A categorized inventory · Version 2
The Framework
Taxonomy.
A working census of named thinking frameworks — 1,505 entries organized into 32 porous categories spanning strategy, systems, science, security, design, and the ways humans organize thought.
Explore the inventory
Search by framework name or isolate a category.
1,505 of 1,505 frameworks shown.
No frameworks match the current filter. Try a broader term or clear the filters.
№ 01 Category
Management
Aligns seven organizational elements—strategy, structure, systems, skills, staff, style, and shared values—to diagnose and drive change
Defines who owns each function in an organization, clarifying roles and eliminating ambiguity across seats
Balances three overlapping leadership responsibilities: achieving the task, managing the team, and developing individuals
Translates strategy into measurable objectives across financial, customer, internal process, and learning perspectives
Replaces fixed annual budgets with adaptive, rolling forecasts and decentralized decision-making authority
Plots leadership style on axes of concern for people and concern for production to identify optimal management behavior
Creates uncontested market space by making competition irrelevant through simultaneous value innovation and cost reduction
Removes hierarchical, functional, and geographic barriers to encourage free flow of information and talent across an enterprise
Maps nine building blocks—value propositions, customer segments, channels, revenue streams, and more—onto a single visual template
Categorizes organizational culture across two dimensions—flexibility vs. control and internal vs. external focus—into four quadrants
Improves throughput by identifying, exploiting, and elevating the single binding constraint that limits a system's output
Identifies the distinctive capabilities that underpin competitive advantage and should guide long-term investment and diversification
Classifies situations into five domains—clear, complicated, complex, chaotic, and confused—to guide appropriate leadership responses
Improves expert performance through focused, goal-directed repetition with immediate feedback rather than mere accumulated experience
Aligns organizational and individual goals through jointly set, measurable objectives reviewed in regular performance discussions
Explains how firms sense, seize, and reconfigure internal and external resources to sustain competitive advantage in changing environments
Prioritizes tasks across four quadrants by urgency and importance to focus effort on what matters most and eliminate what doesn't
Gives small and midsize businesses practical tools across six components—vision, people, data, issues, process, traction—to gain organizational grip
Collects specific real-world behavioral incidents to identify what distinguishes effective from ineffective performance in a given role
Drives strategy execution by focusing on the wildly important goal, lead measures, a compelling scoreboard, and cadence of accountability
Breaks a complex system or process into smaller, more manageable functions to clarify structure and assign responsibility
Defines leadership as meeting the needs of the task, team, and individual through deliberate action rather than innate personality
Externalizes tasks and projects into a trusted capture-and-review system to achieve stress-free, reliable productivity
Describes five predictable phases of organizational growth, each ending in a crisis that demands a new management approach
Structures coaching conversations through four stages: establishing a Goal, examining Reality, exploring Options, and committing to a Way forward
Identifies enabling conditions—a real team, compelling direction, enabling structure, supportive context, and expert coaching—that drive team performance
Cascades strategic goals through the organization via a disciplined catch-ball process that aligns annual priorities with long-term direction
Measures organizational and individual culture styles across constructive, passive-defensive, and aggressive-defensive behavioral clusters
Integrates individual and collective, interior and exterior perspectives into a four-quadrant map for holistic organizational development
Frames customer behavior around underlying progress the customer is trying to make, rather than product features or demographics
Guides large-scale change through eight sequential steps from creating urgency to anchoring new approaches in organizational culture
Maps career transitions from individual contributor to enterprise leader, specifying the new skills, time focus, and values required at each passage
Plots leader behavior on a spectrum from boss-centered autocracy to subordinate-centered delegation, matching style to situational readiness
Identifies driving and restraining forces around a change objective to guide where to apply effort for successful transition
Encourages leaders to gather informal, real-time intelligence and build relationships by being present on the operational floor
Combines functional and project-based reporting lines, giving employees dual accountability to maximize resource sharing and cross-functional collaboration
Divides strategic activity into three time horizons—defending the core, nurturing emerging businesses, and seeding future options—to balance exploitation and exploration
Classifies organizations by their dominant coordinating mechanism and key part, from simple owner-led structures to innovative adhocracies
Translates a high-level objective into specific goals, the strategies to achieve them, and the measures used to track progress
Sets ambitious qualitative objectives and tracks progress through specific, measurable key results on a quarterly cadence
Balances exploitation of existing capabilities with exploration of new opportunities within the same organizational unit
Prescribes leadership behaviors—directive, supportive, participative, achievement-oriented—that clear obstacles and motivate subordinates toward goals
Iterative four-phase quality cycle that embeds continuous improvement into operational routines through disciplined testing and reflection
Extends stakeholder-centric measurement beyond shareholders to cover wants, strategies, processes, capabilities, and contributions of all stakeholders
Argues that sustainable growth comes from fully exploiting the core business before pursuing adjacencies or transformation
Assigns Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, and Informed roles for every task to eliminate ownership gaps and duplication
Extends RACI with a Support role, clarifying who provides resources or additional assistance beyond the core responsible parties
Grounds competitive advantage in a firm's unique bundle of valuable, rare, inimitable, and non-substitutable internal resources and capabilities
Evaluates employees solely on outcomes rather than hours or presence, granting full autonomy over when, where, and how work is done
Assesses teams across eight components—context, mission, talent, norms, buy-in, resources, courage, and results—to drive high performance
Inverts the traditional hierarchy so the leader's primary role is to remove barriers and develop the capabilities of those they serve
Adapts leadership style—directing, coaching, supporting, delegating—to match the development level and commitment of each follower
Diagnoses organizational problems across six interdependent domains: purpose, structure, relationships, rewards, leadership, and helpful mechanisms
Distributes authority through self-organizing circles governed by consent and role-based accountability rather than top-down hierarchy
Defines the number of direct reports a manager can effectively supervise, influencing organizational hierarchy and communication efficiency
Maps human development through successive value systems or vMemes that shape individual and organizational worldviews and priorities
Holds that organizations have obligations to all affected parties—not just shareholders—and that sustainable value creation requires balancing stakeholder interests
Classifies business units by market growth and relative share to guide portfolio investment, harvest, and divestiture decisions
Visualizes the cause-and-effect relationships between strategic objectives across Balanced Scorecard perspectives to make strategy explicit and communicable
Integrates attraction, development, engagement, and retention practices to ensure the right people are in the right roles at the right time
Describes a self-managing, wholeness-oriented, evolutionary-purpose model of organization that moves beyond hierarchical and achievement-driven paradigms
Contrasts two opposing managerial assumptions about human motivation—inherent laziness vs. intrinsic drive—and their organizational consequences
Embeds continuous improvement, customer focus, and employee involvement across every organizational process to achieve sustained quality outcomes
Inspires followers to exceed self-interest through vision, intellectual stimulation, individualized consideration, and idealized influence
Expands organizational success metrics to encompass profit, people, and planet simultaneously rather than financial returns alone
Aligns organizations around a shared vision by cascading the same five-element planning document from CEO to individual employee
Disaggregates a firm's activities into primary and support categories to identify where competitive advantage or cost reduction can be achieved
Diagrams the minimum regulatory structures—five interacting systems—required for any organization to remain viable and autonomous
Provides a decision tree that selects the most appropriate decision-making style from autocratic to collaborative based on situational criteria
Ranks employees annually into top, middle, and bottom performance tiers to concentrate rewards on stars and remove chronic underperformers
№ 02 Category
Strategy
Reframes marketing from a seller's 4P perspective to a buyer's view of commodity, cost, convenience, and communication
Guides growth by systematically evaluating moves into adjacent customers, geographies, channels, or capabilities closest to the proven core
Plots four growth strategies—market penetration, market development, product development, diversification—against existing versus new products and markets
Shifts competitive focus from fighting over existing demand to creating new demand through value innovation that eliminates industry trade-offs
Categorizes business units by market growth rate and relative market share to guide portfolio investment and resource allocation decisions
Analyzes a firm's interdependent network of suppliers, partners, competitors, and customers as a co-evolving system rather than a simple supply chain
Simulates competitive market moves through structured role-play to stress-test strategy against likely rival and regulator responses
Explains sustained superior performance through either low cost or differentiation leadership, each achievable across a broad or narrow competitive scope
Transfers solutions and business models from one industry to another by identifying structural analogies between seemingly unrelated domains
Offers three strategic positions—best product, total customer solutions, system lock-in—and aligns adaptive processes accordingly
Explains how entrants with simpler, cheaper offerings initially serve overlooked segments and eventually displace incumbents from above
Treats competitive strategy as ecosystem co-evolution, prescribing roles—pioneer, settler, town-planner—for different lifecycle stages
Operationalizes Blue Ocean Strategy by mapping which industry factors to eliminate, reduce, raise, or create to reconstruct value curves
Assesses industry attractiveness and competitive intensity through the five structural forces of rivalry, new entrants, substitutes, buyers, and suppliers
Depicts a self-reinforcing cycle of strategic actions that, once spinning, generate compounding momentum and competitive separation
Guides strategy redesign by asking which factors to eliminate, reduce, raise, and create relative to industry convention
Aligns strategy, structure, processes, rewards, and people as five interdependent star points that must be coherent to execute strategy effectively
Evaluates business units across a nine-cell grid of industry attractiveness and competitive strength to inform invest, hold, or divest decisions
Proposes three durable competitive positions—cost leadership, differentiation, and focus—that firms must choose among to avoid being stuck in the middle
Distinguishes genuine strategy—diagnosis, guiding policy, and coherent actions—from vague goals and motivational rhetoric dressed as strategy
Defines strategy through five integrated elements: arenas, vehicles, differentiators, staging, and economic logic
Maps the migration path from today's core competencies to tomorrow's product and market positions through deliberate capability building
Argues that sustained competitive advantage is impossible in dynamic markets, requiring firms to continuously disrupt their own positions
Describes how competitive dynamics, growth rates, and strategic priorities shift across introduction, growth, maturity, and decline stages
Refines strategy by aligning jobs customers need done, capabilities required, and where profits concentrate in the value chain
Applies JTBD theory at the strategic level to identify unmet demand, guide market creation, and outmaneuver competitors focused on product attributes
Turns strategy formation into rapid validated learning through build-measure-learn cycles that test hypotheses before scaling investment
Applies lean principles to strategic planning by treating strategy as a series of small experiments rather than a fixed long-horizon plan
Develops organizational capability to collect, interpret, and act on market intelligence faster and more accurately than rivals
Contrasts planned, top-down intended strategy with patterns that emerge organically from distributed organizational actions
Identifies durable structural advantages—network effects, switching costs, intangibles, cost advantages, efficient scale—that protect economic returns
Pursues radical 10-times improvement rather than incremental gains by combining a huge problem, breakthrough technology, and audacious solution
Prioritizes cash, customers, and culture in the earliest phase of corporate recovery, buying time for deeper strategic restructuring
Analyzes how a product's value increases as more users join, creating winner-take-most dynamics and high switching costs
Distinguishes competitive-arena red oceans from untapped blue oceans to frame the strategic choice between fighting and creating market space
Audits macro-environmental influences—political, economic, social, technological, environmental, legal—that shape strategic opportunities and threats
Designs and governs multi-sided platforms that create value by facilitating interactions between distinct user groups at scale
Structures strategy as five cascading choices: winning aspiration, where to play, how to win, capabilities required, and management systems needed
Explains why certain industries thrive in specific nations through four interacting attributes: factor conditions, demand conditions, related industries, and firm rivalry
Frames strategy formulation as selecting and defending an analytically derived position in the competitive landscape
Maps where profits actually concentrate across an industry's value chain to identify attractive strategic positions beyond revenue share
Explains organizational behavior as a response to power dynamics arising from dependence on external resource providers
Grounds competitive advantage in a firm's unique bundle of valuable, rare, inimitable, and non-substitutable internal resources and capabilities
Develops multiple plausible future stories to test strategy robustness and improve decision-making under deep uncertainty
Plots a firm's financial strength, competitive advantage, environmental stability, and industry strength to recommend a strategic posture
Distinguishes simple, complicated, complex, and chaotic strategic contexts by the degree of agreement and certainty, guiding appropriate approaches
Redefines firm purpose as creating value for all stakeholders, integrating their interests into strategy rather than treating them as constraints
Scans the macro-environment across social, technological, economic, environmental, and political dimensions to surface strategic issues
Applies futures thinking—scanning, scenario building, visioning—to detect emerging signals and shape proactive long-term strategy
Clusters industry competitors by similar strategic dimensions to explain performance differences and identify mobility barriers within an industry
Sets an ambitious, emotionally compelling long-horizon goal that focuses organizational energy and stretch beyond current resource endowments
Links strategy formulation to execution through a six-stage management system anchored in strategy maps, scorecards, and operational budgets
Structures internal strengths and weaknesses alongside external opportunities and threats to inform strategic choices and gap identification
Extends SWOT by explicitly generating strategic options from combinations of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats
Prescribes choosing one of three disciplines—operational excellence, product leadership, or customer intimacy—as the primary competitive identity
Adds complementors to the competitive landscape, enabling firms to see where cooperation and competition can coexist profitably
Visualizes the evolution of components in a value chain from genesis to commodity, revealing strategic opportunities and situational awareness
Guides stakeholder-centric strategy execution through four phases: winning allies, doing the work, building coalitions, and sustaining commitment
№ 03 Category
Business Analysis
Drills down to root causes by asking 'why' repeatedly until the underlying systemic reason for a problem is uncovered
Contrasts current-state process documentation with a desired future-state design to define the scope and requirements of a transformation
Provides the globally recognized knowledge base and competency standards for professional business analysis practice
Compares performance, processes, or products against best-in-class internal or external reference points to identify improvement opportunities
Depicts the essential activities a business performs—independent of technology—to fulfill its mission and serve its stakeholders
Defines the enterprise's strategy, capabilities, value streams, and information in a unified reference model for planning and transformation
Inventories what an organization must be able to do, independent of how or who, to enable capability-based planning and investment
Structures the reasons why an enterprise acts—ends, means, influencers, assessments—into a coherent motivation architecture
Provides a standardized graphical language for modeling business processes that bridges business analysts and technical implementers
Identifies, defines, and manages the policies and constraints that govern business operations to ensure consistency and compliance
Stages organizational process improvement from ad hoc to optimizing across five maturity levels to guide engineering and management practice
Defines the boundaries of a problematic situation by identifying who is affected, who acts, what changes, and under what worldview
Outlines the six knowledge areas and professional competencies required for the Certified Business Analysis Professional credential
Shows a system's inputs, outputs, and boundary relative to external entities, establishing what is in and out of analytical scope
Quantifies and compares the expected costs and benefits of alternative decisions or investments to identify the economically superior choice
Applies Cynefin domain classification to requirements contexts, directing different elicitation and analysis approaches per domain
Illustrates how data moves through a system—from inputs through processes to outputs and storage—at varying levels of abstraction
Standardizes how business decisions and rules are modeled, enabling automated decision services to be governed and versioned like processes
Models data entities, their attributes, and relationships to provide a conceptual foundation for database design and data governance
Facilitates rapid collaborative discovery of domain events, commands, and aggregates to build a shared understanding of complex business processes
Represents business process logic using alternating events and functions connected by logical operators for SAP-environment process documentation
Organizes potential causes of a problem into major categories—people, process, equipment, materials, environment, measurement—branching from a central spine
Breaks a complex system or process into smaller, more manageable functions to clarify structure and assign responsibility
Compares current capabilities or performance against a desired future state to prioritize the improvements needed to close the gap
Models functions as boxes with inputs, outputs, controls, and mechanisms using a hierarchical decomposition syntax for process documentation
Links business goals to actors, their behaviors, and supporting deliverables in a mind-map format to align stakeholders on scope and rationale
Ensures user stories are Independent, Negotiable, Valuable, Estimable, Small, and Testable to maintain backlog quality in agile development
Systematically documents the duties, responsibilities, competencies, and working conditions of a role to inform hiring, training, and evaluation
Classifies product attributes as basic, performance, or delighter features to prioritize development investments based on their effect on customer satisfaction
Structures investment justification concisely around problem, options, benefits, costs, risks, and recommendation without unnecessary documentation overhead
Ranks requirements as Must have, Should have, Could have, or Won't have to drive scope decisions within a fixed time and budget
Aligns organizational mission to actionable tactics through a four-tier hierarchy that ensures operational activities serve strategic intent
Focuses improvement efforts on what is needed and possible rather than on deficiencies, complementing SWOT with a solutions orientation
Identifies the vital few causes or categories that account for the majority of effects to focus improvement effort where it matters most
Analyzes change across five dimensions to ensure human, structural, procedural, data, and technology factors are all considered
Documents and examines the sequence of steps in a process to identify waste, delays, redundancies, and improvement opportunities
Extracts actual process behavior from event log data to discover, monitor, and improve real processes compared to intended models
Investigates the fundamental cause of a problem—not its symptoms—to prevent recurrence through targeted corrective action
Structures business analysis sequencing from strategic context through gap assessment to solution definition and delivery
Provides a high-level view of a process by mapping its key suppliers, inputs, activities, outputs, and customers before detailed analysis
Designs new products or processes to Six Sigma quality from the outset by following Define, Measure, Analyze, Design, Verify stages
Structures group analysis by assigning six colored hats representing facts, emotions, caution, optimism, creativity, and process management
Identifies all parties affected by or able to affect a project, maps their interests and influence, and plans appropriate engagement
Applies SWOT to a specific project or solution option to surface internal strengths and weaknesses alongside external opportunities and threats
Investigates organizational systems and designs improved processes or information systems through structured development life cycle phases
Provides a cyclic method for developing enterprise architecture through phases from preliminary setup to architecture governance
Captures functional requirements as interactions between actors and a system to define scope and communicate expected system behavior
Visualizes the flow of materials and information required to deliver a product or service, exposing waste and the path to future-state improvement
Compares planned versus actual performance on cost, schedule, or quality metrics to explain deviations and trigger corrective action
Aligns stakeholder expectations in complex information environments by making values, policies, events, content, and trust levels explicit
Examines the sequence, handoffs, and timing of work activities across people and systems to optimize flow and eliminate bottlenecks
