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What is a Decision Stack?

A Decision Stack is a five-layer strategic artefact created by Martin Eriksson. It connects vision to daily decisions. Luna uses it as the structure for everything it builds.

The five layers

Vision

One sentence about where the organisation is going. The north star for every decision below.

Strategy

The coherent set of choices that explain how you'll reach the vision. Not a list of goals — a theory of how you win.

Objectives

Measurable outcomes. Each has one metric that matters and an aspiration. Objectives make strategy testable.

Opportunities

Hypotheses with belief statements and success signals. What you actually try to move the objectives.

Principles

Operating guidelines as "X even over Y". The decisions that reveal real priorities under trade-off.

The ten strategic areas

Behind the five layers sit ten areas of strategic context. The decision-stack skill extracts these into a context bundle; Luna uses them to populate the layers.

AreaWhat it covers
Customer & marketWho buys, why, segments, size, trends
Problem & opportunityWhat pain or gain, why now, what changed
Value propositionWhat you offer, why it matters, differentiation
Competitive landscapeAlternatives, substitutes, positioning
Business model & economicsRevenue model, unit economics, margins, CAC/LTV
Go-to-marketChannels, sales motion, distribution, partnerships
Product & experienceWhat it is, how it works, UX, tech
Capabilities & assetsTeam, IP, tech moat, unfair advantages
Risks & constraintsWhat could go wrong, dependencies, capacity
Strategic intentVision, ambition, timeline, funding plans

Why coherence

Strategy fails when thinking scatters. The stack connects every layer to the ones above and below. When a principle conflicts with an objective, you see it.