are underwriting. Many “mistakes” are really mismatches: using long-term logic to justify a short-term trade, or using short-term noise to override a long-term thesis.
A framework only works when it can tell you “stop.” Keep a one-sentence thesis, 3–5 key assumptions, and a specific invalidation trigger tied to business fundamentals (not a price percentage). If you cannot describe what would change your mind, you do not have a decision system—only a story.
Use base/bull/bear scenarios to map how the thesis breaks: demand shock, margin compression, funding risk, or competitive loss. Size from downside tolerance first, then only scale when evidence improves. Scenario thinking is how frameworks prevent “small losses” from turning into process failures.
Use different rules for thesis changes versus valuation changes. Thesis actions depend on facts that break assumptions; valuation actions depend on your pre-defined valuation band and risk budget. Mixing them causes inconsistent behavior: selling a durable business for a scary headline or holding a broken thesis because it looks “cheap.”
A decision framework is incomplete without review rules. Set a cadence (monthly, quarterly, and event-driven) and record what you checked, what changed, and what stayed the same. The goal is not perfect predictions—it is fewer unforced errors and faster recognition when your thesis is drifting.

Any investor who wants consistency under pressure. Frameworks are most valuable when you feel urgency—earnings, drawdowns, macro shocks—because they force you to follow the same inputs every time: thesis, assumptions, triggers, valuation band, and risk budget.
A simple five-part loop: (1) one-sentence thesis, (2) key assumptions, (3) invalidation trigger, (4) valuation band or “pay/avoid” rule, and (5) review cadence. If you can run this loop consistently, you can add more detail later without losing clarity.
Keep it short and decision-linked. Every line should connect to a decision you will actually make: “If X happens, I do Y.” If an item does not change behavior, remove it. The goal is fewer impulsive actions and better post-trade learning, not longer notes.
Backfilling. If you write the framework after you already acted (or after the price moved), it becomes a justification tool. A real framework is written before action and includes disconfirming evidence and triggers that can say “do nothing.”
They can share the same structure, but the triggers and cadence differ. Long-term frameworks emphasize business fundamentals and durable competitive position; short-term trading frameworks emphasize liquidity, catalysts, and risk controls. Mixing horizons is how investors get whipsawed.
Start with scenario-based practice, then map your thesis to one principle before opening any new position.