Each row captures one decision you made on instinct and converts it into a data-informed process. Over time, this becomes your proof that the system is compounding — every decision gets better because the last one generated data.
Loop 1
The decisionWhat did you decide?
The instinctWhat was it based on?
The missing dataWhat would have made this better?
Tracking set upWhat are you measuring now so next time you have the number?
ResultFill in later: was the next decision better?
Loop 2
The decisionWhat did you decide?
The instinctWhat was it based on?
The missing dataWhat would have made this better?
Tracking set upWhat are you measuring now?
Loop 3
The decisionWhat did you decide?
The instinctWhat was it based on?
The missing dataWhat would have made this better?
Tracking set upWhat are you measuring now?
Loop 4
The decisionWhat did you decide?
The instinctWhat was it based on?
The missing dataWhat would have made this better?
Tracking set upWhat are you measuring now?
Why this matters
One loop is a fix. Four loops is a pattern. Twelve loops is a system. Each row proves that your decision-making got better because the previous decision generated data you didn't have before.
This is what compounding looks like in practice. Not a single transformation — a series of small improvements where each one funds the next.