№ 04 Category
Thinking & Decision-Making
Checks reasoning by pushing an argument to its logical extreme to expose internal contradictions or unacceptable implications
Structures high-stakes decisions through four disciplined phases: deep analysis, decisive commitment, execution, and retrospective study
Shifts decision framing toward what is working well and what is possible, generating energy for constructive change rather than problem-fixing
Updates probability estimates for hypotheses as new evidence arrives, systematically incorporating information to improve belief accuracy
Highlights the outsized impact of rare, unpredictable, high-consequence events and argues for building robustness rather than relying on probabilistic forecasting
Explains that decision-makers operate with limited information, cognitive capacity, and time, leading to satisficing rather than optimizing behavior
Builds a multidisciplinary toolkit of models from multiple fields—physics, biology, economics, psychology—to reason about complex situations more reliably
Insists on understanding why an existing rule or structure was created before removing it, preventing well-intentioned destruction of unknown safeguards
Defines the domain in which one's knowledge is reliable and warns against decision-making outside that boundary without recognizing the deficit
Catalogs over 180 documented cognitive biases organized by the type of problem they represent, serving as a reference for bias-aware reasoning
Equips decision-makers to recognize and counteract the tendency to seek, interpret, and recall information that confirms existing beliefs
Quantifies and compares the expected costs and benefits of alternative decisions or investments to identify the economically superior choice
Develops reasoning quality by applying intellectual standards—clarity, accuracy, relevance, logic, breadth—to the elements of thought
Surfaces team assumptions by sorting beliefs into what is known, what is supposed, and what is uncertain before acting
Clarifies decision rights and roles of everyone involved in a choice to prevent confusion about who has final authority
Estimates current position from a known past position, speed, and direction when real-time data is unavailable, applying to decisions under uncertainty
Maps sequential decision points and probabilistic outcomes as a branching diagram to calculate expected values and compare alternative paths
Distinguishes deliberately planned choices from patterns that emerge organically from decisions made without explicit strategic intent
Argues for strategically choosing not to acquire certain information when knowing it would bias behavior or undermine desired outcomes
Assigns a formal critic role to challenge the prevailing recommendation, ensuring major flaws are surfaced before commitment
Develops judgment to separate meaningful patterns from irrelevant variation in data-rich, uncertain decision environments
Goes beyond correcting errors to questioning and revising the underlying assumptions and norms that govern behavior
Stress-tests a decision against two headlines: one for harmful action, one for harmful inaction, catching both unethical decisions and excessive caution
Explains why low-competence individuals overestimate ability while experts underestimate it, guiding calibration of confidence in oneself and others
Applies evidence and reason to determine how to do the most good, prioritizing causes by scale, neglectedness, and tractability
Provides an axiomatic foundation for rational choice under risk, representing preferences as expected utilities of probability-weighted outcomes
Calculates the probability-weighted average outcome of a decision to identify the option with the highest long-run payoff
Detects when a situation is incorrectly framed as having only two mutually exclusive options, revealing overlooked third paths
Produces rough but reliable order-of-magnitude estimates for hard-to-measure quantities by decomposing problems into estimable sub-components
Rebuilds understanding of a problem from foundational truths rather than analogy or convention, enabling genuinely novel solutions
Drills down to root causes by asking 'why' repeatedly until the underlying systemic reason for a problem is uncovered
Audits the assumptions and frameworks shaping current decisions to detect which cognitive models are outdated, incomplete, or misapplied
Structures deliberation by separating objective facts, logical inferences, opinions, and differing perspectives to improve decision clarity
Analyzes strategic interactions in which each actor's optimal choice depends on the anticipated choices of others, identifying equilibria and dominant strategies
Counsels attributing an action to incompetence or misunderstanding rather than malice when both explanations are plausible, reducing interpersonal conflict
Catches reasoning errors in which a conclusion is drawn from an insufficient or unrepresentative sample of evidence
Documents systematic cognitive shortcuts that lead to predictable judgment errors, enabling targeted debiasing interventions
Balances model fit against complexity to select the best statistical model without overfitting to available data
Approaches a problem by imagining the opposite of the desired outcome to identify what to avoid rather than what to pursue
Describes how experts make rapid decisions by recognizing situational patterns that trigger workable courses of action without exhaustive comparison
Traces how individuals move from raw data to conclusions through selective perception, assumptions, and meaning-making, exposing reasoning errors
Generates creative solutions by deliberately shifting perspective and challenging assumptions rather than following conventional sequential logic
Curates a cross-disciplinary library of core concepts to improve judgment by providing multiple lenses for any situation
Systematically explores all possible combinations of problem parameters in a matrix to generate novel solution options
Evaluates alternatives with multiple conflicting criteria by eliciting utilities and weights from decision-makers to compute an overall preference score
Describes how multiple cognitive biases and incentives reinforcing each other in the same direction can produce extreme and predictable outcomes
Studies how experienced practitioners actually make decisions under real-world conditions of uncertainty, time pressure, and high stakes
Prefers the simplest explanation or solution consistent with the evidence, avoiding unnecessary complexity in reasoning and model-building
Makes explicit what is foregone when choosing one alternative over another, ensuring the true cost of any decision is fully accounted for
Observes that work expands to fill the time allotted for it, advocating tighter deadlines and constraints to improve productivity
Imagines a future failure has already occurred and works backwards to identify what went wrong, surfacing risks before commitment
Expresses uncertainty as explicit probability distributions rather than binary certainties, enabling more calibrated and robust decision-making
Describes how people evaluate gains and losses relative to a reference point, exhibiting loss aversion and diminishing sensitivity to outcomes
Assigns one group to attack a plan and another to defend it, using structured adversarial testing to find vulnerabilities before real-world exposure
Chooses by imagining which decision will cause the least regret at age 80, privileging long-horizon identity over short-term comfort
Counters status quo bias by asking whether an argument against change would equally oppose the reverse change, exposing inconsistent reasoning
Adjusts expected outcomes by their probability and consequence to produce a risk-adjusted ranking of alternatives
Selects the first option meeting a minimum acceptable threshold rather than optimizing, reflecting realistic cognitive constraints on decision-making
Considers the consequences of consequences, anticipating how initial effects will trigger further downstream reactions in a complex system
Trains attention on meaningful, actionable information patterns while filtering the statistical variation and irrelevant data that obscures them
Structures group thinking by assigning six perspectives—facts, emotions, caution, optimism, creativity, process—to separate thinking modes and reduce conflict
Uses disciplined probing questions to expose assumptions, test logic, and deepen understanding of complex beliefs or propositions
Structures high-stakes decisions by formalizing context, stakeholders, options, a clear decision, and its rationale in a reusable document
Constructs the strongest possible version of an opposing argument before refuting it, ensuring engagement with substance rather than a weakened caricature
Pairs deliberate construction of a weak argument version with its strongest version to identify where genuine disagreement lies
Assigns competing teams to argue opposite positions under rules to examine a decision rigorously from multiple perspectives
Applies SWOT thinking to personal or individual-level decisions by auditing personal strengths, weaknesses, external opportunities, and threats
Sees organizations as webs of interdependence and feedback rather than linear chains, enabling interventions that produce lasting improvement
Evaluates decisions by how they will look in ten minutes, ten months, and ten years to balance short- and long-term thinking
Reminds decision-makers that models and abstractions simplify reality and should never be mistaken for the complex systems they represent
Distinguishes automatic, intuitive thinking from slow, deliberate reasoning, enabling better calibration of when to trust each mode
Uses imagined scenarios—often impossible in practice—to test logical consistency, explore principles, and generate insight without empirical experimentation
Explains how people judge probability by how easily examples come to mind, often distorting risk perception in favor of vivid, recent events
Distinguishes irreversible high-stakes decisions requiring deliberate process from reversible two-way-door decisions that should be made quickly
Designs fair social arrangements by reasoning as if one does not know one's place in society, preventing self-serving bias in rule-making
Aggregates independent individual judgments to produce estimates or decisions that are often more accurate than any single expert's assessment
Counters four decision biases—narrow framing, confirmation bias, short-term emotion, overconfidence—with four corresponding corrective moves
Frames negotiation choices by mapping the zone of possible agreement and each party's best alternative to clarify when to deal
№ 05 Category
Communication
Attributes communication impact to three channels—words, voice tone/pace, and body language—highlighting the dominance of non-verbal signals
Guides message construction through four quality criteria that ensure recipients understand, act on, and trust what they receive
Structures persuasive presentations by establishing context, stating the challenge, exploring options, and making a clear recommendation
Specifies seven principles—clear, concise, concrete, correct, coherent, complete, courteous—as standards for effective written and spoken messaging
Develops the habit of fully attending, understanding, and responding to a speaker before preparing a reply, building trust and accuracy
Sequences persuasion through four stages that move an audience from awareness to motivated action
Grounds persuasive communication in three interdependent appeals: the speaker's credibility, emotional resonance, and logical argument
Structures assertive communication as Describe, Express, Specify, Consequences to articulate needs clearly without aggression or passivity
Leads every message with the key conclusion or recommendation before context and supporting detail, optimizing reader comprehension and time
Teaches sales communicators to lead with insights that reframe how customers think about their problems before presenting solutions
Identifies six universal psychological levers of persuasion and explains how they can be applied or defended against ethically
Explains how communicators converge toward or diverge from each other's style to signal affiliation or distinctiveness
Maps four behavioral communication styles—Dominance, Influence, Steadiness, Conscientiousness—to improve interpersonal effectiveness and reduce friction
Provides tools for staying in dialogue during high-stakes, emotionally charged conversations where opinions differ and the outcome matters
Distills people skills into practical principles of genuine interest, positive reinforcement, and respect to build lasting influence
Proposes a cognitive limit of roughly 150 stable social relationships, with nested layers of 5, 15, and 50 for closer ties
Structures communication planning around Format, Audience, Channel, and Experience to ensure message delivery matches receiver context
Wraps constructive criticism between two positive observations to make developmental feedback more palatable and actionable
Analyzes every message along four simultaneous dimensions: factual content, self-revelation, relationship signal, and appeal to the receiver
Demonstrates that how information is presented—gain vs. loss framing—significantly alters audience decisions independent of underlying facts
Argues that inspiring communicators start with why they exist before explaining how and what they do, triggering deeper audience resonance
Proposes four conversational maxims—quantity, quality, relation, manner—that speakers implicitly follow to communicate cooperatively
Prescribes four qualities that underpin speaking that people want to listen to, extending beyond mere clarity to character
Maps a universal story arc—call, departure, trials, transformation, return—that makes narratives deeply resonant across cultures
Applies the Japanese reason-for-being concept to communicate purpose at the intersection of passion, skill, societal need, and vocation
Maps self-awareness and mutual understanding through four quadrants of open, blind, hidden, and unknown information between self and others
Advocates for simplicity and brevity in communication, removing unnecessary complexity to improve clarity and comprehension
Adapts the grief cycle to organizational change communication, guiding messages that meet audiences at each stage of the transition
Illustrates how language moves from concrete sensory data up through increasingly abstract concepts, helping communicators choose the right level
Structures communication top-down by leading with the key message and supporting it with grouped, logical evidence rather than building to a conclusion
Organizes communication strategy around one overarching message, three supporting pillars, and proof points to ensure consistent, on-brand delivery
Provides a structured writing approach that opens with situation and complication, poses a question, and delivers a clear answer with supporting logic
Organizes persuasive speeches through five steps—attention, need, satisfaction, visualization, action—to move audiences from engagement to commitment
Explains how policy debates are shaped by competing narratives with heroes, villains, and plots, making narrative analysis a tool for political communication
Describes how immersion in a compelling story reduces counterarguing and shifts beliefs, explaining the persuasive power of storytelling
Connects communicators to their own and others' needs and feelings through four steps: observation, feeling, need, and request
Applies the military Observe-Orient-Decide-Act cycle to communication strategy, accelerating message adaptation faster than the audience's responses
Contextualizes communication planning by anchoring every piece to its intent, target reader, form, and reader expectations
Structures written paragraphs with a Point, Evidence, Explanation, and Link to ensure each paragraph advances a coherent argument
Delivers concise verbal or written responses by stating the point, giving reasons, illustrating with examples, and restating the conclusion
Defines effective feedback as the combination of caring personally about individuals while challenging them directly with honest assessments
Identifies the exigence, audience, and constraints that define a communicative situation and shape what kind of response is appropriate
Organizes ideas into groups of three—the smallest number that creates a satisfying pattern—to improve memorability and rhetorical punch
Delivers specific, actionable feedback by grounding it in an observed situation, concrete behavior, and its measurable impact
Structures communication by establishing stable context, introducing a disruption, posing the resulting question, and providing the answer
Adapts message content, tone, and channel to the specific context, relationship, and communication needs of the situation
Forces communicators to articulate the practical relevance and implication of every point they make, eliminating information that adds no value
Matches the right message, channel, timing, and frequency to each stakeholder group based on their interests and influence level
Structures behavioral responses or case narratives around context, the role played, the action taken, and its measurable outcome
Generates well-structured stories through a fill-in-the-blank spine: 'once upon a time... until finally...' that enforces narrative causality
Organizes written or spoken communication by stating the answer first, then supporting it with mutually exclusive, collectively exhaustive reasoning
Decomposes arguments into claim, grounds, warrant, backing, qualifier, and rebuttal to build logically rigorous and contestable cases
Views communication as simultaneous sending and receiving by both parties, with noise affecting the shared meaning they construct together
Distributes a narrative across multiple platforms—each contributing uniquely—to create a richer, participatory audience experience
Establishes five meta-communicational axioms, including that one cannot not communicate and that all communication has content and relationship levels
№ 06 Category
Military Communication
Delivers a complete combat mission briefing across Situation, Mission, Execution, Administration/Logistics, and Command/Signal paragraphs
Standardizes medical evacuation requests through nine sequentially transmitted data fields covering location, patient count, urgency, and pickup conditions
Provides a rapid status update after a contact or phase of operations covering the three critical combat resource categories
Formats a fire control order to direct and coordinate small-unit direct fire engagements efficiently under pressure
Systematically examines what was planned, what happened, and why after any military or organizational event to drive continuous learning
Prescribes rehearsed, automatic reactions to common battlefield triggers, enabling teams to respond effectively without waiting for orders
Schedules recurring meetings, reports, and decision events into a regular operational cycle to synchronize command, control, and intelligence activities
Provides a simplified two-card framework for controlling when forces are authorized to engage, distinguishing peacetime rules from conflict rules of engagement
Leads every message with the key conclusion or recommendation before context and supporting detail, optimizing reader comprehension and time
Marks the light thresholds used in military planning to synchronize operations exploiting low-visibility conditions at dawn and dusk
Scores potential targets on Criticality, Accessibility, Recuperability, Vulnerability, Effect, and Recognizability to prioritize attack or protection
Standardizes the nine data elements transmitted from ground forces to aircraft to coordinate safe and accurate close air support strikes
Generates, analyzes, war-games, and recommends alternative maneuver plans during military decision-making to select the best option
Defines the specific information a commander must have to make timely, quality decisions at key points in an operation
Communicates the desired end state and the purpose of a mission so subordinates can take initiative when conditions change unexpectedly
Provides all commanders at all echelons a single, shared display of relevant battlefield information to synchronize situational awareness
Describes how a commander intends to accomplish a mission in broad terms, linking strategic guidance to operational execution
Cycles targeting through four phases to ensure fires and effects are directed against the right targets at the right time
Scores course of action options against weighted criteria to provide commanders with a structured basis for comparing alternatives
Guides a commander's logical analysis of mission, enemy, terrain, troops, and time to reach a decision
Amends an existing operations order with only the changes necessary to adjust to new information, preserving time and radio bandwidth
Structures tactical reports with situational awareness across four categories to enable rapid commander assessment
Systematically analyzes the threat, terrain, and weather to develop intelligence products that support the commander's decision-making
Provides a seven-phase structured approach for joint force commanders to develop, analyze, and select operational plans
Guides staff through mission receipt, course of action development, war-gaming, comparison, and recommendation to support commander decisions
Analyzes six key factors that shape every tactical decision, ensuring all mission variables are considered before planning
Decentralizes authority by providing clear intent and letting subordinates determine the best execution approach, enabling faster action than top-down control
Provides a concise periodic summary of operational activity, status, and key events to higher headquarters for situational awareness
Pre-plans four communication methods in priority order so units can maintain contact when primary means fail
Standardizes enemy observation reports using six elements to ensure all tactically relevant information is captured and transmitted
Uses a physical or digital terrain model to brief plans and orient subordinate leaders through a visual, three-dimensional representation
Provides a periodic formatted update on unit location, current activity, enemy contact, and administrative status to higher command
Organizes the five-paragraph operations order format used by US and allied militaries to brief and execute combat operations
Sends an immediate formatted report of a significant observation—contact, obstacle, NBC hazard—using a concise, standardized structure
Establishes NATO standardization agreements for communication procedures, formats, and equipment ensuring interoperability among allied forces
Aligns all battlefield activities, effects, and resources against time and terrain on a single planning tool to ensure coordinated execution
Standardizes the format and content of intelligence reports within NATO to ensure consistent, interoperable intelligence sharing among allies
Issues advance notice of an upcoming mission or task, giving subordinates time to prepare before the full operations order arrives
Provides the structured template for a warning order, alerting units to an impending mission with enough detail to begin preparation
№ 07 Category
Consulting
Plots any two dimensions against each other to create four quadrants that clarify trade-offs, priorities, or typologies for client discussions
Anchors strategic diagnosis in a triangulation of the firm's capabilities, what customers value, and what competitors offer
Adds deal setup and deal design to conventional tactics as two additional negotiation dimensions that determine whether a deal is possible
Diagnoses business challenges across four operational dimensions to ensure solutions address root causes in structure and capability
Extends the 3C framework with collaborators and context to provide a fuller environmental scan for strategic decision-making
Guides problem-solving through five lenses: situation context, binding constraints, evaluation criteria, solution candidates, and key consequences
Guides teams from problem definition and disaggregation through prioritized analysis and hypothesis testing to a synthesized recommendation
Focuses attention on the roughly 20% of causes or inputs that drive roughly 80% of effects or outputs to maximize impact
Combines Ansoff growth options with BCG portfolio logic to guide growth direction and portfolio resource allocation simultaneously
Categorizes business units by market growth rate and relative share into stars, cash cows, dogs, and question marks to inform portfolio decisions
