skills/systems-thinking-leverage/SKILL.md
Finds high-leverage intervention points in complex systems by mapping feedback loops, identifying system archetypes (fixes that fail, shifting the burden, tragedy of the commons, limits to growth), and ranking interventions by Meadows' leverage hierarchy. Use when problems involve interconnected components with feedback loops, delays, or emergent behavior; when past solutions failed or caused unintended consequences; when identifying where to push for maximum effect; or when user mentions systems thinking, leverage points, feedback loops, causal loop diagrams, stocks and flows, or complex systems.
npx skillsauth add lyndonkl/claude systems-thinking-leverageInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Copy this checklist and track your progress:
Systems Thinking & Leverage Progress:
- [ ] Step 1: Define system and problem
- [ ] Step 2: Map system structure
- [ ] Step 3: Identify leverage points
- [ ] Step 4: Validate and test interventions
- [ ] Step 5: Design high-leverage strategy
Step 1: Define system and problem
Clarify system boundaries (what's in/out of system), key variables (stocks that accumulate, flows that change them), and problem symptom vs. underlying pattern. Use System Definition section below.
Step 2: Map system structure
For simple cases → Use resources/template.md for quick causal loop diagram and stock-flow identification. For complex cases → Study resources/methodology.md for system archetypes, multi-loop analysis, and time delays.
Step 3: Identify leverage points
Apply Meadows' leverage hierarchy (parameters < buffers < structure < delays < balancing loops < reinforcing loops < information < rules < self-organization < goals < paradigms). See Leverage Points Analysis below and resources/methodology.md for techniques.
Step 4: Validate and test interventions
Self-assess using resources/evaluators/rubric_systems_thinking_leverage.json. Test mental models: what happens if we push here? What are second-order effects? What delays might undermine intervention? See Validation section.
Step 5: Design high-leverage strategy
Create systems-thinking-leverage.md with system map, leverage point ranking, recommended interventions, and predicted outcomes. See Delivery Format section.
Before mapping, clarify:
1. System Boundary
2. Key Variables
3. Time Horizon
4. Problem Statement
Meadows' 12 Leverage Points (ascending order of effectiveness):
12. Parameters (weak) - Constants, numbers (tax rates, salaries, prices)
11. Buffers - Stock sizes relative to flows (reserves, inventories)
10. Stock-and-Flow Structures - Physical system design
9. Delays - Time lags in information flows
8. Balancing Feedback Loops - Strength of stabilizing forces
7. Reinforcing Feedback Loops - Strength of amplifying forces
6. Information Flows - Who has access to what information
5. Rules - Incentives, constraints, punishments
4. Self-Organization - Power to add/change/evolve structure
3. Goals - Purpose the system serves
2. Paradigms - Mindset from which the system arises
1. Transcending Paradigms (strongest) - Ability to shift between paradigms
How to Use This Hierarchy:
Before finalizing, check:
System Map Quality:
Leverage Point Analysis:
Archetype Recognition (if applicable):
Mental Model Testing:
Minimum Standard: Use rubric (resources/evaluators/rubric_systems_thinking_leverage.json). Average score ≥ 3.5/5 before delivering.
Create systems-thinking-leverage.md with:
1. System Overview
2. System Map
3. Leverage Point Analysis
4. Intervention Strategy
5. Implementation Considerations
If system matches these patterns, leverage points are well-known:
Fixes That Fail
Shifting the Burden
Tragedy of the Commons
Limits to Growth
For more archetypes, see resources/methodology.md.
Resources:
Key Concepts:
Red Flags:
testing
--- name: advisory-edit description: A strict advisory-only editing discipline for a writer who dictates ("speaks out") essays and wants help WITHOUT having their voice changed. The editor directs structure, flags grammar, and suggests strategic language — but never modifies the writer's text unless the writer explicitly says "apply" / "make that change" / "rewrite this." Produces a line-referenced, suggestion-only critique where every item is marked the writer's call. Four passes: structural, l
testing
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testing
Renders a markdown report to a PDF using pandoc with xelatex (11pt serif body, 1-inch margins, numbered footnotes, formal heading hierarchy). Requires a one-time install of pandoc and a LaTeX engine on the user's machine — basictex on macOS or texlive-xetex on Linux. Does not attempt automatic install. Fails loudly with the exact install commands if pandoc or xelatex is missing on the user's PATH. Use when producing a finished strategist or analyst report PDF from a polished markdown source.
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