--- name: create-v2mom description: Create a V2MOM (Vision, Values, Methods, Obstacles, Metrics) strategic framework for any project, goal, or domain — personal infrastructure, business strategy, health goals, financial planning, software development, career planning, or life goals. Walks the user through the five sections in order: Vision first (aspirational picture of success), then Values (2-4 principles that guide decisions), Methods (4-7 prioritized approaches with concrete actions), Obstacles (honest personal and external challenges), and Metrics (measurable outcomes, not vanity metrics). Includes an optional task-migration phase that consolidates an existing todo list under the defined Methods. Use when the user asks to create a V2MOM, build a strategic plan, set goals for a significant project, or apply ruthless prioritization without an existing framework. Do NOT use for simple todo lists, single-decision prompts (use /arch-decide), quick task brainstorming (use /brainstorm), or daily/weekly planning of routine tasks. Produces a document that becomes the project's decision-making source of truth. --- # /create-v2mom — Create a V2MOM Strategic Framework Transform vague intentions into a concrete action plan using V2MOM: Vision, Values, Methods, Obstacles, Metrics. Originated at Salesforce; works for any domain. ## Problem Solved Without a strategic framework, projects suffer from: - **Unclear direction** — "get healthier" / "improve my finances" is too vague to act on; every idea feels equally important; no principled way to say "no." - **Priority inflation** — everything feels urgent; research/planning without execution; active todo list grows beyond manageability. - **No decision framework** — debates about A vs B waste time; second-guessing after decisions; perfectionism masquerading as thoroughness. - **Unmeasurable progress** — can't tell if work is actually making things better; no objective "done" signal; vanity metrics only. ## When to Use - Starting a significant project (new business, new habit, new system) - Existing project has accumulated many competing priorities without clear focus - You find yourself constantly context-switching between ideas - Someone asks "what are you trying to accomplish?" and the answer is vague - Annual or quarterly planning for ongoing projects or life goals Particularly valuable for: personal infrastructure (tooling, systems, workflows), health and fitness, financial planning, software package development, business strategy, career development. ## Exit Criteria The V2MOM is complete when: 1. **All 5 sections have concrete content:** - Vision: Clear, aspirational picture of success - Values: 2-4 principles that guide decisions - Methods: 4-7 concrete approaches with specific actions - Obstacles: Honest personal/technical challenges - Metrics: Measurable outcomes (not vanity metrics) 2. **It's useful for decision-making:** can answer "does X fit this V2MOM?" quickly; provides priority clarity (Method 1 > Method 2 > etc.); identifies what NOT to do. 3. **Both parties agree it's ready:** feels complete not rushed; actionable enough to start execution; honest about obstacles (not sugar-coated). **Validation questions:** - Can you articulate the vision in one sentence? - Do the values help you say "no" to things? - Are methods ordered by priority? - Can you immediately identify 3-5 tasks from Method 1? - Do metrics tell you if you're succeeding? ## Instructions Complete phases in order. Vision informs Values. Values inform Methods. Methods reveal Obstacles. Everything together defines Metrics. ### Phase 1: Ensure shared understanding of the framework Confirm both parties understand what each section means: - **Vision:** What you want to achieve (aspirational, clear picture of success) - **Values:** Principles that guide decisions (2-4 values, defined concretely) - **Methods:** How you'll achieve the vision (4-7 approaches, ordered by priority) - **Obstacles:** What's in your way (honest, personal, specific) - **Metrics:** How you'll measure success (objective, not vanity metrics) ### Phase 2: Create the document structure 1. Create file: `docs/[project-name]-v2mom.org` or appropriate location. 2. Add metadata: `#+TITLE`, `#+AUTHOR`, `#+DATE`, `#+FILETAGS`. 3. Create section headings for all 5 components. 4. Add a "What is V2MOM?" overview section at top. Save incrementally after each section — V2MOM discussions can run long. ### Phase 3: Define the Vision **Ask:** "What do you want to achieve? What does success look like?" **Goal:** Clear, aspirational picture. 