Problem Solving
Most problems are misdiagnosed before they are ever solved. This domain covers frameworks that help you frame issues correctly, separate symptoms from causes, challenge assumptions, and improve processes systematically. Use these models when something is not working, the problem is still unclear, or quick fixes have failed to produce lasting results.
Applications
Problem Framing
Frameworks for defining the real problem clearly so teams can stop solving the wrong thing.
Process Improvement
Frameworks for diagnosing workflow issues, reducing inefficiency, and improving how work moves through a process.
Critical Thinking
Frameworks for improving reasoning quality, testing assumptions, and thinking through issues with more rigor and less bias.
Root Cause Analysis
Frameworks for moving past symptoms, identifying underlying causes, and solving recurring problems more effectively.
Recommended Frameworks
5 Whys Technique: Discover Root Causes
Get to the root cause of an issue by asking "why" repeatedly.
Fishbone Diagram: A Simple Guide Helps You Uncover Root Causes
A simple yet powerful tool that helps you analyze and solve problems in a structured way.
FMEA Methodology: Identify Failure Modes and Prioritize Risks
Identify failure modes and prioritize risks.
PDCA Model: The Cycle of Continuous Improvement (Deming Cycle)
A systematic approach to continuous improvement, involving Plan-Do-Check-Act 4 activities.
FAQ
How is Problem Solving different from Decision & Strategy?
Problem Solving is about diagnosis and resolution. Decision & Strategy is about choice and direction. If you do not yet understand the problem clearly, start here. If you already understand the issue and need to choose a path forward, move to Decision & Strategy.
When should I use a problem-framing framework first?
Use one when teams are arguing about solutions before agreeing on what the actual problem is. It is especially useful when the issue feels vague, recurring, cross-functional, or politically loaded.
Are problem-solving frameworks only useful for operational issues?
No. They work across technical, organizational, product, and business problems. The common requirement is that something is off, the cause is not obvious, and you need a structured way to move from confusion to clarity.
What is the most common failure in problem solving?
Treating the first visible symptom as the real issue. Teams often solve for speed instead of accuracy, which creates temporary relief but not durable improvement. Strong frameworks slow the process down just enough to solve the right problem.