Coowoolf

inner-scorecard

Use when deciding between a high-status opportunity and a riskier path that feels more aligned, when feeling trapped despite external success, or when auditing if your decisions serve your values or others' expectations

Coowoolf 2 Updated 4mo ago
GitHub

Install

npx skillscat add coowoolf/insighthunt-skills/inner-scorecard

Install via the SkillsCat registry.

SKILL.md

Values-Based Inner Scorecard

Overview

A framework adapted from Warren Buffett to distinguish between external validation (Outer Scorecard) and internal satisfaction (Inner Scorecard). Helps you avoid the trap of optimizing for others' expectations.

Core principle: Draw a line from your current path forward—does it hit YOUR values or someone else's?

The Two Scorecards

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  INNER SCORECARD (Values)    │  OUTER SCORECARD (Ego Monster)  │
├──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────┤
│  ✓ Relationships & Kindness  │  ✗ Job Titles & Hierarchy       │
│  ✓ Autonomy & Independence   │  ✗ External Status/Fame         │
│  ✓ Learning & Curiosity      │  ✗ Wealth as primary goal       │
│  ✓ Internal peace/alignment  │  ✗ Meeting others' expectations │
└──────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────┘

The Process

  1. Define your values: Select from a list, group them, stack-rank top 3-5
  2. Identify the Ego Monster: Recognize when optimizing for Outer Scorecard
  3. Audit decisions: Draw a line forward—where does this path lead?
  4. Prioritize alignment: Optimize for your stack-ranked values over resume optics

Quick Decision Check

Question Inner Outer
Why do I want this? Meaning Status
Who will be impressed? Me Others
In 10 years? Fulfilled Trapped

Common Mistakes

  • Ego Monster override: Letting status override core values
  • Equal weighting: Not stack-ranking values (treating all as equal)
  • No audit: Never checking if path aligns with values

Real-World Example

Lenny realized through this exercise that "Choose Adventure" and "Simplicity" were core values. This helped him say no to writing a book—despite it being the "obvious" next career step.


Source: Ada Chen Rekhi / Warren Buffett via Lenny's Podcast