1-3 paragraphs describing the end state. **Your role:** - Help articulate what's described - Push for specificity ("works great" → what specifically works?) - Identify scope (what's included, what's explicitly out) - Capture concrete examples the user mentions **Good vision characteristics:** - Paints a picture you can visualize - Describes outcomes, not implementation - Aspirational but grounded in reality - Specific enough to know what's included **Examples across domains:** - Health: "Wake up with energy, complete a 5K without stopping, feel strong in daily activities, stable mood throughout the day." - Finance: "Six months emergency fund, debt-free except mortgage, automatic retirement savings, financial decisions that don't cause anxiety." - Software: "A package that integrates seamlessly, has comprehensive documentation, handles edge cases gracefully, that maintainers of other packages want to depend on." **Time estimate:** 15-30 minutes if mostly clear; 45-60 minutes if it needs exploration. ### Phase 4: Define the Values **Ask:** "What principles guide your decisions? When faced with A vs B, what values help you decide?" **Goal:** 2-4 values with concrete definitions and examples. **Your role:** - Suggest values based on vision discussion - Push for concrete definitions (not just the word, but what it MEANS) - Help distinguish between overlapping values - Identify when examples contradict stated values **Common pitfall:** Listing generic words without defining them. - Bad: "Quality, Speed, Innovation" - Good: "Sustainable means can maintain this for 10+ years without burning out. No crash diets, no 80-hour weeks, no technical debt I can't service." **For each value, capture:** 1. The value name (1-2 words) 2. Definition (what it means in context of this project) 3. Concrete examples (how it manifests) 4. What breaks this value (anti-patterns) **Method:** Start with 3-5 candidates. For each, ask "what does [value] mean to you in this context?" Discuss until the definition is concrete. Refine, merge, remove until 2-4 remain. **Examples:** - Health: "Sustainable: Can do this at 80 years old. No extreme diets. Focus on habits that compound over decades." - Finance: "Automatic: Set up once, runs forever. Don't rely on willpower for recurring decisions." - Software: "Boring: Use proven patterns. No clever code. Maintainable by intermediate developers. Boring is reliable." **Time estimate:** 30-45 minutes. ### Phase 5: Define the Methods **Ask:** "How will you achieve the vision? What approaches will you take?" **Goal:** 4-7 methods (concrete approaches) ordered by priority. **Your role:** - Extract methods from vision and values discussion - Help order by priority (what must happen first?) - Ensure methods are actionable (not just categories) - Push for concrete actions under each method - Watch for method ordering that creates dependencies **Structure for each method:** 1. Method name (verb phrase: "Build X", "Eliminate Y", "Establish Z") 2. Aspirational description (1-2 sentences: why this matters) **Method ordering matters:** - Method 1 should be highest priority (blocking everything else) - Lower-numbered methods should enable higher-numbered ones - Common ordering patterns: - Fix → Stabilize → Build → Enhance → Sustain - Eliminate → Replace → Optimize → Automate → Maintain - Learn → Practice → Apply → Teach → Systematize **Examples:** Health: - Method 1: Eliminate Daily Energy Drains (fix sleep, reduce inflammatory foods, address deficiencies) - Method 2: Build Baseline Strength (3x/week resistance, progressive overload, compound movements) - Method 3: Establish Sustainable Nutrition (meal prep, protein targets, vegetable servings) Finance: - Method 1: Stop the Bleeding (eliminate wasteful subscriptions, high-interest debt, impulse purchases) - Method 2: Build the Safety Net (automate savings, reach $1000 fund, then 3 months expenses) - Method 3: Invest for the Future (max 401k match, open IRA, automatic contributions) Software Package: - Method 1: Nail the Core Use Case (solve one problem extremely well, clear docs, handle errors gracefully) - Method 2: Ensure Quality and Stability (comprehensive tests, CI/CD, semantic versioning) - Method 3: Build Community and Documentation (contribution guide, examples, responsive to issues) **Ordering is flexible until it isn't:** After defining all methods, you may realize the ordering is wrong. Swap them. The order represents priority — getting it right matters more than preserving the initial draft. **Time estimate:** 45-90 minutes (longest section). ### Phase 5.5: Brainstorm tasks for each method For each method, brainstorm what's missing to achieve it. **Ask:** "What else would help achieve this method's goal?" **Your role:** - Suggest additional tasks based on the method's aspirational description - Consider edge cases and error scenarios - Identify automation opportunities - Propose monitoring/visibility improvements - Challenge if the list feels incomplete (can't reach the goal) - Challenge if the list feels bloated (items don't contribute to the goal) - Create sub-tasks for items with multiple steps - Ensure priorities reflect contribution to the method's goal **For each brainstormed task:** - Describe what it does and why it matters - Assign priority based on contribution to the method - Add technical details if known - Get user agreement before adding **Priority system (org-mode):** - `[#A]` Critical blockers — must be done first, blocks everything else - `[#B]` High-impact reliability — directly enables the method goal - `[#C]` Quality improvements — valuable but not blocking - `[#D]` Nice-to-have — low priority, can