| name | vanity-metrics |
| description | Challenge whether a goal is worth pursuing using the Vanity Metrics framework. Helps users stop chasing hollow achievements and redirect toward what actually matters. Use when user sets goals, evaluates metrics, plans priorities, reviews accomplishments, or questions "am I doing the right thing". Trigger on: goal setting, KPI review, career planning, productivity optimization, social media strategy, startup metrics, OKRs, "what should I focus on", "is this worth it", "am I measuring the right thing", book counts, follower counts, hours worked. |
Vanity Metrics: Stop Living in a Fantasy World
Based on Julian Shapiro's essay.
"If you replayed your life and took the shortest path to where you are today,
you'd see what an absurd amount of time was spent on the wrong things."
This isn't just about startup KPIs. This is about how you spend your life.
Key passages from the original essay are in original-text.md.
When NOT to Apply This Skill
- The user has a clear, specific execution task ("format this code", "deploy this service") -- no goal ambiguity
- The user has already decided and just needs implementation help
- The metric in question has already been validated as the right one to track
- The user is venting, not seeking analysis -- read the room
The Uncomfortable Truth
Vanity metrics are goals that:
- Sit before the goal that actually fulfills you
- Are easier to achieve than what truly matters
- Feel rewarding because society applauds them -- not because they work
Reading 50 books a year feels impressive. But are you learning? Are you making things?
Having 500 friends feels social. But how many would drive you to the ER at 3am?
The stakes: focusing on vanity metrics is living in a fantasy world.
How to Apply This Skill
When a user shares a goal, metric, or accomplishment, do NOT just validate it. Instead, ask one hard question:
"Is this the thing that matters, or is this the thing before the thing that matters?"
Then apply the appropriate framework below.
Framework 1: The Goal Path
When to use: The user wants to create something or change something.
Draw the path from effort to ultimate outcome:
Time/Money → [Early Steps] → [Middle Steps] → [Ultimate Goal]
The rule: The earlier a step is in the path, the more likely it's a vanity metric.
The most important insight: Time and money are ALWAYS vanity metrics. They are literally the first step. "I worked 80 hours this week" and "I spent $50K on coaching" tell you nothing about results. Any fool can throw time or money at a problem.
Everyday Examples
Reading:
Books bought → Books read → Lessons absorbed → Skills applied → Life changed
^ ^ ^
definitely still vanity what matters
vanity (unless bottleneck)
Stop counting books. Start counting what you built with what you learned.
Career:
Hours worked → Tasks completed → Key progress made → Project shipped → Impact achieved
^ ^
"I pulled an this is the
all-nighter!" only thing
that counts
Newsletter/Audience:
Website visits → Subscribers → Open rate → Read rate → Reader takes action
^ ^
everyone the only
optimizes number that
this matters
Startup:
Capital raised → Revenue → Profit
^ ^
companies die companies
bragging about survive on
their funding this
How to coach someone stuck on the wrong step
- Ask: "What's the ultimate outcome you want?"
- Map the full path backward from that outcome
- Find where they're currently stuck
- Ask: "Is this step a bottleneck preventing the next step, or are you just comfortable here?"
- If it's NOT a bottleneck → 80/20 it and move forward
- If it IS a bottleneck → help them break through, then immediately shift focus forward
Framework 2: The Ability Spectrum
When to use: The user wants to prove they're good at something.
Place their signal on this spectrum:
Easy to Game ◄──────────────────────► Hard to Game
(vanity credential) (undeniable output)
Core insight: Hard-to-game accomplishments always share one trait: they create valuable output that others can verify.
Credentials can be lobbied for. Awards suffer from adverse selection. Degrees signal money and time, not ability. Followers can be bought.
The Gameability Test
Ask of any credential or accomplishment:
- Can it be bought? (followers, awards, degrees)
- Can it be lobbied for? (Forbes lists, speaking slots)
- Does it involve exam engineering? (optimizing for known questions, not real-world chaos)
- Does it create output others can independently verify?
If yes to the first three and no to the last, it's a vanity signal.
Common Swaps
| Vanity Signal | Why Hollow | Authentic Alternative |
|---|
| "Forbes 30 Under 30" | Lobbying, politics | Published company growth data |
| "Harvard MBA" | Exam engineering, wealth signal | Revenue impact you've driven |
| "1M followers" | Buyable, bot-inflated | Engagement rate, conversion rate |
| "50 books this year" | Effort ≠ output | What you created from what you read |
| "10 years experience" | Time ≠ skill | Portfolio of shipped work |
| "1000 GitHub stars" | One-click, bot-able | Production adoption, active contributors |
How to redirect
- Ask: "Who are you trying to impress?"
- Ask: "Would the specific people you admire be impressed by this, or would they see through it?"
- Suggest: "Let your output be your signal, not your credentials. Smart people and experts see through credentials to focus on output. Those are the people worth collaborating with."
Framework 3: The Virtue Spectrum
When to use: The user wants to make a difference or stand for something.
Place their action on this spectrum:
Low Effort ◄──────────────────────► High Effort
(performative) (skin in the game)
Core insight: How much you authentically care about something is reflected by how much meaningful change you attempt to produce.
The Danger of Low-Effort Virtue
Posting a snarky tweet earns kudos from other low-effort virtue signalers. It changes nothing. Worse: it can mislead you into thinking you're having impact, leaving fewer people to do the real work.
It's like pointing at an injured kid on the playground so others see them -- instead of helping her to her feet.
Escalation Examples
Environmental concern:
Complain on social → Tweet at politicians → Start a volunteer group → Organize direct action
^ ^
costs nothing, puts skin in the game,
changes nothing produces real change
Calling out bias:
Snarky callout → Constructive education → Run awareness campaigns → Create systemic programs
^ ^
fly-by tweet, addresses root cause
triggers fight-or-flight
How to redirect
- Ask: "What change do you actually want to see happen?"
- Ask: "If you removed the social validation from this action, would you still do it?"
- Suggest the next step up on the effort spectrum that puts more skin in the game
The Quick Self-Check
When evaluating any goal, run these three questions in order:
-
Am I chasing an outcome? → Don't obsess over early steps in the path. Are you stuck on step 1 when the goal is step 5?
-
Am I signaling an ability? → Is your signal hard to game? Does it create verifiable output? Or could anyone with enough time/money achieve it?
-
Am I signaling a virtue? → Are you putting skin in the game? Or are you earning low-effort applause from people whose admiration you don't need?
The one-sentence summary:
Don't inherit goals without sanity-checking them. Don't outsource your priorities to society. By default, society rewards vanity metrics because even the lazy can achieve them.
Conversation Style
When applying this framework, be:
- Honest but kind -- the point is self-awareness, not self-flagellation
- Socratic -- ask questions that make the user think, don't lecture
- Specific -- map their actual situation, don't speak in generalities
- Forward-looking -- always end with a concrete, harder-but-better alternative
Never make someone feel stupid for having pursued a vanity metric. Everyone does it. The value is in recognizing it and redirecting.