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14 Comments

Seeking 1 stalled async decision

Seeking one person to partner with for a quick decision audit.

When a decision reopens repeatedly, it’s rarely “misalignment.”
It’s usually missing structure:

  • ownership (unclear decision rights)
  • expiry (no deadline pressure)
  • threshold (no definition of done)

I’ll map the structure in ~20 minutes and send:

  • the decision map
  • one outbound message rewrite to move it forward

Async Decision Audit — 20 min — $39
Share the decision and the stakeholders involved. Keep it high-level.

posted to Icon for group Looking to Partner Up
Looking to Partner Up
on March 16, 2026
  1. 2

    Interesting offer. A lot of stalled decisions are not really people problems, they’re structure problems, so the framing here is strong. Ownership, expiry, and threshold is a simple but useful lens. Feels like the kind of focused service that could be surprisingly valuable.

  2. 2

    Clean offer — $39 for 20 minutes of structured thinking.

    Most decisions stall because no one owns them, no one put a deadline, and 'done' isn't defined. You're solving all three.

    Quick questions:

    1. What's your success rate on moving stalled decisions forward?
    2. Do you work with solo founders or only teams?
    3. Any examples of decisions you've unblocked?

    I work with B2B founders on growth and lead gen — stalled decisions are a silent killer in partnerships.

    Might take you up on this myself.

    1. 1

      Good questions.

      No fixed “success rate” — the goal isn’t persuasion, it’s to make the decision structurally move.

      Works for both solo founders and small teams. The pattern is the same when a decision keeps reopening.

      Recent examples are mostly around pricing, scope, and hiring decisions that stalled due to unclear ownership or no real deadline.

      If you want, try the preview first (20 questions).
      Then send 3–5 lines — I’ll take a quick look.

      1. 2

        Clear offer — preview first, pay later. That builds trust.

        I like the 'goal isn't persuasion, it's to make the decision structurally move.' That's the right framing. Most stalled decisions aren't about convincing someone — they're about unclear ownership, no deadline, or no definition of 'done'.

        Quick question: what's the most common pattern you see in stalled decisions across different industries?

        I might take you up on the preview

        1. 1

          Across industries, it usually collapses to one pattern:

          someone is expected to move the decision forward,
          but no one is explicitly responsible for closing it.

          That’s when discussions keep looping without real progress.

          If you want, run the preview first — it’ll make this visible pretty quickly.

          1. 2

            That's a simple but powerful diagnosis.

            'Someone is expected to move the decision forward, but no one is explicitly responsible for closing it.'

            This happens constantly in partnerships, sales cycles, and even internal team decisions. Everyone assumes someone else is handling it.

            I'll take you up on the preview. Here's a decision I'm working on:

            — I'm in discussions with a potential client for a lead generation partnership. We've agreed on terms, but the final agreement hasn't been signed.

            — The stakeholders: Me and the client. No third parties.

            — What's unclear: He's responsive but not closing. Probably busy, but I'm not sure if there's another blocker.

            Would love to see what the preview reveals.

            What do you need from me to start?

            1. 1

              This helps, thanks for laying it out.

              Let’s keep it simple and move this to email so it’s easier to structure.

              Send it here: [email protected]

              Just include:

              1. The decision that needs to be closed
              2. What “done” looks like (one line)
              3. What’s currently blocking it

              Short is enough. I’ll map it and send the preview.

              1. 2

                Perfect — I'll send it over shortly.

                Here's what I'll include:

                — The decision: Closing a lead generation partnership agreement with a potential client. Terms are agreed, but final signature is pending.

                — What 'done' looks like: Signed agreement and first outreach started.

                — What's blocking it: Client is responsive but not closing. Probably busy, but unclear if there's another blocker.

                I'll email you now. Thanks for the help!

                1. 1

                  Nice, this is clear.

                  Send it over and I’ll take a look. I’ll map it out and get the preview back to you.

                  1. 2

                    Perfect — sending it over now.

                    Check your email. Looking forward to seeing what the preview reveals.

                    Thanks again for the help

  3. 2

    Strong framing. One tiny add that helped my team: define a reversal condition before shipping the decision message.

    Format we use:

    • Owner: one name
    • Deadline: exact date/time
    • Success threshold: what outcome closes the loop
    • Reversal trigger: the single metric/event that re-opens it

    That last line kills most “re-open by opinion” cycles.

    1. 1

      That’s a sharp add.

      The reversal trigger is usually where loops quietly reopen,
      so defining it upfront makes a big difference.

      Your format is clean. Especially tying it to a single metric.

  4. 1

    Interesting async decision-making can be tricky to get right.
    If you’re working on a product around this, I help founders test apps and identify UX friction, bugs, and improvement areas early.
    Happy to take a look if you’re open!

  5. 1

    Quick heads-up.

    If a decision keeps reopening, it usually points to unclear ownership or no clear deadline.

    If helpful, I can tighten one outbound message so the owner and boundary are explicit.

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