defer **Time estimate:** 10-15 minutes per method (~50-75 min for 5 methods). ### Phase 6: Identify the Obstacles **Ask:** "What's in your way? What makes this hard?" **Goal:** Honest, specific obstacles — both personal and technical/external. **Your role:** - Encourage honesty (obstacles are reality, not failures) - Help distinguish symptoms from root causes - Identify patterns in behavior that create obstacles - Acknowledge challenges without judgment **Good obstacle characteristics:** - Honest about personal patterns - Specific, not generic - Acknowledges both internal and external obstacles - States real stakes (not just "might happen") **Common obstacle categories:** - Personal: perfectionism, hard to say no, gets bored, procrastinates - Knowledge: missing skills, unclear how to proceed, need to learn - External: limited time, limited budget, competing priorities - Systemic: environmental constraints, missing tools, dependencies on others **For each obstacle:** name it clearly, describe how it manifests in this project, acknowledge the stakes (what happens because of it). **Examples:** Health: - "I get excited about new workout programs and switch before seeing results (pattern: 6 weeks into a program)" - "Social events involve food and alcohol — saying no feels awkward and isolating" - "When stressed at work, I skip workouts and eat convenient junk food" Finance: - "Viewing budget as restriction rather than freedom — triggers rebellion spending" - "FOMO on lifestyle experiences my peers have" - "Limited financial literacy — don't understand investing beyond 'put money in account'" Software: - "Perfectionism delays releases — always 'one more feature' before v1.0" - "Maintaining documentation feels boring compared to writing features" - "Limited time (2-4 hours/week) and competing projects" **Time estimate:** 15-30 minutes. ### Phase 7: Define the Metrics **Ask:** "How will you measure success? What numbers tell you if this is working?" **Goal:** 5-10 metrics — objective, measurable, aligned with vision/values/methods. **Your role:** - Suggest metrics based on vision, values, methods - Push for measurable numbers (not "better" — concrete targets) - Identify vanity metrics (look good but don't measure real progress) - Ensure metrics align with values and methods **Metric categories:** - **Performance** — measurable outcomes of the work - **Discipline** — process adherence, consistency, focus - **Quality** — standards maintained, sustainability indicators **Good metric characteristics:** - Objective (not subjective opinion) - Measurable (can actually collect the data) - Actionable (can change behavior to improve it) - Aligned with values and methods **For each metric, capture:** name, current state (if known), target state, how to measure, measurement frequency. **Examples:** Health: - Resting heart rate: 70 bpm → 60 bpm (daily via fitness tracker) - Workout consistency: 3x/week strength training for 12 consecutive weeks - Sleep quality: 7+ hours per night 6+ nights per week (sleep tracker) - Energy rating: subjective 1-10 scale, target 7+ weekly average Finance: - Emergency fund: $0 → $6000 (monthly) - High-interest debt: $8000 → $0 (monthly) - Savings rate: 5% → 20% of gross income (monthly) - Financial anxiety: weekly check-in, target "comfortable with financial decisions" Software: - Test coverage: 0% → 80% (coverage tool) - Issue response time: median < 48 hours (GitHub stats) - Documentation completeness: all public APIs documented with examples - Adoption: 10+ GitHub stars, 3+ projects depending on it **Time estimate:** 20-30 minutes. ### Phase 8 (optional): Migrate existing tasks If there's an existing `TODO.org` or task list, migrate it under the V2MOM methods. **Goal:** Consolidate all project tasks under V2MOM methods, eliminate duplicates, move non-fitting items to someday-maybe. **Process:** 1. **Identify duplicates** — read existing TODO, find tasks already in V2MOM methods, check if V2MOM task has all technical details from the TODO version, enhance if needed, mark original for deletion. 2. **Map tasks to methods** — for each remaining task, ask "which method does this serve?" Add under appropriate method with priority. Preserve task state (DOING, VERIFY, etc.). 3. **Review someday-maybe candidates one-by-one** — for each task that doesn't fit methods, ask: keep in V2MOM (which method)? Move to someday-maybe? Delete? 4. **Final steps** — append someday-maybe items to `docs/someday-maybe.org`; copy completed V2MOM to TODO.org (overwriting). V2MOM becomes the single source of truth. **Keep in V2MOM:** DOING tasks (work in progress), VERIFY tasks (need testing/verification), tasks that enable method goals. **Move to someday-maybe:** Doesn't directly serve a method's goal; nice-to-have without clear benefit; research task without actionable outcome; architectural change decided not to pursue; unrelated personal task. **Delete entirely:** Obsolete tasks (feature removed, problem solved elsewhere); duplicate of something done; task that no longer makes sense. **Review one task at a time** — don't batch. Capture reasoning. **Time estimate:** Variable — small (~20 tasks) 30-45 min; medium (~50) 60-90 min; large (100+) 2-3 hours. This phase is optional — only needed if an existing todo list has substantial content. ### Phase 9: Review and refine Once all sections are complete, review the whole V2MOM together: 1. **Does the vision excite you?