Compares performance, processes, or products against best-in-class internal or external reference points to identify improvement opportunities
Provides a four-part business diagnosis lens used in case interviews to systematically explore performance shortfalls
Measures barriers to international expansion across four distance dimensions to predict the difficulty of cross-border operations
Assesses a target's market position, competitive dynamics, and growth prospects during M&A to validate or challenge the investment thesis
Defines a consulting engagement through four linked elements—issue, client, approach, and output—to align expectations at the outset
Structures consulting interventions by first diagnosing root causes, defining targeted actions, and establishing measurement to validate impact
Designs the entire consulting engagement—scope, deliverables, governance, team, timeline, and pricing—on a single visual planning canvas
Evaluates business units across a nine-cell grid of industry attractiveness and competitive strength to inform invest, hold, or divest decisions
Starts with a clearly stated hypothesis rather than an open question, focusing analytical effort on proving or disproving specific answers
Decomposes a complex problem into an exhaustive and mutually exclusive hierarchy of sub-issues to structure analysis and ensure no gaps
Guides post-merger integration by sequencing workstreams—culture, systems, operations, people—to capture synergies while managing transition risk
Evaluates market attractiveness, entry barriers, competitive position, and go-to-market approach to assess the viability of entering a new market
Aligns seven organizational elements—strategy, structure, systems, skills, staff, style, and shared values—to diagnose and drive organizational change
Divides strategic activity into three time horizons—defending the core, nurturing emerging businesses, and seeding future options
Requires that analytical categories cover all possibilities without overlap, ensuring structurally rigorous and complete problem decomposition
Quantifies, qualifies, and tracks the revenue and cost synergies expected from a merger to support valuation and hold management accountable post-close
Visualizes how an organization delivers its value proposition through a canvas of capabilities, processes, governance, technology, and organization
Evaluates three pricing approaches—cost-plus, value-to-customer, and competitive parity—to recommend an optimal pricing strategy
Redefines an ambiguous business challenge into a precise, solvable problem statement before any analytical work begins
Disaggregates profit into revenue and cost drivers across a logic tree to identify which specific factor explains a performance change
Structures communication top-down by leading with the key message and supporting it with logically grouped, evidence-based sub-points
Investigates the fundamental cause of a problem—not its symptoms—to prevent recurrence through targeted corrective action
Links market structure to firm conduct to industry performance, providing a classic framework for antitrust and competitive analysis
Presents findings by establishing the situation, introducing a complication, posing the key question, and delivering the answer
Forces consultants to articulate the significance, rationale, and implementation path behind every analytical finding before presenting it
Plots stakeholders on axes of power and interest to prioritize engagement strategies from monitor to manage closely
Pairs a SWOT inventory with TOWS strategic option generation to convert an internal-external audit into actionable strategic directions
Sequences a corporate recovery through cash stabilization, strategic repositioning, operational restructuring, and organizational renewal
Disaggregates a firm's activities into primary and support categories to identify where competitive advantage or cost reduction can be achieved
Decomposes a top-line financial metric into its operational and commercial drivers to identify which levers most influence overall business performance
Identifies gaps between a product or service's theoretical customer value and the value actually captured through pricing and delivery
№ 08 Category
Product Management
Tracks a product's growth funnel across five stages from first user contact to active referral to identify the weakest conversion point
Organizes growth strategies around four sequential value-creation arcs that a product must progress through to achieve sustainable scale
Inventories the riskiest assumptions underlying a product strategy and ranks them by impact and uncertainty to guide the order of experimentation
Drives iterative product development by rapidly building minimum viable tests, measuring results, and learning before committing to full development
Wraps iterative development cycles with explicit risk assessment at each spiral, scaling planning rigor to the severity of identified risks
Provides a systematic product design interview framework covering Comprehend, Identify, Report, Cut, List, Evaluate, and Summarize
Embeds weekly touchpoints with customers, opportunity mapping, and assumption testing as recurring habits rather than episodic research events
Tests business model assumptions with potential customers through four phases—discover, validate, create, build—before scaling
Visualizes every touchpoint a customer has with a product or service across their full lifecycle to surface pain points and improvement opportunities
Assigns clear decision roles to every stakeholder in a product decision, reducing bottlenecks and preventing ambiguity about who has final say
Specifies four qualities that distinguish a healthy, actionable product backlog from a disorganized list of wishes
Compresses design, prototype, and user testing into a five-day structured process to answer critical product questions before committing to development
Runs discovery and delivery work in parallel continuous tracks, ensuring validated insights consistently feed the development pipeline
Separates agile work into a discovery track validating solutions and a delivery track building validated ones, keeping learning ahead of building
Measures startup performance through conversion and retention metrics that expose the true health of customer acquisition and retention funnels
Maps product development items into features, the components they require, and the dependencies between them to improve planning accuracy
Deploys code behind toggles that allow gradual rollout, A/B testing, and instant rollback of features without redeployment
Assesses product-market fit across four interconnected dimensions—product, channel, revenue model, and market—that must align for sustainable growth
Organizes product planning in a four-layer hierarchy from long-horizon goals down to day-level tasks, keeping strategy and execution connected
Defines the launch strategy for a product covering target segment, value proposition, channels, pricing, and sales motion
Provides a five-dimension user experience measurement model for evaluating product quality at scale
Prioritizes product experiments and features by multiplying three scores—anticipated impact, confidence in that estimate, and ease of implementation
Links business goals to actors, their behaviors, and supporting deliverables in a mind-map format to align stakeholders on scope and rationale
Plots potential initiatives on axes of expected impact and implementation effort to quickly identify quick wins and deprioritize low-value heavy lifts
Reframes user stories around the situational trigger and desired outcome using the template 'When... I want to... So I can...'
Frames customer behavior around underlying progress the customer is trying to make, rather than product features or demographics
Classifies product attributes as basic, performance, or delighter features to prioritize development investments based on their effect on customer satisfaction
Adapts the Business Model Canvas for startups by swapping business-facing blocks for problem, solution, unfair advantage, and key metrics
Applies lean manufacturing principles—eliminate waste, amplify learning, decide late—to reduce development cycle time and improve product-market fit
Ranks requirements as Must have, Should have, Could have, or Won't have to drive scope decisions within a fixed time and budget
Identifies a single metric that best captures the value a product delivers to users and aligns the entire team around growing it
Organizes the product roadmap into three time horizons—current sprint commitments, near-term bets, and future possibilities—without false date precision
Sets ambitious product objectives and tracks progress through measurable key results on a quarterly cadence to maintain focus and alignment
Visually connects a product outcome to discovered opportunities, possible solutions, and the experiments needed to validate them
Defines goal-setting criteria for continuous personal or product goals that emphasize ongoing effort over fixed end-state outcomes
Distinguishes between demographic-based personas and progress-focused JTBD to help teams choose the appropriate framing for their product decisions
Scores optimization opportunities by their improvement potential, how important the page or flow is, and how easy the test is to run
Documents the purpose, features, user stories, constraints, and success metrics for a product or feature before development begins
Drafts a fictional future press release and FAQ for a proposed product to clarify the customer problem and desired outcome before building
Adapts Toyota Kata for product teams, using iterative challenge, current state, target condition, and experiment cycles to drive improvement
Captures the product vision, target group, user needs, key features, and business goals on one page to align product teams and stakeholders
Treats the product itself as the primary acquisition, conversion, and retention engine, reducing reliance on sales and marketing
Validates that a product satisfies strong market demand through behavioral signals like retention curves, NPS, and the Sean Ellis survey threshold
Structures digital marketing and product analytics around four customer lifecycle stages from initial discovery to loyal advocacy
Prioritizes product features by dividing the product of Reach, Impact, and Confidence by Effort to generate a comparable priority score
Applies weighted scoring or ranking methods to select and sequence product investments that best serve strategic goals and customer needs
Measures product-market fit by surveying users on how disappointed they'd be if the product disappeared, with 40% being the fit threshold
Organizes product development into six-week cycles with two-week cooldowns, using detailed pitches and explicit bets to scope fixed-time work
Organizes autonomous cross-functional squads within tribes, with chapters and guilds providing functional alignment across the matrix
Arranges user stories along a horizontal activity narrative and vertical priority axis to plan releases that deliver complete user experiences
Compares the strategic value of potential initiatives against their implementation effort to prioritize the highest-leverage work first
Ranks alternatives by assigning importance weights to criteria and summing criterion scores to produce a defensible, comparable priority ranking
Starts product development by drafting the customer-facing press release and FAQ to ensure the right problem is being solved before writing code
№ 09 Category
Design
Organizes UX design from strategy and scope through structure, skeleton, and surface to connect user needs to visual interface decisions
Stages an organization's progress toward inclusive digital design across five maturity levels from unaware to optimized
Clusters qualitative data—observations, ideas, feedback—into thematic groups to surface patterns and insights from large volumes of unstructured input
Builds UI systems from atoms through molecules, organisms, templates, and pages, enabling consistent, scalable component-based design
Reveals users' mental models by asking them to categorize labeled cards, informing information architecture and navigation design decisions
Applies principles of hue, saturation, value, and color relationships to guide aesthetically effective and emotionally appropriate color choices
Plans the creation, delivery, and governance of useful, usable content to meet both user needs and organizational goals
Organizes design process into two diverge-converge diamonds—discover-define and develop-deliver—ensuring problems are right before solutions are built
Holds designers accountable for the impact of their work, asserting that every design decision is an act with ethical consequences
Scales organizational design capability across five levels from producers to visionaries, guiding investment in design as a strategic function
Establishes a set of guiding values and criteria that shape every product decision, ensuring coherence and alignment across a design team
Compresses design, prototype, and user testing into a five-day structured process to answer critical product questions before committing to development
Provides a shared library of reusable UI components, patterns, and guidelines that ensure visual and functional consistency across a product portfolio
Evaluates innovations at the intersection of what users want, what technology enables, and what the business can sustain
Defines good design as innovative, useful, aesthetic, understandable, unobtrusive, honest, long-lasting, thorough, environmentally friendly, and minimal
Analyzes user emotional responses to design at three levels—immediate sensory, interaction effectiveness, and meaning and identity
Captures what target users say, think, do, and feel to build a shared team understanding of user needs, motivations, and frustrations
Visualizes a user's end-to-end journey across time and touchpoints, including their actions, thoughts, emotions, and opportunities for improvement
Predicts that the time to reach a target depends on its size and distance, guiding placement and sizing of interactive UI elements
Explains behavior as the convergence of motivation, ability, and a prompt, guiding designers to remove friction and time cues appropriately
Apply perceptual psychology rules—proximity, similarity, continuity, closure, figure-ground—to visual design to improve grouping and comprehension
Identifies the most common, frictionless sequence of steps through a product that leads users to key value moments
Applies the ~1.618 proportion found in nature and classical art to design layouts, typography, and composition for visually harmonious results
Audits interface usability against ten expert principles—visibility, feedback, consistency, error prevention, and more—without live user testing
Builds habit-forming products through a four-stage cycle of trigger, action, variable reward, and investment
Places people at the center of every design decision through deep empathy, iterative prototyping, and validation with the people being designed for
Applies IDEO's five-stage non-linear process to solve complex human problems through empathy-driven iteration
Organizes, labels, and structures content within digital products to help users find information and complete tasks efficiently
States that users expect a product to work like sites they already know, since they spend most time on other products
Applies JTBD thinking to product and UX design by anchoring every design decision to the underlying progress users are trying to achieve
Integrates UX practice into agile delivery by prioritizing collaborative outcomes, lightweight documentation, and rapid experiment-driven learning
Aligns the user's internal representation of how something works with the designer's model, minimizing mismatches that cause confusion
Describes the capacity of working memory as approximately seven items, guiding information chunking and interface complexity decisions
Designs for the smallest screen and slowest connection first, then progressively enhances the experience for larger viewports and faster networks
Designs around the objects users care about—their nouns—rather than workflows, producing more consistent and learnable interfaces
Applies research showing people judge experiences by peak intensity and ending, guiding designers to craft memorable highs and strong finishes
Creates fictional but research-grounded user archetypes representing distinct goal clusters to guide design decisions and maintain user focus
Reveals information and options incrementally to reduce cognitive load and complexity, surfacing advanced features only when users need them
Constructs lightweight hypothesis-based user archetypes when research time is limited, to be refined as real user data becomes available
Adapts layout, typography, and media using fluid grids and CSS media queries to render appropriately across any screen size
Generates design ideas by applying seven prompts—Substitute, Combine, Adapt, Modify, Put to other uses, Eliminate, Reverse—to an existing concept
Maps frontstage and backstage service processes, including touchpoints, employee actions, and supporting systems, to design seamless service experiences
Applies design thinking methods to the design and improvement of end-to-end services, treating all channels and actors as an integrated system
Organizes product development into six-week cycles with explicit pitches and bets, using fat marker sketches to scope work without over-specifying
Accelerates design refinement through rapid iteration cycles from low-fidelity sketches to prototypes tested with real users
Addresses the architecture of large-scale software or service systems by defining components, interfaces, data flows, and scalability considerations
States that complexity cannot be removed from a system but only redistributed, forcing designers to decide who should bear it
Organizes visual information on a modular grid based on typographic baselines and column structures to achieve clarity and visual rhythm
Prescribes that products and environments be equitable, flexible, simple, perceptible, fault-tolerant, low-effort, and appropriately sized for all users
Defines seven facets of information architecture quality—useful, usable, desirable, findable, accessible, credible, valuable—as criteria for user experience
Maps product features and benefits against customer jobs, pains, and gains to validate and design compelling value propositions
Predicts that the item standing out from its group is best remembered, guiding use of contrast to highlight key UI elements
Provides international standards for web content accessibility organized around four principles—perceivable, operable, understandable, robust
Describes that perception of stimulus change is proportional to its relative magnitude, informing spacing, sizing, and animation in interfaces
№ 10 Category
Systems Thinking
States that a controller must have at least as much variety as the system it regulates, establishing the fundamental limit of control
Uses the filling and draining bathtub metaphor to build intuition about how accumulations and flows behave in any dynamic system
Demonstrates through a supply chain simulation how small demand fluctuations amplify into large inventory swings as information travels upstream
Distinguishes five nested system functions—operations, coordination, control, intelligence, and policy—that any viable organization must maintain
Exposes the ethical and political implications of where analysts draw system boundaries, which determines whose values and interests are included
Maps feedback loops and causal relationships as a network of arrows showing reinforcing and balancing dynamics driving system behavior
Applies the science of sensitive dependence on initial conditions and strange attractors to understand unpredictability in complex organizational systems
Models how system outputs feed back as inputs through negative or positive loops that either stabilize or amplify behavior over time
Studies systems composed of interacting adaptive agents—like markets or ecosystems—that self-organize and produce emergent behavior
Examines organizations as complex systems at the edge of order and chaos where small interventions can produce disproportionate emergent effects
Proves that every good regulator of a system must contain a model of that system, establishing the theoretical basis for model-based management
Provides mathematical tools for designing feedback controllers that regulate dynamic systems to desired states despite disturbances and uncertainty
Studies communication and control in animals and machines, founding the science of regulatory feedback loops in biological and engineered systems
Classifies situations into five domains—clear, complicated, complex, chaotic, confused—to match appropriate decision and management approaches
Ranks twelve intervention types by power to change system behavior, from parameter tweaks at the bottom to paradigm shifts at the top
Defines a safe and just space for humanity between a social foundation of human needs and an ecological ceiling of planetary boundaries
Measures and compares systems using energy flows as a common currency, linking ecological and economic processes in unified accounts
Identifies and characterizes reinforcing and balancing feedback loops within a system to predict dynamic behavior and design effective interventions
Describes organizational decision-making as the random collision of problems, solutions, participants, and choice opportunities in a 'garbage can'
Proposes universal principles that apply to all systems—biological, social, mechanical—seeking isomorphisms across disciplines
Applies quantitative modeling and optimization to well-defined problems with clear goals and measurable variables in engineering and operations
Explains how complex systems are nearly decomposable into nested hierarchical levels, enabling approximate analysis of each level independently
Recognizes every entity as simultaneously a whole and a part of something larger, requiring both-and rather than either-or systems thinking
Reveals that visible events are supported by underlying patterns, structures, and mental models that must be addressed for sustainable change
Quantifies interdependencies between economic sectors by tracking how industries use each other's outputs as inputs in a matrix model
Guides system dynamics practitioners in selecting, designing, and testing interventions that produce desired behavioral changes in complex systems
Integrates ecological, psychological, and spiritual dimensions of systems thinking to mobilize personal and collective action for planetary wellbeing
Describes society as self-reproducing communication systems that operate through coded distinctions, with no role for individual actors inside the system
Studies systems capable of fundamental structural transformation, distinguishing metamorphic change from incremental adaptation or mere growth
Identifies eight principles governing successful long-lived common-pool resource institutions, challenging the inevitability of the tragedy of the commons
Models ecosystems and social-ecological systems as nested adaptive cycles of growth, conservation, release, and reorganization across scales
Extends open systems thinking by treating system boundaries as permeable, dynamic, and negotiated rather than fixed and given
Defines organizational levels by the time-span of discretion in roles, arguing accountability and authority must match to avoid dysfunction
Shifts safety focus from avoiding failure to building the capacity to absorb disruptions, adapt, and recover quickly in complex sociotechnical systems
Creates an informal, holistic diagram of a messy problem situation including actors, relationships, conflicts, and concerns to foster shared understanding
Addresses complex, human-centered problems through an iterative learning cycle that compares rich-picture reality with conceptual models to define improvement
Argues that a system's true purpose is revealed by its actual outputs and behavior, not its stated goals or intentions
Translates a causal loop diagram into a quantitative model with explicit accumulations and rates to simulate system behavior over time
Builds computer simulation models of complex systems using stocks, flows, and feedback loops to understand non-linear behavior and test policies
Catalogs recurring generic feedback structures that underlie common organizational problems, enabling pattern recognition and leverage identification
Predicts adoption of new technology based on perceived usefulness and ease of use, informing sociotechnical system design and implementation
