Decision Framing (PERM)

Decision Framing (PERM)

Many consequential decisions are shaped long before they appear in reporting, escalation, or performance discussions. By the time issues surface, the framing has already happened, often reasonably, under pressure, and with incomplete information.
Decision Framing looks at how early assumptions influence later outcomes. It focuses on the conditions decisions are made under, the expectations carried into them, and risks that are sensed but not surfaced.

PERM

PERM is the operating logic behind this framing.
It forces clarity before judgement becomes the primary risk control.
It reflects four assumptions that are always present, whether acknowledged or not, in early decisions:

Purpose. What is this role, decision, or change actually for?

Expectations. What is assumed about delivery, behaviour, authority, and timing?

Risks. Where are we most likely to be wrong, misaligned, or surprised?

Measurement. What should be visible early if things are on track?

PERM is not a checklist or a method.
It sits behind clarity tools, requiring these assumptions to be examined before commitment is made.

Why this Matters at Senior Levels

Many senior issues follow a familiar retrospective pattern:
Decision Framing shifts this pattern by making early assumptions explicit while there is still time to challenge them.

Relationship to Role Clarity

Role Clarity looks at where early operating risk forms.
PERM is the logic used to make early decision assumptions visible before they become fixed.
PERM is shared here to preserve clarity of decision language, not to introduce a new framework or methodology.

Boundary and Provenance

PERM is shared as embedded operating logic, not as a commercial framework, product, or service.

Trademark Notice

PERM Framework® is a registered trademark. The term is used here to preserve clarity of meaning and provenance, not to signal a commercial offering.