** (If not, why not? What's missing?) 2. **Do the values guide decisions?** (Can you use them to say no to things?) 3. **Are the methods ordered by priority?** (Is Method 1 truly most important?) 4. **Are the obstacles honest?** (Or are you sugar-coating?) 5. **Will the metrics tell you if you're succeeding?** (Or are they vanity metrics?) 6. **Does this V2MOM make you want to DO THE WORK?** (If not, something is wrong.) **Refinement:** merge overlapping methods; reorder methods if priorities are wrong; add missing concrete actions; strengthen weak definitions; remove fluff. **Red flags:** - Vision doesn't excite you → Need to dig deeper into what you really want - Values are generic → Need concrete definitions and examples - Methods have no concrete actions → Too vague, need specifics - Obstacles are all external → Need honesty about personal patterns - Metrics are subjective → Need objective measurements ### Phase 10: Commit and use 1. Save the document in its appropriate location. 2. Share with stakeholders (if applicable). 3. Use it immediately — start Method 1 execution or the first triage. 4. Schedule first review (1 week out): is this working? Use immediately to validate the V2MOM is practical, not theoretical. Execution reveals gaps that discussion misses. ## Principles ### Honesty over aspiration V2MOM requires brutal honesty, especially in Obstacles. - "I get bored after 6 weeks" (honest) vs "Maintaining focus is challenging" (bland) - "I have 3 hours per week max" (honest) vs "Time is limited" (vague) - "I impulse-spend when stressed" (honest) vs "Budget adherence needs work" (passive) **Honesty enables solutions.** If you can't name the obstacle, you can't overcome it. ### Concrete over abstract Every section should have concrete examples and definitions. **Bad:** Vision "be successful" · Values "Quality, Speed, Innovation" · Methods "improve things" · Metrics "do better" **Good:** Vision "Complete a 5K in under 30 min, have energy to play with kids after work, sleep 7+ hours consistently" · Values "Sustainable: can maintain for 10+ years, no crash diets, no injury-risking overtraining" · Methods "Method 1: Fix sleep quality (blackout curtains, consistent bedtime, no screens 1hr before bed)" · Metrics "5K time: current 38 min → target 29 min (measure: monthly timed run)" ### Priority ordering is strategic Method ordering determines what happens first. Get it wrong and you'll waste effort. Common patterns: - **Fix → Build → Enhance → Sustain** (eliminate problems before building) - **Eliminate → Replace → Optimize** (stop damage before improving) - **Learn → Practice → Apply → Teach** (build skill progressively) Method 1 must address the real blocker — if the foundation is broken, nothing built on it will hold; high-impact quick wins build momentum; must stop the bleeding before rehab. ### Methods need concrete actions If you can't list 3-8 concrete actions for a method, it's too vague. **Test:** Can you start working on Method 1 immediately after completing the V2MOM? If the answer is "I need to think about what to do first," the method needs more concrete actions. - Too vague: "Method 1: Improve health" - Concrete: "Method 1: Fix sleep quality → blackout curtains, consistent 10pm bedtime, no screens after 9pm, magnesium supplement, sleep tracking" ### Metrics must be measurable "Better" is not a metric. "Bench press 135 lbs" is a metric. For each metric, you must be able to answer: 1. How do I measure this? (exact method or tool) 2. What's the current state? 3. What's the target state? 4. How often do I measure it? 5. What does this metric actually tell me? If you can't answer these, it's not a metric yet. ### V2MOM is a living document Not set in stone. As you execute, expect: method reordering (new info reveals priorities), metric adjustments (too aggressive or too conservative), new obstacles emerging, refined value definitions. **Update when:** major priority shift occurs; new obstacle emerges that changes approach; metric targets prove unrealistic or too easy; method completion opens new possibilities; quarterly review reveals misalignment. **But not frivolously:** Changing the V2MOM every week defeats the purpose. Update on major shifts, not minor tactics. ### Use it or lose it V2MOM only works if you use it for decisions. Use it for: - Weekly reviews (am I working on the right things?) - Priority decisions (which method does this serve?) - Saying no to distractions (not in the methods) - Celebrating wins (shipped Method 1 items) - Identifying blockers (obstacles getting worse?) If 2 weeks pass without referencing the V2MOM, something is wrong — either the V2MOM isn't serving you, or you're not using it. ## Closing Test Can you say "no" to something you would have said "yes" to before? If so, the V2MOM is working.