Describes how individually rational resource use collectively depletes shared commons, motivating governance regimes from privatization to community management
Provides a set of twelve boundary questions to make explicit the normative assumptions underlying systems designs and plans
Diagrams the five interacting regulatory systems—operations, coordination, control, intelligence, policy—required for any organization to remain viable
Characterizes complex social problems as wicked—ill-defined, interdependent, and having no definitive solution—requiring adaptive rather than technical responses
Simulates interactions between population, food production, industrial output, pollution, and resources to project long-term global sustainability scenarios
№ 11 Category
Psychology & Behavioral Science
Demonstrates that emotional consequences stem from beliefs about activating events, not events themselves, forming the basis of cognitive behavioral therapy
Links specific workplace events through emotional reactions to work attitudes and behaviors, explaining within-person variation in performance
Identifies four neuroscience-based conditions that must be present for information to transfer from working memory into long-term storage
Describes how early caregiver relationships shape internal working models that influence emotional regulation and relationships throughout life
Explains why people's stated attitudes often fail to predict their actual behavior, identifying intervening situational and social factors
Examines how people explain the causes of behavior and events as either internal or external, stable or unstable, controllable or uncontrollable
Structures the creation of products and services that successfully change user behavior using a CREATE Action Funnel informed by behavioral science
Explains behavior as learned responses to environmental stimuli and consequences, rejecting unobservable mental states as legitimate scientific explanations
Describes personality along five empirically derived dimensions—openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism—with strong cross-cultural validity
Applies systems thinking to families, treating emotional functioning as governed by relational processes of differentiation, triangulation, and fusion
Designs decision environments—default settings, ordering, framing—to predictably influence choices without restricting options or changing incentives
Treats psychological problems by identifying and restructuring the distorted thoughts and maladaptive behaviors that maintain them
Explains the psychological discomfort of holding contradictory beliefs and the motivated reasoning people use to resolve the tension
Diagnoses behavior change challenges by identifying which of three necessary conditions—capability, opportunity, motivation—is the binding constraint
Links psychological distance—temporal, spatial, social, hypothetical—to how abstractly or concretely people think, affecting judgment and choice
Demonstrates the disproportionate influence of the status quo option when choices are framed with a preset default, informing choice architecture design
Distinguishes fast, automatic, emotional thinking from slow, deliberate, analytical reasoning and examines when each mode dominates
Proposes that self-control draws on a limited resource that is exhausted by use, leading to diminished willpower for subsequent tasks
Describes two routes to persuasion—central effortful processing and peripheral cue-based processing—each producing different degrees of attitude change
Catalogs strategies—reappraisal, suppression, situation selection—people use to influence the type, intensity, and duration of their emotional experiences
Explains motivation as the product of expectancy, instrumentality, and valence, predicting effort when people believe effort will lead to valued outcomes
Presents simple decision rules that exploit environmental structure to produce surprisingly accurate and efficient judgments under uncertainty
Describes optimal experience as a state of deep absorption occurring when skill and challenge are in balance, generating intrinsic motivation
Explains behavior as the simultaneous intersection of sufficient motivation, ability, and a timely prompt, providing a diagnostic for behavior change
Classifies people by how they respond to inner and outer expectations into four types—Upholder, Questioner, Obliger, Rebel—to personalize motivation
Documents the tendency to over-attribute others' behavior to character while under-attributing to situation, with opposite bias for one's own behavior
Grounds offender rehabilitation in helping individuals build positive human goods rather than merely managing deficits and risks
Describes the phenomenon where subjects improve behavior when they know they are being observed, complicating measurement in organizational and psychological research
Arranges human motivations into a five-tier pyramid from physiological survival through safety, belonging, esteem, to self-actualization
Contrasts the idealized rational actor of classical economics with the empirically documented biased, social, and emotional actual human being
Describes the tendency to prefer smaller sooner rewards over larger later ones at a rate that declines hyperbolically, explaining present-bias in decision-making
Argues that durable habits are built by shifting identity—'I am a person who...'—rather than focusing on outcomes or processes alone
Converts abstract intentions into concrete behavioral plans by specifying when, where, and how a goal-directed behavior will be performed
Pre-exposes people to weakened forms of persuasive attacks to build resistance against stronger future influence attempts
Maps the emotional journey through denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance experienced after major loss or disruptive change
Documents that losses loom roughly twice as large as equivalent gains in subjective experience, explaining risk-averse and endowment effects
Describes how people assign money to separate mental budget categories and treat it differently based on source, purpose, and framing
Combines positive fantasy about a goal with an honest appraisal of obstacles and a specific if-then implementation plan to boost goal achievement
Distinguishes factors that cause satisfaction (motivators) from those that cause dissatisfaction (hygiene factors), requiring separate management strategies
Uses choice architecture to steer behavior in beneficial directions without restricting options, leveraging default effects, social norms, and framing
Defines wellbeing through five measurable elements—positive emotion, engagement, relationships, meaning, accomplishment—that contribute independently to flourishing
Strengthens desired behaviors by immediately following them with a positive stimulus, forming the foundation of operant conditioning applications
Describes how people evaluate gains and losses relative to a reference point, exhibiting loss aversion and diminishing sensitivity to outcomes
Measures the team climate in which members feel safe to speak up, take risks, and admit mistakes without fear of interpersonal punishment
Documents how higher expectations from leaders or teachers lead to improved performance in those they supervise, creating a self-fulfilling prophecy
Predicts that when people perceive their freedom to choose is threatened, they are motivated to reassert that freedom by doing the opposite
Identifies five social domains—status, certainty, autonomy, relatedness, fairness—that trigger threat or reward responses affecting collaboration and performance
Grounds intrinsic motivation in three universal psychological needs—autonomy, competence, and relatedness—that must be satisfied for wellbeing
Explains that people's belief in their ability to execute required behaviors strongly predicts performance, persistence, and motivation in any domain
Measures individual differences in the need for novel, complex, and intense stimulation and willingness to take risks to obtain it
Explains behavior as shaped by the interplay of personal, environmental, and behavioral factors through observation, self-regulation, and self-efficacy
Explains how group membership shapes self-concept and drives in-group favoritism and out-group discrimination through social comparison processes
Describes how people look to others' behavior as a cue for their own actions, especially under uncertainty, creating powerful conformity effects
Maps intentional change across five stages—precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance—to match interventions to readiness
Proposes that awareness of mortality motivates individuals to invest in cultural worldviews and self-esteem as symbolic buffers against death anxiety
Describes the cognitive ability to attribute mental states—beliefs, desires, intentions—to others and understand that they may differ from one's own
Predicts deliberate behavior from intention, which is shaped by attitudes toward the behavior, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control
Classifies conflict-handling styles on axes of assertiveness and cooperativeness into competing, collaborating, compromising, avoiding, and accommodating
Analyzes interpersonal communication through the lens of three ego states—Parent, Adult, Child—to identify dysfunctional patterns and enable healthier transactions
Distinguishes motivating factors that drive satisfaction from hygiene factors that merely prevent dissatisfaction, requiring separate management approaches
Identifies source credibility, message characteristics, and audience factors as determinants of persuasion, grounding attitude change in social learning
№ 12 Category
Learning & Development
Designs instruction for complex learning by integrating learning tasks, supportive information, procedural information, and part-task practice
Organizes instruction around four learning preferences—concrete experience, reflective observation, abstract conceptualization, active experimentation—in a cyclic sequence
Suggests professional development is most effective when roughly 70% comes from challenging work, 20% from others, and 10% from formal training
Simulates human cognitive processes as procedural and declarative memory systems interacting to produce skilled performance over practice
Develops leaders by having small groups tackle real organizational problems together, reflecting on both task progress and interpersonal learning
Identifies six principles distinguishing adult learners—self-direction, experience, readiness, problem-orientation, internal motivation, need to know—to guide L&D design
Identifies four neuroscience-based conditions that must be present for information to transfer from working memory into long-term storage
Distinguishes teacher-directed child learning from self-directed adult learning across six dimensions to guide appropriate instructional strategies
Develops expert writing and thinking by making implicit knowledge explicit through structured articulation of reasoning during task performance
Arranges cognitive learning objectives in six hierarchical levels from basic recall to creative synthesis, guiding curriculum design and assessment
Structures coaching conversations through five stages: Contracting, Listening, Exploring, Action, and Review
Grounds coaching in the belief that clients are naturally creative and resourceful, building a partnership of fulfillment, balance, and process
Describes informal learning communities formed around a shared domain of practice that develop knowledge through participation and repertoire
Defines the knowledge, skills, abilities, and behaviors required for effective performance in a role, guiding hiring, development, and succession
Arranges learning experiences from abstract symbols at the top to direct concrete experience at the base, suggesting concrete experiences produce deeper learning
Holds that learners actively construct knowledge through experience and social interaction rather than passively receiving transmitted information
Achieves expert performance through effortful, focused practice at the edge of current ability with immediate expert feedback, not mere repetition
Describes five stages of skill development—novice, advanced beginner, competent, proficient, expert—each characterized by different cognitive strategies
Proposes that information encoded both verbally and visually is remembered more reliably, guiding multimedia instructional design
Sequences learning as a four-stage cycle—concrete experience, reflective observation, abstract conceptualization, active experimentation—that can be entered at any point
Enhances cognitive modifiability through a mediator who interposes between the learner and environment, providing intentional and transcendent learning experiences
Inverts traditional instruction so direct teaching is consumed at home via video, freeing class time for active application and discussion
Applies flow theory to learning environments by designing tasks that balance challenge and skill to sustain intrinsic motivation and deep engagement
Guides coaching conversations through framing the conversation, understanding the current state, exploring desired state, and laying out a path
Categorizes five types of learning outcomes and prescribes the instructional conditions—internal and external—that must be arranged to achieve each type
Structures coaching conversations through four stages: establishing a Goal, examining Reality, exploring Options, and committing to a Way forward
Contrasts the belief that abilities are fixed with the belief they can be developed, showing mindset significantly influences achievement and resilience
Develops critical thinking by centering instruction on students' own questions, investigations, and discovery rather than teacher-transmitted content
Organizes instructional design into five sequential phases—Analyze, Design, Develop, Implement, Evaluate—providing a systematic process for creating effective learning
Improves long-term retention and transfer by mixing different problem types or topics within a practice session rather than blocking them
Evaluates training effectiveness across four levels—reaction, learning, behavior, and results—to determine whether investment in L&D created real impact
Treats classroom communities as knowledge-creating organizations that advance collective understanding through discourse, not just individual learning
Represents the iterative cycle of experience, reflection, conceptualization, and experimentation that drives continuous improvement in individuals and organizations
Defines organizations that continuously expand capacity through five disciplines: systems thinking, personal mastery, mental models, shared vision, team learning
Encodes information by mentally placing it along a vividly imagined spatial route, exploiting spatial memory to dramatically improve recall
Identifies five universal principles of effective instruction: activation, demonstration, application, integration, and problem-centered learning
Delivers knowledge in small, focused, self-contained units optimized for just-in-time access and retention without cognitive overload
Designs learning experiences by aligning instruction with brain research on attention, memory consolidation, sleep, stress, and social learning
Applies behavioral economics nudges—defaults, prompts, social norms—to learning environments to improve participation, completion, and behavior change
Guides solution-focused coaching through Outcome, Scaling, Know-how, Affirm and Action, and Review to build on existing strengths
Provides just-in-time resources embedded in the workflow that help workers complete tasks correctly without requiring recall of trained content
Develops critical thinking and knowledge by engaging learners in authentic, complex problems before formal instruction on relevant concepts
Immerses students in extended, real-world projects that require applying knowledge, collaborating, and producing publicly meaningful products
Strengthens long-term memory by repeatedly testing learners on material rather than re-studying it, leveraging the testing effect
Applies agile principles to eLearning design through rapid prototype and review cycles that converge on effective instruction iteratively
Provides temporary adjustable support that enables learners to accomplish tasks beyond their independent ability, gradually withdrawn as competence grows
Describes knowledge creation as a spiral cycling through four conversion modes between tacit and explicit knowledge
Ensures goals are Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound to improve clarity, commitment, and tracking of intended outcomes
Explains that people learn by observing and modeling others' behavior, with self-efficacy and vicarious reinforcement playing critical roles
Dramatically improves long-term retention by distributing practice over time with expanding intervals rather than massing all study into one session
Guides coaching through Subject, Target, Emotion, Perception, Plan, Pace, and Action to address both rational and emotional dimensions of change
Applies agile development to eLearning by iteratively building, evaluating, and refining prototypes with stakeholder input throughout design
Describes professionals with deep expertise in one area (the vertical bar) and broad collaboration ability across many disciplines (the horizontal bar)
Classifies learning objectives into cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains to ensure instructional design addresses the full range of outcomes
Organizes curriculum around generative topics and understanding goals, with performances of understanding that demonstrate flexible thinking
Analyzes how and under what conditions skills and knowledge learned in one context are applied effectively in different real-world contexts
Defines the gap between independent learner ability and what they can achieve with guidance as the optimal target zone for instruction
№ 13 Category
Innovation
Categorizes innovation across ten dimensions from configuration through offering to experience, expanding the search space beyond product features
Divides innovation investment across three time horizons—core business, emerging opportunities, and future options—to balance exploitation and exploration
Guides how organizations leverage additive manufacturing to innovate supply chains, custom products, and on-demand production capabilities
Extends innovation framing beyond product to include process improvement, market repositioning, and business model paradigm shifts
Provides a systematic multi-step algorithm within TRIZ for resolving contradictions in technically complex inventive problems
Draws on 3.8 billion years of evolution to adapt nature's time-tested strategies into sustainable design and innovation solutions
Creates new market space rather than competing in existing markets by reconstructing industry boundaries through simultaneous differentiation and cost reduction
Grows innovation by orchestrating or participating in a broader ecosystem of partners, suppliers, and customers that co-create value
Models creative design as an expanding co-evolution between a space of concepts and a space of knowledge, enabling genuinely novel invention
Structures creative ideation through alternating divergent and convergent thinking phases across problem understanding, idea generation, and action planning
Guides creative problem-solving through Capacity, Role, Insight, Statement, Personality, and Experiment to reframe challenges and generate novel ideas
Uses fictional narratives, prototypes, and artifacts set in imagined futures to provoke critical thinking about the implications of emerging technologies
Positions design empathy and human-centered iteration as the primary driver of breakthrough innovation rather than technology push or market pull
Explains how, why, and at what rate new ideas spread through social systems, identifying innovators, early adopters, majority, and laggards
Provides a 24-step process for building a new venture from market segmentation through business model design to growth strategy
Explains how entrants with simpler, cheaper offerings initially serve overlooked segments and eventually displace incumbents from above
Evaluates and designs innovation across ten types spanning configuration, offering, and experience to avoid over-reliance on product-only innovation
Organizes design process into two diverge-converge phases—discover and define the right problem, then develop and deliver the right solution
Describes expert entrepreneurial logic as starting with available means and co-creating goals through stakeholder commitments rather than predicting and planning
Rebuilds assumptions about cost and feasibility from fundamental physics to reveal innovation opportunities that analogical thinking misses
Structures futures intelligence gathering around four scanning domains—technology, social, economic, political—to provide early warning of emerging change
Develops affordable, good-enough solutions for resource-constrained markets by stripping away non-essential features and simplifying design and production
Maps second- and third-order consequences of a trend by branching outward in a wheel diagram to identify systemic implications for strategic planning
Structures growth team experimentation as a disciplined cycle from collecting ideas through prioritization to running and learning from experiments
Drives innovation by deeply understanding human needs and iterating solutions through empathy, ideation, prototyping, and testing with users
Applies IDEO's five-stage human-centered innovation process to transform complex problems into desirable, feasible, and viable solutions
Plots innovation initiatives on a grid of market newness and offering newness to guide portfolio balance between core, adjacent, and transformational bets
Maps all actors, relationships, and enabling conditions in an innovation ecosystem to identify leverage points for orchestration and collaboration
Manages the pipeline from many early-stage ideas through staged gates of screening, development, and launch into a product portfolio
Assesses an organization's innovation capability across five maturity levels to identify gaps and prioritize investments in innovation infrastructure
Adapts the NASA TRL scale to assess how ready an organization is to bring a specific innovation from concept to market deployment
Applies JTBD theory at the strategic level to identify unmet demand, guide market creation, and outmaneuver competitors focused on product attributes
Structures outcome-driven innovation by mapping customer desired outcomes against current solution satisfaction to reveal the best opportunity spaces
Accelerates startup learning by building minimum viable products, measuring customer response, and pivoting or persevering based on validated learning
Identifies macro-level societal shifts that will shape future markets, informing long-horizon strategic positioning and innovation bets
Tests the riskiest assumptions behind an innovation idea with the least possible investment before committing to development or scaling
Releases the smallest possible version of a product that delivers core value and enables validated learning about the target customer
Observes that transistor density on chips doubles roughly every two years, enabling planners to anticipate exponential improvement trajectories in computing economics
Combines internal R&D with external knowledge flows—licensing in, spinning out, partnering—to accelerate innovation and improve returns on R&D investment
Links product development to the metrics customers use to measure success when completing a job, ensuring innovations target real unmet needs
Argues that more choices increase decision paralysis and dissatisfaction, guiding innovators to constrain options rather than maximize them
Designs platforms that enable third-party innovation on top of a core infrastructure, creating value through ecosystem participation and network effects
Builds quick, low-fidelity versions of ideas to gather feedback, test assumptions, and reduce the cost of learning before full investment
Develops frugal innovations for emerging markets first and then adapts them for developed markets, reversing the conventional innovation flow
Describes the typical slow-fast-slow growth trajectory of technology adoption and forecasts transition points where incumbent technologies should be replaced
Generates innovation ideas by systematically applying seven transformation verbs to an existing product, process, or service
Designs new products or processes to Six Sigma quality from the outset using Define, Measure, Analyze, Design, and Verify stages
