Decision Frame

The structured problem definition that opens every governed decision session.

What it is

Decision Frame

DF-082 • Strategic
Framing Risk: Medium

"Should we shift 40% of our R&D budget from legacy maintenance to the new sovereign cloud infrastructure for Q3 2026?"

  • No head-count expansion

  • 99.9% uptime on legacy

  • Beta release by Sept 15

  • Core churn < 2%

CC
AI
Governed Artifact

The Decision Frame is the first governed artifact produced in every session. It answers the question: what problem are we actually solving?

A well-formed Decision Frame prevents the most common failure mode in enterprise decision-making — anchoring on the first framing that gets voiced in a room.

Structure

FieldDescription
decision_questionThe precise question being decided
decision_typeClassification (strategic / operational / tactical / reversible / irreversible)
constraintsFixed constraints that bound the solution space
success_criteriaWhat a good outcome looks like
stakeholdersWho is affected and who must be aligned
timelineWhen the decision must be made and when consequences land
alternatives_consideredOther framings that were surfaced and why they were set aside

Framing risk

The system scores framing risk as low, medium, or high based on:

  • How quickly the initial framing converged
  • Whether alternative framings were explored
  • Whether success criteria are measurable
  • Whether constraints are explicit or assumed

A high framing risk score triggers a mandatory exploration phase before the Decision Plan is generated.

Relationship to other artifacts

The Decision Frame is the input to the Decision Plan. If the frame is weak, the plan will be wrong — regardless of the quality of analysis applied to it.

Decision Frame | Deciding.org