Case StudyDirection Sorting

Case Library: From Stories To Reusable Judgment Samples

Published 2026-04-17

TL;DR

  • This page is the case-library index, organized by problem type so you can quickly find a similar judgment sample.
  • The point of reading cases is not to copy a success story, but to understand whether the judgment logic applies to your situation.
  • Reading two close cases before submitting your situation can reduce communication cost.

Parent Topic Cluster

Returning to the cluster entry page helps you understand where this content sits in the knowledge network.

How to Sort Your Direction When You Feel Lost

Background & Context

Browse anonymous cases by problem type. Focus on the judgment basis and suggested path, not success-story narration.

This is for you if

  • People unsure which situation type they belong to
  • People who want to understand judgment logic rather than only outcomes

This may not be for you if

  • People who already have a clear direction and only need execution steps
  • People looking only for motivational success stories

Conclusion First

Cases are not templates for success stories. They are judgment samples. Read them to see whether the reasoning can be reused in your own situation.

How To Use This Library

Start with the problem type closest to your current state. Then compare:

  1. Is the starting situation similar?
  2. Is the judgment basis reusable?
  3. Does the suggested path fit your time window and constraints?

Browse By Problem Type

Japanese Reinforcement First

Direction Sorting First

Job Preparation First

What To Watch For

When reading a case, do not only look at the final suggestion. Look at the signals that led to the suggestion:

  • Was the bottleneck language, direction, materials, or timing?
  • Was the person's anxiety stronger than the actual deadline?
  • Did the case require specialized help or only front-stage sorting?

Next Steps

After reading two cases that feel close to your situation, submit your current state through the trial flow. The more structured your input is, the easier it is to give a useful next-step suggestion.

Conclusion

This page is the case-library index, organized by problem type so you can quickly find a similar judgment sample.

  • This page is the case-library index, organized by problem type so you can quickly find a similar judgment sample.
  • The point of reading cases is not to copy a success story, but to understand whether the judgment logic applies to your situation.

Want to sort out your situation?

You don't need to have it all figured out — just start by sharing where you are

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Next Steps

If you're still unsure, start with these pages.

Case Library: From Stories To Reusable Judgment Samples | kibouFlow