Develops and scales novel solutions to social challenges that are more effective, efficient, and just than existing approaches
Uses design to create artifacts and scenarios from possible futures to provoke critical debate about current trajectories in technology and society
Manages new product development through a series of go/kill decision gates between defined stages, reducing risk while accelerating time to market
Applies Stanford's empathize-define-ideate-prototype-test process as a human-centered framework for tackling ill-defined challenges
Assesses technology maturity on a nine-level scale from basic principles observed through full operational deployment, guiding R&D investment decisions
Names the dispiriting distance between a beginner's taste and skill as a phase to persist through rather than a reason to quit
Holds that great startups are built on non-consensus truths—secrets about the world—that competitors don't yet see or believe
Divides organizational attention across three simultaneous time-horizon boxes: managing today's business, abandoning outdated practices, and creating the future
Provides a systematic methodology for technical innovation based on analysis of patents and inventive principles that resolve contradictions
Simultaneously pursues differentiation and low cost by identifying which industry factors to eliminate, reduce, raise, or create for a value-price leap
Structures the early stages of new venture creation through customer discovery, business model design, and iterative testing before scaling
№ 14 Category
Quality & Process Improvement
Organizes the physical and digital workspace through five Japanese disciplines that eliminate waste, reduce errors, and build a culture of discipline
Categorizes non-value-adding activities—transport, inventory, motion, waiting, overproduction, over-processing, defects—as targets for elimination
Guides cross-functional teams through eight disciplined steps from team formation through root cause analysis to permanent corrective action and prevention
Captures the full PDCA cycle of problem-solving on a single A3 sheet, forcing concise problem definition, analysis, countermeasures, and follow-up
Empowers any worker to stop a production line by signaling a defect or problem, making abnormalities visible and triggering immediate response
Extends ISO 9001 with aviation, space, and defense-specific requirements for safety, reliability, and configuration management
Radically redesigns core business processes from scratch to achieve dramatic improvements in cost, quality, speed, and customer service
Identifies root causes of nonconformities and implements both corrective actions to fix current issues and preventive actions to stop recurrence
Plots process output over time with statistical control limits to distinguish common cause variation from special cause signals requiring investigation
Incorporates reliability requirements into product design from the outset through analysis, testing, and failure mode mitigation before manufacturing
Combines lean speed principles with Six Sigma quality tools to design new products and processes that are both efficient and defect-free
Ensures new products or services are designed to meet customer requirements and achieve near-zero defects from the first production run
Designs new products or processes to Six Sigma quality standards by following five disciplined phases from customer definition to verification
Improves existing processes through five data-driven phases that systematically identify, address, and control the sources of defects and variation
Builds physical or digital mechanisms into processes that prevent mistakes from occurring or detect them immediately before they become defects
Identifies all potential failure modes in a product or process, assesses their severity, occurrence, and detectability, and prioritizes mitigation actions
Traces backward from an undesired top event through a logical tree of contributing causes to identify the root combinations that produce failure
Quantifies the variation contributed by a measurement system itself—repeatability within an operator and reproducibility across operators
Has leaders observe work where it actually happens to understand reality, identify waste, and engage with employees in continuous improvement
Establishes minimum requirements for the production and testing of pharmaceuticals, food, and other regulated products to ensure safety and quality
Smooths production volume and mix over time to reduce inventory, improve flow, and enable a stable, predictable manufacturing pace
Deploys breakthrough quality and operational objectives through the organization via the catch-ball process of aligned goal setting
Specifies quality management system requirements for automotive production and relevant service parts, building on ISO 9001 with industry-specific requirements
Provides requirements for a quality management system specific to the design, development, production, and servicing of medical devices
Specifies requirements for an environmental management system helping organizations improve environmental performance through efficient resource use
Sets requirements for occupational health and safety management systems to reduce workplace injuries, illness, and fatalities
Specifies requirements for a quality management system based on customer focus, leadership, process approach, and continual improvement
Provides best-practice guidance for IT service management across service strategy, design, transition, operation, and continual improvement
Builds human intelligence into machines so that processes stop automatically when a defect is detected, separating human work from machine monitoring
Drives continuous incremental improvement by engaging every employee in identifying and eliminating waste as a daily habit rather than a periodic event
Visualizes work on a board with limited work-in-progress per stage to expose bottlenecks and pull work at a sustainable pace
Provides a systematic decision and problem analysis process separating problem description, root cause analysis, decision analysis, and potential problem analysis
Eliminates all non-value-adding activities across the enterprise by applying the Toyota Production System principles of flow, pull, and perfection
Integrates lean waste elimination with Six Sigma statistical problem-solving to simultaneously improve speed, quality, and cost performance
Evaluates the entire measurement system—gauges, methods, operators, environment—to ensure data collected for analysis is reliable and valid
Evaluates the entire measurement system—gauges, methods, operators, environment—to ensure data collected for analysis is reliable and valid
Measures manufacturing productivity as the product of availability, performance, and quality to benchmark and improve equipment utilization
Drives continuous improvement through iterative Plan, Do, Check, Act cycles that test changes, analyze results, and institutionalize improvements
Quantifies how well a process produces output within specification limits relative to its natural variation, guiding process improvement priorities
Identifies potential failure modes in each manufacturing or service process step, assesses risk, and drives preventive action before production
Translates customer voice into engineering and production characteristics through a matrix—the house of quality—that cascades requirements through design
Provides the organizational structure, policies, processes, and resources required to consistently meet customer and regulatory quality requirements
Investigates the fundamental cause of a problem—not its symptoms—to prevent recurrence through targeted corrective action
Provides a high-level view of a process by mapping its key suppliers, inputs, activities, outputs, and customers before detailed analysis
Applies statistical methods and DMAIC structure to reduce defects to fewer than 3.4 per million opportunities by systematically eliminating variation
Designs new products or processes to Six Sigma quality from the outset using Define, Measure, Analyze, Design, Verify
Reduces equipment changeover time to under ten minutes by converting internal setup steps to external ones and streamlining the remainder
Uses control charts and statistical methods to monitor process stability and detect special causes before they produce defects
Designs products and processes that minimize quality variation and customer loss by optimizing tolerance and parameter settings through designed experiments
Maximizes equipment effectiveness by engaging all employees in proactive maintenance, eliminating the six big losses of manufacturing equipment
Embeds continuous improvement, customer focus, and employee involvement across every organizational process to achieve sustained quality outcomes
Visualizes the flow of materials and information required to deliver a product or service, exposing waste and the path to future-state improvement
Makes process status, standards, and abnormalities immediately visible to anyone in the workplace without needing to ask or report
Establishes the standard of performance as zero defects—not acceptable quality levels—and motivates through error cause removal rather than statistical tolerance
№ 15 Category
Operations
Classifies inventory items into A, B, and C categories by value to concentrate management attention on the highest-impact stock
Applies agile principles—iterative delivery, cross-functional teams, rapid adaptation—to non-software operational functions and service delivery
Calculates the uncommitted inventory available to commit to new customer orders, improving delivery promises and preventing over-commitment
Explains how small demand fluctuations amplify into large upstream inventory swings and guides policies that dampen the effect
Provides requirements for planning, implementing, and maintaining the capability to continue critical operations during and after disruptive incidents
Determines the production capacity needed by an organization to meet changing demands, balancing cost and service level trade-offs
Improves throughput by identifying and exploiting the bottleneck that limits a system's output before elevating it to increase total capacity
Identifies the longest sequence of dependent tasks in a project to determine the minimum completion time and where to focus schedule management
Eliminates warehousing by moving incoming shipments directly to outbound transport with minimal or no storage, reducing handling and inventory costs
Positions strategic buffers at decoupling points in the supply chain to protect and promote flow while responding to actual demand
Defines where in the supply chain make-to-stock transitions to make-to-order, balancing responsiveness and inventory investment
Applies statistical models, market intelligence, and collaborative planning to predict future customer demand for inventory and capacity decisions
Extends MRP logic to distribution networks, planning replenishment of warehouse and distribution center stock to meet demand
Calculates the optimal order quantity that minimizes total inventory costs by balancing ordering costs against holding costs
Designs the physical arrangement of equipment, workstations, and storage to minimize material flow, reduce waste, and improve throughput
Manages vehicle acquisition, maintenance, routing, and utilization to minimize total fleet cost while meeting service level requirements
Maps cross-border value-adding activities from conception to end consumer to inform trade strategy and economic development policy
Quantifies the probability of human error in complex systems to identify the most critical human performance risks and prioritize mitigation
Determines optimal stock levels across a network by balancing service levels against holding, ordering, and stockout costs using demand uncertainty models
Produces and delivers materials and products exactly when needed, eliminating buffer inventory and exposing operational problems for immediate resolution
Manages the final delivery step from distribution center to customer, which is the most expensive and complex segment of the supply chain
Extends lean manufacturing principles to all operational functions, eliminating waste and creating smooth, customer-value-driven flow
States that average items in a system equals throughput times average time in the system, enabling queue and capacity analysis
Evaluates whether to produce a product or component internally or purchase it externally based on cost, strategic fit, and capability considerations
Integrates production planning with financial and business planning to manage all manufacturing resources—material, capacity, and money—in a unified system
Determines the optimal configuration of supply chain nodes—factories, warehouses, distribution centers—to minimize cost while meeting service objectives
Determines the optimal order quantity for perishable or single-period inventory items by balancing overage and underage costs under demand uncertainty
Cascades organizational OKRs into operational teams to align daily work with strategic priorities and measure operational contribution to company goals
Integrates inventory, fulfillment, and customer experience across all physical and digital channels to enable seamless customer journeys
Applies the military Observe-Orient-Decide-Act cycle to operational decision-making, enabling faster adaptation than competitors in dynamic environments
Applies mathematical optimization methods—linear programming, simulation, queuing—to operational decisions to find the provably best solution
Focuses improvement effort on the vital few causes or items that account for the majority of effects, waste, or defects
Documents the detailed sequence, flow, and handoffs of a process to create a shared understanding and identify improvement opportunities
Estimates project duration using three-point estimates for each activity and calculates expected completion time with statistical confidence
Contrasts demand-triggered pull production with forecast-driven push, guiding decisions about which approach suits each supply chain segment
Models waiting lines mathematically to predict queue length, wait times, and server utilization under different arrival and service rate scenarios
Calculates the inventory level at which a replenishment order must be placed to avoid stockout given lead time demand and safety stock
Maximizes revenue from fixed capacity by dynamically adjusting prices and allocations based on demand patterns and customer segment willingness to pay
Validates that master production schedule demand can be met with available key resource capacity before detailed scheduling commences
Aligns demand and supply plans through a monthly cross-functional process that balances customer service with operational and financial constraints
Calculates and maintains buffer inventory to absorb demand and lead time variability, protecting service levels against uncertainty
Assigns jobs, tasks, or resources to time slots using optimization algorithms to minimize makespan, cost, or lateness subject to constraints
Maps the frontstage customer experience alongside the backstage operational processes and support systems that deliver the service
Defines, measures, and governs the service standards a provider commits to deliver, establishing remedies when standards are not met
Links internal service quality through employee satisfaction and capability to customer loyalty and ultimately to profit and growth
Grounds operational excellence in the transformation of culture and behavior toward ideal results rather than merely copying lean tools
Describes, measures, and improves supply chain performance across plan, source, make, deliver, return, and enable processes
Improves throughput by focusing on identifying, exploiting, subordinating to, and elevating the system's single binding constraint
Extends lean flow principles across the entire enterprise—from suppliers through production to customers—to achieve end-to-end supply chain optimization
Solves the linear programming problem of minimizing total shipping cost between multiple sources and destinations with given supply and demand constraints
Visualizes the flow of materials and information required to deliver a product or service, exposing waste and the path to future-state improvement
Transfers inventory replenishment responsibility to the supplier, who monitors stock at the customer and replenishes based on agreed targets
Forecasts future talent needs and develops strategies to ensure the right people with the right skills are available at the right time
№ 16 Category
Project Management
Encompasses a family of iterative, adaptive delivery frameworks that prioritize working product, team collaboration, and responding to change
Establishes twelve values and principles prioritizing individuals and interactions, working software, customer collaboration, and responding to change over prescriptive processes
Manages projects whose scope is only partially known at the start through iterative scope adjustment cycles driven by evolving business value
Tracks remaining or completed work against a time axis to visualize sprint or release progress and forecast completion dates
Covers foundational project management processes and knowledge areas as defined in the PMBOK, forming the basis of the CAPM certification
Schedules projects by identifying the resource-constrained critical chain and protecting it with strategically placed project and feeding buffers
Identifies the longest sequence of dependent tasks in a project to determine the minimum completion time and where to focus schedule management
Provides a family of agile methods scaled by team size and project criticality, emphasizing communication and human factors over rigid process
Applies time-boxing and MoSCoW prioritization to iterative delivery, fixing time and cost while keeping quality high and flexing scope
Measures project performance by integrating scope, schedule, and cost baselines and comparing earned value to planned and actual cost
Models project risk as chains of causally linked events and Monte Carlo simulates their combined effect on schedule and cost
Improves software quality and responsiveness through engineering practices including pair programming, TDD, continuous integration, and frequent small releases
Organizes development around an overall model and feature list, building features in two-week iterations with clear ownership and progress reporting
Provides Switzerland's modular, scenario-based project management standard covering IT, service, business, and infrastructure project types
Defines the individual project management competences—technical, behavioral, and contextual—assessed in IPMA's four-level certification framework
Provides international guidance on concepts and processes for project management, harmonizing terminology across global standards
Manages project work by visualizing tasks on a board, limiting work in progress, and pulling new items when capacity is available
Scales Scrum to multiple teams working on a single product with minimal additional roles and structure, preserving the core Scrum framework
Eliminates waste in project processes by applying value stream thinking and pull scheduling to reduce lead time and improve project flow
Plots milestone completion forecasts over time to visualize schedule trends and predict whether key dates will be met or slipped
Connects product or project roadmap initiatives directly to OKRs, ensuring planned work is traceable to measurable strategic outcomes
Focuses program evaluation on the behavioral changes in direct partners rather than distant social impact, enabling more realistic attribution
Provides guidance for designing, implementing, and operating portfolio, programme, and project office structures within organizations
Provides the globally recognized body of knowledge for project management across five process groups and ten knowledge areas
Delivers projects through seven principles, seven themes, and seven processes that provide structured governance adaptable to any project type
Combines PRINCE2's governance framework with agile delivery techniques, enabling controlled, flexible project execution within clearly defined boundaries
Aligns multiple agile teams across an Agile Release Train around a shared mission, objectives, and dependencies in a two-day planning event
Coordinates and governs multiple related projects as a program to realize benefits that cannot be achieved by managing each project independently
Formally authorizes a project by documenting its objectives, scope, stakeholders, constraints, and high-level plan in a single governing document
Defines the sequence of phases a project passes through from initiation through planning, execution, monitoring, and closure
Assigns Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, and Informed roles for every task to eliminate ownership gaps and duplication
Replaces rigid planning with iterative prototyping and user involvement to compress development cycles and improve requirements alignment
Hierarchically categorizes all project risk sources to ensure comprehensive risk identification and facilitate monitoring and reporting
Provides a configurable framework for scaling agile delivery across large enterprises through Agile Release Trains, value streams, and portfolio kanban
Scales Scrum by replicating the Scrum cycle at the organizational level through a Scrum of Scrums and an Executive Action Team
Delivers products iteratively in time-boxed sprints, with defined roles—Product Owner, Scrum Master, Developers—and events governing the process
Combines Scrum's cadence and retrospectives with Kanban's flow and WIP limits for teams that need structured flexibility
Provides a minimal universal kernel of software engineering concepts—alphas, activity spaces, competencies—that underlie any method
Organizes product development into six-week cycles with explicit pitches and bets, using fat marker sketches to scope work without over-specifying
Wraps iterative development cycles with explicit risk analysis at each spiral, scaling process rigor to the severity of technical and management risks
Manages new product development through sequential gates with defined deliverables and go/kill decisions between each stage
Estimates task duration using optimistic, most likely, and pessimistic values to produce a probability-weighted expected duration
Represents the decreasing range of cost and schedule estimates over time as project scope becomes progressively better defined
Pairs each development phase with a corresponding testing phase, ensuring systematic validation and verification from requirements through deployment
Sequences software development through fixed phases—requirements, design, implementation, testing, deployment—each completed before the next begins
Decomposes total project scope into a hierarchical tree of deliverables and work packages to enable planning, assignment, and control
№ 17 Category
Change Management
Guides individual change through five building blocks—Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability, Reinforcement—as a sequential adoption path
States that change succeeds when dissatisfaction with the status quo times vision times first steps exceeds the perceived cost of changing
Distinguishes the psychological transition people experience from the external change event, emphasizing management of the neutral zone
Maps the causal relationships between twelve organizational variables to distinguish transformational from transactional change levers
Provides seven change acceleration tools GE developed to reduce the time required to get organizational change accepted and embedded
Maps the emotional responses individuals experience through major organizational change, guiding communication and support timing
States that successful change requires Dissatisfaction, Vision, and First steps to outweigh Resistance in order for change to occur
Involves stakeholders as active participants in designing and implementing change, building ownership and reducing resistance through shared authorship
Identifies three change styles—conservative, pragmatic, originator—to help managers adapt their approach to individual change-style preferences
Applies Rogers' adoption curve to organizational change, segmenting the population by innovation adoption timing to guide sequential engagement
Provides six activities for leading complex change, balancing the creation of a compelling vision with operational implementation support
Extends Kotter's eight steps into a permanent dual operating system that keeps a hierarchy running while a network accelerates strategic change
Diagnoses organizational change readiness by mapping stakeholder positions on axes of fear and trust to design targeted engagement strategies
Identifies vision, skills, incentives, resources, and an action plan as five necessary conditions for successful organizational change
Identifies the driving forces supporting and restraining forces opposing a proposed change, guiding where to apply effort for successful transition
Deploys seven tools for leading change—shared need, vision, mobilization, change leadership, commitment, systems, momentum—to accelerate adoption
Argues that large-scale change succeeds by changing feelings rather than analysis alone, using compelling stories and seeing to trigger action
Changes behavior by identifying vital behaviors and targeting six sources of influence—personal, social, and structural motivation and ability
Guides large-scale change through eight sequential steps from creating urgency to anchoring new approaches in organizational culture
Describes change as a three-phase process: unfreezing existing behavior, moving to a new state, and refreezing the new behavior as the norm
Identifies six elements needed for sustainable change—vision, consensus, skills, incentives, resources, action plan—each gap producing a predictable failure mode
Shifts organizational behavior through four conditions: compelling story, role modeling, reinforcement mechanisms, and skill building
Measures organizational health across nine outcomes and 37 management practices to predict long-term performance and guide improvement
Diagnoses organizational performance by assessing fit between four components—work, people, structure, and culture—in their interaction with strategy
Applies behavioral nudges—defaults, prompts, social norms, feedback—to encourage adoption of new behaviors without mandates or incentives
Improves organizational effectiveness and health through planned, systemic interventions grounded in behavioral science and applied research
Uses Plan-Do-Check-Act cycles to implement and stabilize organizational change through iterative experimentation and learning
Integrates ADKAR individual change with an organizational change management process covering preparation, management, and reinforcement phases
Diagnoses organizational and individual readiness for a specific change before implementation to identify gaps and plan targeted interventions
Maps five stages—late status quo, foreign element, chaos, integration, new status quo—that systems pass through when confronted with transformative change
Explains change resistance as social threat responses in the five domains of status, certainty, autonomy, relatedness, and fairness
Frames organizational change as requiring deep learning across five disciplines—systems thinking, personal mastery, mental models, shared vision, team learning
Uses the metaphor of rider (rational), elephant (emotional), and path (environment) to design change that works with all three simultaneously
Identifies the reinforcing loops, delays, and structural tensions that generate resistance to change and guides leverage-point interventions
Creates organizational change by identifying and mobilizing informal peer influencers who spread new behaviors through social networks rather than top-down communication
Diagnoses organizational problems across six interdependent domains—purpose, structure, relationships, rewards, leadership, helpful mechanisms—to target interventions
№ 18 Category
Risk & Security
Grants access decisions based on attributes of users, resources, and environment rather than static role assignments, enabling fine-grained policy enforcement
Extends the MITRE ATT&CK knowledge base to map adversary tactics and techniques specific to industrial control and operational technology environments
Identifies all points through which an attacker could enter or extract data from a system to guide security testing and hardening priorities
Visualizes a risk event at center with threat causes on the left and consequences on the right, placing controls on each branch
Measures software security activities across 121 observed practices to benchmark an organization's security posture against industry peers
Defines the three core information security properties—protecting data from unauthorized disclosure, modification, and loss of access—that all controls must address
Provides best practices and guidance for securing cloud computing environments across domains from governance to data center operations
Requires US defense contractors to demonstrate cybersecurity maturity across five levels aligned with NIST SP 800-171 controls
Provides a comprehensive framework for IT governance and management covering five principles, 37 governance and management objectives
Integrates enterprise risk management with strategy and performance through five interrelated components across organizational structure
Defines internal control as five interrelated components—control environment, risk assessment, control activities, information, monitoring—governing reliable financial reporting
Standardizes the identification, definition, and scoring of publicly known cybersecurity vulnerabilities to prioritize remediation effort
Models a cyber intrusion as seven sequential phases—reconnaissance through actions on objectives—to guide defense across each stage
Layers multiple independent security controls so that if one layer fails, others continue to protect against attack
Analyzes cyber intrusions through four linked features—adversary, capability, infrastructure, victim—to understand threat actors and predict future behavior
Scores security threats across five factors—Damage, Reproducibility, Exploitability, Affected users, Discoverability—to prioritize risk remediation
France's national risk management method that models risks through five workshops covering context, risk sources, scenarios, and treatment
Provides the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity's guidance on information security risk management for critical infrastructure and EU institutions
Quantifies information risk in financial terms by analyzing threat event frequency and loss magnitude through a structured taxonomy
Analyzes all potential failure modes in a system, assessing severity, probability, and detectability to rank and prioritize risk mitigation actions
Integrates an organization's approach to governance, enterprise risk management, and regulatory compliance into a unified management capability
Specifies requirements for secure industrial automation and control systems across policies, procedures, system design, and component levels
Connects IT risk governance and management with organizational objectives, providing a complete process framework for IT risk decision-making
Specifies requirements for an information security management system and provides risk-based guidance for implementing and continuously improving it
Extends ISO 27001 controls for cloud service providers and customers, with 27018 specifically addressing protection of personally identifiable information
Provides internationally recognized principles, framework, and process for managing risk of any type in any organization
Aligns IT risk management with business strategy through governance, evaluation, response, and monitoring processes for technology-related risks
Models an adversary's attack sequence to identify defensive opportunities where intrusions can be detected and disrupted at each phase
Systematically identifies privacy threats in systems using seven threat categories—Linkability, Identifiability, Non-repudiation, Detectability, Disclosure, Unawareness, Non-compliance
Catalogs real-world adversary tactics, techniques, and procedures as a knowledge base to improve threat detection, response, and red team exercises
Generates thousands of probabilistic scenarios to model the distribution of possible project or investment outcomes under uncertainty
Provides voluntary cybersecurity guidance organized around five functions—Identify, Protect, Detect, Respond, Recover—adaptable to any organization or sector
Guides federal agencies through six steps—prepare, categorize, select, implement, assess, authorize, monitor—for managing information system risk
Provides an extensive catalog of security and privacy controls for federal information systems with implementation guidance across control families
Guides organizations in self-directed information security risk assessments focusing on organizational rather than technical risks
Provides a measurable framework for integrating security practices into software development across governance, design, implementation, verification, and operations
Aligns threat modeling with business objectives through seven stages from business impact analysis through attack simulation to countermeasure identification
Embeds privacy protections proactively into system and process design rather than as an afterthought, addressing both function and compliance
Embeds privacy into system design from the outset through seven foundational principles including proactive prevention, full functionality, and privacy as default
Quantifies the probability and consequences of accident sequences in complex systems using event trees and fault trees to guide safety investment
Assigns permissions to roles rather than individuals, simplifying access management and enforcing least-privilege principles in complex systems
Defines the amount and type of risk an organization is willing to accept in pursuit of its objectives, guiding risk-taking decisions enterprise-wide
Plots risks on a color-coded grid of likelihood and impact to provide management with a visual snapshot of the organization's risk landscape
Scores risks by multiplying the probability of occurrence by the magnitude of impact to compare and prioritize mitigation actions
Maintains a structured log of identified risks with their descriptions, owners, assessments, and treatment plans for ongoing risk monitoring
Quantifies the financial value of security controls by comparing the reduction in expected annual loss against the cost of controls
Provides a business-driven security architecture framework aligned to TOGAF, translating business risk into layered security design
Inventories all components, libraries, and dependencies in a software product to enable vulnerability tracking and supply chain risk management
Develops and evaluates plausible future risk scenarios to stress-test controls, plans, and strategies against a range of potential conditions
Applies enterprise architecture methods to security, ensuring security controls are systematically aligned with business requirements and technology layers
Automates and orchestrates security operations workflows to accelerate detection, investigation, and response to cyber incidents at scale
Provides assurance reports on service organization controls related to security, availability, processing integrity, confidentiality, and privacy
Categorizes security threats into Spoofing, Tampering, Repudiation, Information disclosure, Denial of service, and Elevation of privilege for systematic analysis
Identifies, assesses, and mitigates risks arising from third-party suppliers across the end-to-end supply chain from components to delivery
Assesses cybersecurity risk from the perspective of specific threat agents—their motivation, capability, and method—to prioritize controls
Models threats as violations of security requirements from the stakeholder perspective, focusing on acceptable risk and requirements-based threat identification
Eliminates implicit network trust by requiring continuous verification of every user, device, and session regardless of network location
Guides detection, response, and remediation of previously unknown software vulnerabilities before official patches are available
№ 19 Category
Intelligence Analysis
Evaluates multiple competing hypotheses against available evidence, rating each piece of evidence as consistent or inconsistent to avoid confirmation bias
Integrates intelligence from HUMINT, SIGINT, GEOINT, OSINT, and other collection disciplines into a single coherent analytic product
Deliberately generates and evaluates alternative explanations or outcomes to challenge the dominant analytic view and reduce analytic failure
Develops a range of plausible alternative future outcomes rather than a single prediction to prepare decision-makers for multiple contingencies
Uses IBM i2 Analyst's Notebook software methodology to organize, visualize, and analyze complex entity relationships and temporal data in intelligence work
Establishes standards for evaluating the reliability of intelligence reporting and the confidence levels assigned to analytic judgments
Extends the CARVER targeting matrix with shock and psychological impact factors to assess critical infrastructure vulnerability to terrorism
Documents the FBI counterintelligence program's analytical methods for identifying, disrupting, and neutralizing domestic political organizations
Plans, prioritizes, and tasks intelligence collection against requirements to ensure the most important intelligence gaps are addressed efficiently
Organizes intelligence collection requirements against available sources and methods into a structured plan that synchronizes collection with decision timelines
Distinguishes communication, electronic, and measurement-and-signature intelligence as separate collection disciplines requiring different analytical tradecraft
Provides structured processes for gathering, analyzing, and using intelligence about competitors, markets, and trends to support business decisions
Organizes business competitive intelligence work into a continuous cycle of planning, collection, analysis, and dissemination
Visualizes a widening range of possible futures over time as uncertainty grows, helping analysts and planners avoid over-confidence in specific predictions
Applies intelligence cycle processes to understanding competitor customer-facing strategies, win/loss patterns, and market positioning shifts
Assigns analysts to build the strongest possible alternative case against the prevailing assessment to challenge assumptions and surface analytic gaps
Analyzes cyber intrusions through adversary, capability, infrastructure, and victim attributes to understand threat actor behavior and predict future operations
Describes a targeting cycle for counterterrorism operations that integrates intelligence collection with kinetic action and post-strike exploitation
Applies strategic foresight methods—horizon scanning, scenario development, signal analysis—to produce forward-looking intelligence products for decision-makers
Provides a collection of structured methods designed to improve analytic rigor, reduce bias, and increase transparency in intelligence assessments
Focuses attention on scenarios that are unlikely but would have catastrophic consequences if they occurred, preventing their dismissal in planning
Guides the collection of intelligence from human sources through established handling, tasking, and reporting processes to produce reliable, protected intelligence
Identifies specific observable indicators that signal an adversary is approaching a threshold action, enabling early warning and decision advantage
Establishes US intelligence community analytic standards for sourcing, alternative analysis, and the use of probability language in assessments
Describes the continuous five-phase process by which raw information is transformed into finished intelligence and delivered to decision-makers
Systematically analyzes the threat, terrain, and weather to develop intelligence products that support the commander's decision-making
Integrates collection sensors and platforms with processing, exploitation, and dissemination of information in support of operational decisions
Extends IPB to the joint operational level, analyzing all relevant aspects of the environment across all domains to support joint force commanders
Makes explicit and systematically challenges the assumptions driving an analytic conclusion to identify those most likely to be wrong or need monitoring
Maps the sequence of adversary actions from target selection to attack execution to identify where intelligence can enable defensive disruption
Visualizes and analyzes relationships between entities—people, organizations, locations—in network diagrams to identify key nodes and patterns
Identifies four primary motivators that lead individuals to spy for foreign intelligence services, guiding counterintelligence vulnerability assessment
Systematically identifies what information is required but not yet collected to focus collection efforts on the most critical intelligence gaps
Combines information from multiple collection sources and sensors to produce higher-confidence, more complete intelligence products than any single source provides
Provides structured processes and tool categorization for collecting and analyzing intelligence from publicly available sources
Forces analysts to consider how an adversary perceives the situation to avoid mirror-imaging and surface alternative explanations
Studies the routine behaviors, movements, and associations of individuals or organizations over time to identify anomalies and predict future actions
Analyzes an operational environment across Political, Military, Economic, Social, Infrastructure, and Information dimensions as interrelated systems
Extends PMESII with physical terrain and time dimensions for comprehensive operational environment characterization in joint planning
Evaluates the sourcing, reliability, and completeness of information underlying an intelligence assessment before publishing
Uses a dedicated team to think and act like an adversary, producing assessments from the adversary's perspective to challenge analytic assumptions
Analyzes a problem from the perspective of a specific adversary or foreign actor to understand their intentions, capabilities, and likely actions
Standardizes enemy observation reports using six elements—Size, Activity, Location, Unit, Time, Equipment—to capture all tactically relevant information
Applies technical and analytical processes to signals collected by SIGINT platforms to extract intelligence on adversary communications and electronic systems
Defines observable events that would indicate a scenario is becoming more or less likely, enabling ongoing monitoring and early warning
Evaluates the credibility of intelligence reporting by assessing the source, the information content, timeliness, and collection environment
Maps and measures relationships within a social network to identify key influencers, communication paths, and network vulnerabilities
Generates comprehensive analytic questions across who, what, where, when, why, and how dimensions before developing answers
Provides disciplined analytical methods—ACH, red hat, key assumptions check—that counteract cognitive biases and improve intelligence product quality
Organizes intelligence collection and analysis around the target rather than the collection discipline, enabling more coherent and efficient intelligence production
Assigns two separate teams to develop competing assessments of the same intelligence problem to surface alternative explanations and assumptions
Focuses intelligence resources on detecting and assessing adversary capabilities and intentions that could result in surprise attack or strategic shock
Challenges a prevailing assessment by positing that a specific unlikely event has occurred, then tracing what indicators would be expected and where
Evaluates adversary decisions by comparing them against what a rational, well-informed actor with known objectives would do, identifying deviations that signal intent
№ 20 Category
Research & Scientific Methods
Compares two versions of a product, message, or experience by randomly assigning users to each version and measuring the difference in outcomes
Infers the simplest and most plausible explanation from incomplete observations, forming hypotheses that are then subject to testing
Cycles between inquiry and intervention in a real-world setting, with practitioners researching their own practice to produce both knowledge and change
Combines prior beliefs with observed data through Bayes' theorem to produce updated posterior probability distributions over model parameters
Investigates a contemporary phenomenon in depth within its real-world context, using multiple evidence sources to build and test theory
Uses causal graphs, do-calculus, and counterfactual reasoning to identify and estimate causal effects from observational or experimental data
Provides internationally recognized standards for planning, conducting, and reporting systematic reviews of clinical intervention evidence
Visually represents the hierarchical relationships between concepts using nodes and labeled linking phrases, revealing the structure of a knowledge domain
Tests whether a hypothesized factor structure fits observed data, validating the construct validity of psychological or organizational measurement scales
Standardizes the reporting of randomized controlled trials through a 25-item checklist to improve completeness, transparency, and quality of published evidence
Systematically codes and quantifies the content of text, images, or media to identify patterns, themes, and trends in a dataset
Ensures experimental validity by including a comparison group receiving no intervention, allowing treatment effects to be isolated from confounders
Examines how language in texts and talk reproduces or challenges social power, ideology, and inequality through systematic linguistic analysis
Holds that an objective reality exists independent of observation but is only partially accessible, requiring attention to generative mechanisms beneath observable events
Determines when to stop collecting qualitative data by identifying the point at which additional participants yield no new themes or insights
Gathers expert consensus through multiple rounds of structured questionnaires with controlled feedback, converging toward shared judgment on complex uncertain questions
Produces and evaluates IT artifacts—constructs, models, methods, instantiations—that solve organizational problems while contributing generalizable knowledge
Analyzes how language constructs social reality, identities, and relationships in specific contexts, going beyond grammar to meaning and power
Captures real-time, real-world psychological states and behaviors through repeated sampling in participants' natural environments via mobile devices
Immerses the researcher in a culture or community over extended time to produce rich, contextual understanding through observation and participation
Plans experiments with controlled conditions, randomization, and appropriate statistical models to test causal hypotheses with maximum efficiency
Identifies the latent factor structure underlying a set of observed variables without prior specification, generating hypotheses about construct relationships
Rates the certainty of evidence and strength of clinical recommendations across four levels from very low to high confidence
Builds theory inductively from qualitative data through iterative coding, constant comparison, and theoretical sampling until saturation
Analyzes nested data—students within schools, employees within firms—by modeling variance at each level separately to avoid ecological fallacy
Reconstructs and interprets past events through systematic examination of primary and secondary historical sources to understand causes and context
Makes inferences about population parameters by computing a test statistic under a null hypothesis and comparing it against a significance threshold
Applies optimal foraging theory to explain how people navigate information environments, patching between sources based on information scent cues
Studies how people's everyday experiences are shaped by institutional relations by tracing the textual and organizational processes that coordinate social action
Interprets human texts and actions by attending to the fusion of horizons between interpreter and text within a historical and cultural context
Examines how individuals make sense of lived experience through in-depth analysis of small purposive samples, maintaining close attention to participant voice
Distinguishes comprehensive systematic reviews from broader scoping reviews, each with different protocols suited to different research questions
Collects data from the same subjects at multiple time points to examine change, development, and causal sequences that cross-sectional studies cannot reveal
Improves credibility of qualitative findings by returning interpretations to participants for feedback and correction
Statistically combines effect sizes from multiple studies on the same question to produce more precise and generalizable estimates of effects
Integrates quantitative and qualitative data collection and analysis within a single study to provide complementary evidence for complex research questions
Conducts research in natural settings with emergent design, human instruments, purposive sampling, and trustworthiness criteria rather than statistical validity
Guides the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence in rating evidence quality and translating it into clinical practice recommendations
Involves community members as co-researchers in identifying problems, collecting data, and implementing solutions, combining research with empowerment
Investigates the essence of lived experience by bracketing researcher assumptions and analyzing multiple participants' first-person accounts of a phenomenon
Structures clinical and systematic review questions into four elements to enable precise literature searching and evidence synthesis
Extends PICO with a time dimension to specify the duration of follow-up for clinical outcomes, improving research question precision
Calculates the minimum sample size needed to detect a specified effect size at desired levels of significance and statistical power
Provides a 27-item checklist and flow diagram for transparent, complete reporting of systematic reviews and meta-analyses
Collects verbal reports of cognitive processes during task performance to provide data on how people think and solve problems
Studies subjective viewpoints by having participants sort statements and factor-analyzing the sorts to identify distinct perspectives or discourses
Examines necessary and sufficient conditions for an outcome using Boolean algebra and set theory, bridging case-based and variable-based approaches
Estimates causal effects in natural or field settings where full randomization is impossible, using designs like difference-in-differences or regression discontinuity
Randomly assigns participants to treatment and control conditions to provide the most rigorous evidence of causal effects in intervention research
Evaluates interventions by identifying the mechanisms that generate change, the contexts that trigger them, and the outcomes they produce
Establishes standards and protocols for reproducing the findings of prior studies to assess reliability and identify false positives in the literature
Captures not just observable behavior but the layers of meaning, context, and interpretation that make action intelligible to others
Formulates testable hypotheses derived from theory and subjects them to empirical tests, rejecting or refining theories based on results
Tests how much research or model conclusions change when key assumptions, parameters, or included studies are varied to assess robustness
Structures qualitative research questions using five elements to improve literature search specificity for non-intervention studies
Tests complex hypothesized relationships among latent and observed variables simultaneously, combining confirmatory factor analysis with path analysis
Designs and administers questionnaires to systematically collect standardized self-report data from a defined sample for analysis and inference
Pre-registers a comprehensive, replicable search and synthesis plan for all available evidence on a defined research question before conducting the review
Tests whether perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use predict technology adoption intentions and behavior in organizational and consumer contexts
Determines when to stop theoretical sampling in grounded theory when new data no longer generates new theoretical categories
Collects data on cognitive processes by asking participants to verbalize thoughts continuously while performing tasks, without interruption by the researcher
Increases research validity by using multiple methods, sources, investigators, or theories to cross-verify findings and reduce single-method bias
Evaluates whether a measure captures what it claims to (validity) and whether it does so consistently across conditions and time (reliability)
Analyzes global inequality as a systemic outcome of core, semi-periphery, and periphery relationships in a historical capitalist world economy
№ 21 Category
Software & Architecture
Documents software architecture from five viewpoints—logical, process, physical, development, and scenarios—to satisfy different stakeholder needs
Models concurrent computation as a collection of actors that communicate through message passing, eliminating shared state and synchronization complexity
Documents significant architecture decisions with their context, options considered, and rationale in lightweight versioned records alongside the code
Designs and publishes the API contract before implementing any service, ensuring consuming teams can develop in parallel against a stable interface
Provides a visual language for describing and analyzing enterprise architecture across business, application, and technology layers
Creates separate backend services optimized for each specific client frontend—web, mobile, third-party—to reduce over-fetching and coupling
Extends TDD with a shared language—Given-When-Then scenarios—that bridges business stakeholders and developers in specifying system behavior
Isolates system components into separate resource pools so that failure or overload in one component cannot cascade and exhaust resources across others
Visualizes software architecture at four progressive levels of detail—system context, containers, components, code—for different audience needs
Proves that a distributed system can guarantee at most two of three properties—Consistency, Availability, Partition tolerance—simultaneously
Organizes a system into independent cells each managing their own data and compute to improve scalability and fault isolation
Prevents a service from repeatedly calling a failing downstream dependency by tripping a circuit that returns errors until the dependency recovers
Organizes code into concentric dependency layers—entities, use cases, adapters, frameworks—with all dependencies pointing inward toward business logic
Defines practices for writing readable, maintainable code including meaningful naming, small functions, single responsibility, and minimal comments
Provides cloud provider-specific guidance for planning, migrating, and optimizing workloads across strategy, governance, and operations dimensions
Scales message processing by allowing multiple concurrent consumer instances to pull from a shared queue, distributing load and improving throughput
Automates the release pipeline so software is always deployable and can be released to production at any time with low risk
Automates code integration, testing, and deployment so that every commit can be validated and released rapidly and reliably
Validates service integrations by testing each service against contracts defined by its consumers, catching breaking changes before integration testing
Observes that organizations design systems that mirror their own communication structures, making team topology a key lever for software architecture
Separates read and write models into distinct data stores and services, optimizing each independently for query performance and write consistency
Decentralizes data ownership to domain teams that produce and serve their own data as products, governed by a federated platform and standards
Aligns software model and language with business domain concepts through bounded contexts, aggregates, entities, and ubiquitous language
Defines microservice boundaries by business capability rather than technical function, ensuring services own a complete, cohesive business responsibility
Specifies formal preconditions, postconditions, and invariants for software components, making expectations explicit and enabling automatic verification
Describes the three principles of DevOps—flow, feedback, and continuous experimentation—that enable fast, reliable, and safe software delivery
Measures software delivery performance through four evidence-based metrics that predict organizational performance
Requires that every piece of knowledge have a single authoritative representation in a system, eliminating duplication and reducing maintenance burden
Persists application state as an immutable sequence of domain events rather than current values, enabling replay, audit, and temporal queries
Decouples producers and consumers through asynchronous event streams, enabling scalable, loosely coupled systems that react to state changes
Designs systems with fitness functions that enable guided, incremental change over time without requiring big-bang re-architecture
Lists eight incorrect assumptions developers make about distributed networks—reliability, zero latency, infinite bandwidth—that must be addressed in design
Provides the US federal government's reference model for planning and managing IT investments across performance, business, data, application, and infrastructure layers
Controls feature availability at runtime through configuration rather than code deployment, enabling gradual rollout, A/B testing, and instant kill switches
Separates pure business logic (functional core) from side effects and IO (imperative shell), making core logic easy to test and reason about
Manages infrastructure and deployments by treating Git as the single source of truth and using automated reconciliation to apply declared state
Defines the API schema before implementation, enabling frontend and backend teams to work in parallel against a shared contract
Isolates application core from external systems through ports and adapters, making it independently testable and replaceable without core changes
Designs systems to minimize downtime through redundancy, failover, load balancing, and health monitoring to meet demanding uptime SLAs
Manages and provisions infrastructure through machine-readable configuration files, enabling version control, automated testing, and repeatable deployments
Applies open source collaboration practices—pull requests, shared ownership, contribution guidelines—to internal enterprise software development
Advocates designing systems with the minimum necessary complexity, resisting the urge to add features or flexibility until explicitly needed
Organizes software into horizontal layers—presentation, business logic, data access—each with defined responsibilities and interfaces to adjacent layers
Applies Toyota lean principles to software: eliminate waste, amplify learning, decide late, deliver fast, empower the team, and see the whole
Structures an application as a suite of small, independently deployable services each owning a single business capability and communicating over APIs
Provides the UK defence community's architecture framework for describing, analyzing, and planning defense systems and operations
Structures systems into well-defined modules with explicit interfaces to enable independent development, testing, and replacement of components
Organizes a monolithic application into clearly bounded modules with enforced internal APIs, combining deployment simplicity with module-level code organization
Separates application concerns into model (data), view (display), and controller (input handling) to improve maintainability and testability
Separates UI from logic by interposing a ViewModel that exposes observable data and commands, enabling two-way binding and testable UI logic
Provides NATO's standard for describing, analyzing, and communicating enterprise, capability, and system architectures across allied organizations
Prescribes nine coding exercises—one level of indentation, no else, small entities—that enforce discipline and produce simpler, more maintainable object-oriented code
Applies the military observe-orient-decide-act cycle to system monitoring and response, enabling faster adaptation to operational anomalies
Achieves reliable message publishing by writing events to an outbox table within the same transaction as domain data, then relaying asynchronously
Provides a broad set of community-developed web application security standards, guidelines, and tools for secure software development
Identifies the ten most critical web application security risks to guide developers and security teams in prioritizing vulnerability remediation
Catalogs recurring solutions to common enterprise application design problems across domain logic, data source, and web presentation layers
Distributes computation and data across equal peer nodes without central servers, enabling decentralized applications with high resilience and scalability
Processes data streams by passing them through a chain of independent filter components connected by pipes, enabling flexible, composable data transformation
Builds and maintains internal developer platforms that provide self-service infrastructure capabilities, reducing cognitive load on application teams
Uses a message queue to decouple producers from consumers and absorb demand spikes, protecting downstream services from overload
Constrains the rate at which a client can call an API or service to prevent abuse, ensure fairness, and protect backend resources
Abstracts data persistence behind a collection-like interface, decoupling domain logic from database specifics and enabling easier testing and swapping of data stores
Handles transient failures by automatically retrying failed operations with progressively increasing delays to avoid overwhelming recovering services
Provides a configurable framework for scaling agile delivery across large enterprises through Agile Release Trains, value streams, and portfolio kanban
Manages long-running distributed transactions as a sequence of local transactions with compensating transactions that undo completed steps if a later step fails
Deploys functions triggered by events without managing servers, enabling automatic scaling and pay-per-execution billing for event-driven workloads
Manages service-to-service communication—load balancing, observability, mTLS—in a dedicated infrastructure layer outside application code
Structures software as a set of interoperable services that communicate over a network using standard protocols like SOAP or REST
Partitions a data store across multiple shards based on a shard key, distributing load and enabling horizontal scaling beyond single-node limits
Assigns each node its own independent data and resources without sharing memory or storage, enabling linear horizontal scalability
Moves testing activities earlier in the development lifecycle to catch defects when they are cheapest to fix and improve overall quality
Attaches a helper container alongside a main application container to provide cross-cutting capabilities—logging, proxy, configuration—without modifying the application
Applies software engineering to operations, using error budgets, SLOs, and automation to balance reliability with the velocity of change
Defines the full process of planning, creating, testing, deploying, and maintaining software across its entire lifecycle
Provides five object-oriented design principles—Single responsibility, Open-closed, Liskov substitution, Interface segregation, Dependency inversion—for maintainable software
Distributes processing and storage across a grid of in-memory data spaces to achieve massive scalability by eliminating database bottlenecks
Migrates a legacy system by incrementally replacing functionality piece by piece, routing traffic to the new system as it grows
Writes a failing test before writing production code, then writes the minimum code to pass it, producing test coverage and simple design
Organizes teams into four types with three interaction modes to reduce cognitive load and improve software delivery flow
Defines twelve methodology-agnostic best practices for building software-as-a-service apps that are portable, scalable, and maintainable in the cloud
Separates software into three physical tiers—presentation, application logic, and data—enabling independent scaling and security control of each layer
Provides a comprehensive method and set of tools for developing enterprise architecture through the Architecture Development Method and reference models
Maps the end-to-end flow of value from business need through software development and deployment to customer delivery, identifying bottlenecks and waste
Provides cloud-provider guidance across five or six pillars—operational excellence, security, reliability, performance, cost optimization—for evaluating architectures
Classifies enterprise architecture artifacts in a six-by-six matrix of perspectives and dimensions to ensure complete, balanced architecture coverage
Requires explicit verification of every user, device, and network flow with least-privilege access, treating all traffic as untrusted regardless of location
№ 22 Category
Data & Analytics
Tests three or more variants against a control simultaneously to identify the best performer more efficiently than sequential A/B tests
Tracks growth analytics across Acquisition, Activation, Retention, Revenue, and Referral to diagnose the weakest conversion stage
Provides open table formats for managing large-scale analytical data with ACID transactions, schema evolution, and time travel capabilities
Represents probabilistic dependencies among variables as a directed acyclic graph to enable inference, prediction, and causal reasoning under uncertainty
Transforms raw organizational data into actionable insights through reporting, dashboards, and analysis that support operational and strategic decisions
Uses causal graphs and do-calculus to identify and estimate causal effects from observational data, distinguishing association from causation
Provides a six-phase data mining process—business understanding, data understanding, preparation, modeling, evaluation, deployment—as a vendor-neutral standard
Estimates the total revenue a business can expect from a customer relationship over its lifetime to guide acquisition spending and retention investment
Provides the Data Management Body of Knowledge second edition, covering eleven data management knowledge areas from governance to metadata management
Inventories and documents all data assets in an organization with metadata, lineage, and usage information to enable data discovery and governance
Formalizes agreements between data producers and consumers about schema, quality, SLAs, and semantics to prevent breaking changes in data pipelines
Establishes the policies, processes, roles, and standards governing data assets to ensure their quality, security, and appropriate use
Stores raw data at scale in its native format, enabling flexible schema-on-read access for diverse analytics workloads without upfront transformation
Combines data lake low-cost storage with data warehouse reliability and query performance using open table formats and metadata layers
Tracks the origin, transformations, and movement of data through systems to support debugging, compliance, and impact analysis
Decentralizes data ownership to domain teams that produce and serve their own data as products, governed by a federated platform and standards
Provides contrasting approaches—Kimball's dimensional star schema and Inmon's normalized enterprise data warehouse—for organizing analytical data stores
Treats internal data assets as products with defined owners, consumers, SLAs, and quality metrics, applying product management discipline to data
Defines dimensions of data quality—accuracy, completeness, consistency, timeliness, uniqueness, validity—and the processes for measuring and improving them
Organizes enterprise data warehouses into hubs, links, and satellites to provide a flexible, auditable, and historized integration layer
Applies DevOps principles—automation, monitoring, collaboration—to data analytics pipelines to improve quality, reduce cycle time, and increase agility
Defines eighteen principles for data analytics operations emphasizing collaboration, automation, monitoring, and continuous improvement
Integrates decision science, data science, and managerial judgment to design decision architectures that systematically improve organizational choices
Adds ACID transactions, schema enforcement, and scalable metadata management on top of data lake storage to improve reliability for analytics workloads
Stages analytical capability from describing what happened, diagnosing why, predicting what will happen, to prescribing optimal actions
Adds carefully calibrated statistical noise to query results or training data to mathematically guarantee that individual records cannot be reverse-engineered
Structures data pipeline design as either Extract-Transform-Load into a target system or Extract-Load into storage then Transform, each with distinct trade-offs
Defines four properties that data and metadata must have to enable effective machine-readable discovery and reuse by humans and algorithms
Transforms raw data into informative input features for machine learning models through selection, extraction, creation, and encoding techniques
Centralizes the storage, computation, and serving of machine learning features to ensure consistency between training and inference environments
Trains machine learning models across decentralized devices or servers without sharing raw data, preserving privacy while enabling collaborative model improvement
Evaluates data governance maturity across five dimensions to identify gaps in fitness-for-purpose, ownership, cost management, access, and security
Measures user drop-off at each step of a defined sequence—sign-up, onboarding, purchase—to identify where to focus conversion optimization effort
Applies graph algorithms—centrality, community detection, pathfinding—to network data to uncover structural patterns invisible in tabular formats
Organizes analytical data in star schemas with fact tables and dimension tables, optimized for fast query performance and business user comprehension
Represents entities and their relationships as a semantic graph, enabling complex querying, reasoning, and discovery across heterogeneous data sources
Selects, defines, and tracks a small set of key performance indicators that most directly measure progress against strategic or operational objectives
Processes data through parallel batch and speed layers to provide both accurate historical analysis and low-latency real-time views
Applies DevOps practices to machine learning model development, deployment, monitoring, and retraining to operationalize ML at scale
Organizes a data lakehouse into three quality layers—raw, cleaned, and business-ready—enabling progressive refinement and data product publishing
Decomposes a top-level business metric into a tree of driver metrics at successively lower levels to enable diagnosis and targeted improvement
Provides an open-source platform for managing the ML lifecycle including experiment tracking, model registry, packaging, and deployment
Documents machine learning model performance, limitations, intended uses, and fairness metrics in a standardized one-pager for transparency
Monitors data pipelines for anomalies in freshness, volume, schema, distribution, and lineage to detect data quality issues before they impact decisions
Connects OKRs to a metrics hierarchy by identifying the leading and lagging indicators that serve as key results and track goal progress
Enables multidimensional analysis of business data through slice, dice, drill-down, and roll-up operations on pre-aggregated cubes
Manages high-volume, short-latency read/write transactions on normalized relational databases that power day-to-day operational applications
Applies statistical models and machine learning to historical data to forecast future outcomes and support proactive decision-making
Combines a retrieval system that fetches relevant documents with a generative model that conditions its output on retrieved context
Defines six principles—fairness, reliability, privacy, inclusiveness, transparency, accountability—for developing and deploying AI systems responsibly
Applies systematic investigation techniques to analytics anomalies to trace metric deviations back to their underlying data or business causes
Provides SAS Institute's five-step data mining process as a structured workflow from data sampling through model assessment
Explains individual machine learning predictions by attributing contribution values to each feature, making black-box models interpretable
Organizes data warehouse tables as a central fact table surrounded by dimension tables, with snowflake extending to normalized dimension sub-tables
Monitors process output using control charts to distinguish common cause variation from special causes requiring investigation and action
Simplifies the lambda architecture by treating all data as a stream and reprocessing historical data through the same real-time pipeline
Provides Microsoft's agile, iterative data science methodology covering business understanding, data acquisition, modeling, deployment, and customer acceptance
Structures end-to-end natural language processing workflows from raw text ingestion through preprocessing, feature extraction, modeling, and output delivery
Defines the bridge role between business domain experts and data scientists that formulates problems, interprets results, and drives adoption
Analyzes and forecasts time-indexed data using statistical models that capture trend, seasonality, and autoregressive patterns
Extends the Kimball star schema with a bridge table that unifies multiple fact and dimension tables to simplify complex analytical models
Stores and indexes high-dimensional embedding vectors to enable semantic similarity search at scale for AI and search applications
Builds powerful ensemble models by sequentially fitting new trees to the residuals of previous ones, achieving state-of-the-art performance on structured data
№ 23 Category
Facilitation
Generates ideas and conversations by having participants work alone, then in pairs, then groups of four, before sharing with the whole room
Identifies and builds on Assets, Builds on strengths, Connects community, and Dreams together to surface what is working before planning change
Clusters qualitative data—observations, ideas, feedback—into thematic groups to surface patterns from large volumes of unstructured input
Offers structured formats for teams to reflect on what to begin, stop, and continue to continuously improve working practices
Generates creative solutions by first brainstorming how to make the problem worse, then reversing those ideas into constructive approaches
Mobilizes whole-system change by focusing collective attention on what is working and co-creating the conditions to do more of it
Challenges the hidden assumptions underlying a problem or product by explicitly listing and then inverting each one to reveal new possibilities
Has six participants silently write three ideas each per five-minute round as sheets rotate, generating 108 ideas in 30 minutes
Generates large quantities of ideas by deferring judgment, encouraging wild ideas, building on others' contributions, and aiming for quantity
Rotates small groups through multiple flip-chart stations to build on each other's ideas, combining individual thinking with collaborative accumulation
Intensively engages multiple stakeholder groups in consecutive short working sessions that feed into each other to produce integrated design solutions
Gives each participant uninterrupted speaking time before open discussion, ensuring all voices are heard and dominant voices do not crowd out others
Creates a safe dialogue space for people to share emotions and concerns about climate change, drawing on World Café principles
Uses complexity theory and narrative methods—including SenseMaker—to gather and analyze naturally occurring stories for organizational learning
Aligns multiple organizations around a common agenda, shared measurement, mutually reinforcing activities, and backbone support
Guides design and launch of a community of practice through domain selection, community design, and shared practice development
Produces shared agreements from diverse groups through a five-step sequence of context, brainstorm, cluster, name, and resolve
Facilitates structured dialogue in small groups using four agreements—openness, listening, reflection, silence—to generate meaningful conversation rather than debate
Generates eight rough sketches in eight minutes to force quantity over quality and expand the range of design or problem-solving ideas considered
Identifies the two most critical and uncertain forces shaping a situation and uses them as axes to construct four distinct scenario narratives
Structures rapid group decision-making through facilitated sequencing of problem framing, option generation, analysis, and commitment
Generates design solutions through rapid sketching, individual presentations, group critique, and iteration cycles that combine divergent and convergent thinking
Prioritizes options democratically by giving participants a fixed number of dot stickers to allocate across displayed items based on preference
Has participants observe and interact with users in their environment to generate first-hand empathy insights before design or strategy work
Structures large-group dialogue with a small inner discussion circle and larger outer observer ring, with rotating access to the inner seats
Uses Lencioni's five-dysfunctions model—absence of trust, fear of conflict, lack of commitment, avoidance of accountability, inattention to results—as a team diagnostic
Provides a structured set of facilitation tools for guiding groups through futures scanning, scenario development, and strategic implication workshops
Uses interactive theatre to explore oppressive social situations, inviting audience members to replace the protagonist and try out alternative approaches
Convenes cross-stakeholder groups for three days to reflect on the past, examine the present, and co-create a shared future vision
Guides groups through three phases—critique of the present, utopian vision, and implementation planning—to collectively imagine and plan alternative futures
Displays ideas on walls and invites participants to circulate, read, and add comments using sticky notes before plenary discussion
Uses real-time visual recording of conversations and ideas on large surfaces to make group thinking visible, memorable, and shareable
Captures the content of a meeting or conference in real-time illustrations that make discussion visible, aid memory, and support shared understanding
Structures intensive time-limited team innovation events through team formation, challenge framing, coaching, prototyping, and pitch presentation phases
Sorts ideas on originality and feasibility axes into how (innovative but hard), now (ordinary but feasible), and wow (both)
Positions participants physically along a continuum from strongly agree to strongly disagree in response to statements, making group opinions spatially visible
Applies the systems thinking iceberg model to team retrospectives, examining the visible events, underlying patterns, structures, and mental models driving team behavior
Uses improvisational theatre's foundational agreement rule—accepting what your partner offers and adding to it—to build collaborative creative energy in groups
Creates an informal learning dialogue space where participants share expertise through unstructured conversation, cross-pollinating knowledge across an organization
Runs agenda-free meetings where participants propose topics, vote on priority, then time-box each discussion before voting to continue or move on
Surfaces the paradoxes and tensions within a group or organization as unanswerable 'wicked questions' that clarify systemic constraints
Provides 33 microstructures for meetings and group work that replace conventional methods by distributing control and including more voices
Creates an informal learning marketplace where presenters host topic stations and participants circulate and engage in self-directed conversation
Creates radial visual diagrams of ideas and associations branching from a central concept, externalizing and organizing thinking for planning or problem-solving
Guides group process without directing content, trusting participants' own wisdom to produce the most meaningful and owned outcomes
Adapts in-person facilitation principles and tools to virtual environments, addressing attention, participation, and connection in distributed groups
Self-organizes large-group meetings around a central theme by letting participants create and attend only the sessions they care most about
Guides group discussion through four levels of questioning from factual observation through emotional response to meaning and decision
Involves future users of a product or service as active co-designers throughout the development process rather than as subjects of user research
Engages community members in imagining and designing alternative futures through structured activities that combine personal stories with systemic analysis
Combines the World Café dialogue format with Open Space Technology to help participants develop project ideas through three rounds of hosted conversation
Examines a problem from four perspectives—product, planning, potential, and people—to generate diverse solutions that single-frame thinking misses
Provides a family of structured reflection formats—Start-Stop-Continue, 4Ls, DAKI, Sailboat—that teams use to continuously improve their working practices
Generates creative ideas by having participants adopt the persona of different stakeholders or fictional characters before contributing, reducing inhibition
Facilitates groups through structured steps to develop multiple plausible future scenarios and explore their strategic implications
Structures group thinking by assigning six colored hats representing distinct perspectives that participants adopt in sequence or rotation
Facilitates text-based collaborative inquiry through open questions that deepen participants' understanding without the facilitator supplying answers
Uses the metaphor of a sailboat with winds (accelerators) and anchors (impediments) to help teams identify what helps and hinders progress
Visualizes and prioritizes stakeholders around a project by plotting them in concentric rings based on their influence and engagement priority
Facilitates collaborative completion of a SWOT analysis by structured group exercises that surface internal strengths and weaknesses and external opportunities and threats
Has participants first think individually, then discuss with a partner, then share with the larger group—building confidence and depth before plenary dialogue
Creates a shared visual record of significant past events on a collective timeline, building common understanding of history before forward-looking strategy work
Provides a structured methodology from the Institute of Cultural Affairs for participatory strategic planning, workshop design, and community engagement
Applies TRIZ inventive principles in a facilitated workshop to resolve technical contradictions by matching the problem type to proven solution principles
Has participants take turns presenting a challenge while two colleagues consult silently, then debrief together, providing peer coaching at scale
Creates a self-organizing event where the agenda is set by participants on the day, removing pre-planned content to maximize emergent relevance
Uses drawing, mapping, and visual sense-making tools to help groups externalize complex ideas and make thinking visible and shareable
Requires silent review of all work displayed on walls before discussion, ensuring everyone reads outputs before group sense-making begins
Convenes representatives of all parts of a system in one room simultaneously to generate shared understanding and commitment to system-wide change
Randomly selects a small citizens' panel to deliberate on a public issue through facilitated dialogue and produce a shared statement
Facilitates large-group dialogue through multiple rounds of conversation at small tables with rotating participants, cross-pollinating ideas across the whole group
№ 24 Category
Sales Methodologies
Qualifies sales prospects by assessing four criteria—budget availability, decision authority, business need, and purchase timeline
Trains sales reps to teach customers something new, tailor the pitch to their needs, and take control of the buying conversation
Reorders BANT by leading with the customer's challenges rather than budget, prioritizing problem discovery over qualification
Ensures sales teams can articulate a consistent, compelling value story aligned to customer problems and differentiated from competitors
Focuses sales conversations on the customer's concept of a solution rather than the product itself, uncovering buying criteria through structured questioning
Positions the salesperson as a trusted advisor who diagnoses business problems and co-creates solutions rather than pitching a preset offering
Shifts sales from product-centric presentations to buyer-centric conversations that help customers visualize how they would use a solution
Enables sales teams to consistently qualify opportunities, deliver differentiated value, and drive decisions by executing a disciplined sales process
Focuses sales on quantifying the gap between the customer's current problem state and desired future state to create urgency
Qualifies and understands prospects by uncovering their strategic goals, existing plans, specific challenges, and timing constraints
Guides reps to identify, connect with, explore, and advise inbound leads who have already shown interest rather than cold-calling outbound prospects
Qualifies complex enterprise deals by assessing all dimensions of the buying process, decision dynamics, and business pain
Manages complex B2B sales by identifying all buyer roles, their individual win criteria, and the political landscape within the account
Co-creates a shared roadmap between seller and buyer outlining milestones, resources, and responsibilities needed to achieve the buyer's goals
Prioritizes customer needs and quantified economic impact above budget, recognizing that compelling value creates its own funding
Structures sales enablement around Needs, Urgency, Means, and Authority to ensure reps qualify and advance opportunities efficiently
Anchors every sales conversation in the customer's desired business outcomes rather than product features, linking solution capabilities to measurable results
Structures a structured periodic meeting between vendor and customer to review performance, assess ROI, and plan the next quarter's priorities
Uses a submarine's seven compartments as a metaphor for seven sequential sales stages, emphasizing pain discovery, budget confirmation, and mutual commitment
Adapts selling to the frazzled, distracted buyer by keeping messages simple, demonstrating unique value, aligning to buyer priorities, and raising urgency
Shifts focus from product pitching to diagnosing customer pain and collaboratively designing solutions that directly address their specific problems
Structures customer success and renewal conversations around the five elements most predictive of customer expansion and retention
Uses four question types to surface and amplify buyer needs, moving from situation questions through to need-payoff to build value
Guides reps to Discover, Investigate, Align, Develop, Execute, and Measure value throughout the sales cycle to earn premium pricing
Connects sales conversations to the customer's strategic value chain, demonstrating how the solution improves each link to justify investment
№ 25 Category
Marketing Frameworks
Reframes the 4Ps from the buyer's perspective as Consumer wants, Cost to satisfy them, Convenience of buying, and Communication
Updates the 4Cs for digital marketing by emphasizing creating experiences, omnichannel presence, value exchange, and brand advocacy
Provides the foundational marketing mix of product decisions, pricing strategy, distribution channels, and promotional activities
Extends the 4Ps with People, Process, and Physical evidence to address service marketing's additional controllable variables
Sequences the customer journey through four psychological stages that a marketing message must move a prospect through to generate a sale
Classifies brands into twelve universal character archetypes—Hero, Sage, Explorer, Rebel, and others—to guide brand personality and positioning
Builds brand equity through four progressive levels—identity, meaning, response, resonance—by satisfying customers' rational and emotional needs
Structures brand building from functional attributes through emotional benefits to consumer insight and personality at the apex of the pyramid
Maps content types to each funnel stage—awareness, consideration, decision—ensuring the right format and message reaches buyers at each moment
Guides marketing spend allocation by comparing customer acquisition cost against the predicted long-term revenue stream from each customer segment
Defines advertising effectiveness by moving prospects through awareness, comprehension, conviction, and action stages with measurable objectives at each
Argues brand growth comes from increasing the number of buyers through mental availability (salience) and physical availability (distribution)
Replaces the linear funnel with a flywheel that generates momentum by delighting customers who attract new prospects through referral
Frames marketing messages around the progress customers are trying to make rather than product features or demographic segments
Divides a market into homogeneous segments by customer characteristics to enable targeted positioning and resource allocation
Identifies the critical moments—first stimulus, shelf, experience, zero moment—when customers form decisive opinions about a brand or product
Organizes media channels into four types to help marketers build an integrated content distribution and PR strategy
Segments market adoption across innovators, early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards to guide launch and scaling strategy
Plans digital marketing activity across four online customer lifecycle stages from initial reach through purchase to long-term engagement
Scores customers by when they last bought, how often they buy, and how much they spend to segment and prioritize marketing outreach
Provides a six-stage marketing planning process from situational analysis through strategy to implementation and measurement
Guides marketing strategy by dividing the market, selecting the most attractive segments, and positioning the offering to serve them distinctively
Maps content and marketing tactics to three buyer journey stages—awareness, consideration, decision—to align messaging with purchase readiness
Measures viral growth by the K-factor—invites per user times conversion rate—where K greater than one produces exponential user growth
№ 26 Category
Negotiation
Extends conventional negotiation tactics with two additional dimensions—deal setup and design—that determine whether agreement is possible
Maps each party's best and worst alternatives alongside the zone where a deal is mutually acceptable to clarify negotiation strategy
Structures feedback conversations through four elements—context, specific observation, impact, and agreed next steps—for clarity and accountability
Predicts negotiation strategy from the combination of concern for self and concern for the other party across five behavioral styles
Separates people from problems, focuses on interests not positions, generates options for mutual gain, and uses objective criteria
Distinguishes win-win interest-based integrative bargaining from zero-sum positional distributive bargaining, guiding which approach to adopt
Achieves better negotiated agreements through joint fact-finding, linking issues across parties, and packaging agreements for mutual benefit
Prepares negotiators by analyzing interests, options, legitimacy criteria, alternatives, communication, relationships, and commitment requirements
Structures negotiation preparation around who has what decision power, what each party truly wants, and what jointly efficient outcomes look like
Describes negotiation as a reciprocal process of progressive disclosure and commitment that spirals toward agreement through iterative exchange
Identifies five conflict-handling modes—competing, collaborating, compromising, avoiding, accommodating—to select the most appropriate negotiation approach
Classifies negotiation outcomes into three categories to frame the strategic choice between collaborative, competitive, or destructive approaches
№ 27 Category
Coaching & Mentoring
Aligns individual or team effort by mapping specific daily activities to objectives to expected results in a transparent accountability structure
Structures coaching conversations through five stages: contracting the purpose, deep listening, exploring possibilities, action planning, and reviewing progress
Grounds coaching in the belief that clients are naturally creative and resourceful, building a partnership focused on fulfillment, balance, and life process
Engages coach and client as equal partners in generating new understanding, possibilities, and actions together rather than expert-to-novice transmission
Guides coaching conversations through framing the discussion, understanding current situation, exploring desired outcomes, and laying out action plans
Structures coaching through four stages: setting a Goal, assessing Reality, generating Options, and committing to a Will/Way forward
Maps the hidden competing commitments and big assumptions that keep people stuck despite sincere intentions to change
Traces how coaches and clients climb from observable data through assumptions and conclusions to identify where beliefs block effective action
Describes mentoring relationships along a spectrum from directive sponsorship through facilitative coaching to provide the right support for each mentee's needs
Uses stories clients tell about themselves as the primary vehicle for change, working with narrative structure and identity to shift limiting patterns
Guides solution-focused coaching through outcome definition, progress scaling, existing know-how, affirmation, action, and review
Strengthens mental fitness by identifying saboteur patterns and building sage capabilities through daily mental fitness exercises
Adapts the coaching approach—directive, coaching, supporting, delegating—to match the coachee's development level and commitment in the specific competency
Centers coaching on the client's desired future and existing strengths rather than past problems, using solution-focused questioning to generate rapid progress
Guides coaching conversations through seven stages that address both rational goal-setting and the emotional dimensions of behavioral change
Develops team performance by coaching the team as a system rather than as individuals, addressing dynamics, tasks, and shared purpose
Goes beyond behavioral change to work with identity, values, and mental models that shape how clients interpret their world and generate action
Combines vivid goal visualization with an honest assessment of the main obstacle and a specific if-then implementation plan to boost goal attainment
№ 28 Category
Finance & Valuation
Links a company's three core financial statements into an integrated dynamic model used as the foundation for all financial analysis
Calculates whether an acquisition increases (accretive) or decreases (dilutive) the acquirer's earnings per share on a pro forma basis
Prices European options by modeling the underlying asset's stochastic price process with five inputs: stock price, strike, time, volatility, and risk-free rate
Values a company by applying the valuation multiples of similar publicly traded companies to its own financial metrics
Values an asset by projecting its future free cash flows and discounting them back to the present at a risk-adjusted rate
Decomposes return on equity into net margin, asset turnover, and financial leverage components to diagnose the drivers of profitability
Measures economic profit by subtracting the cost of all capital from operating profit to determine whether a business creates or destroys value
Calculates the cash available to all capital providers after operating expenses and investment, used as the numerator in enterprise value DCF models
Values a stock by dividing next year's expected dividend by the difference between the required return and the perpetual dividend growth rate
Assesses a company's operational, financial, legal, and governance readiness to meet public market requirements before initiating an IPO process
Models a private equity acquisition using significant debt, projecting equity investor returns based on leverage, growth, and exit multiple
Establishes that in perfect markets capital structure does not affect firm value, providing the theoretical baseline for all capital structure analysis
Runs thousands of random scenarios on key financial variables to produce a probability distribution of outcomes for risk assessment and valuation
Values a company using the multiples paid in comparable historical M&A transactions, reflecting acquisition premiums embedded in deal prices
Values managerial flexibility in investment decisions—expand, delay, abandon—as financial options, capturing upside that traditional DCF models ignore
Stress-tests financial models by varying key assumptions—growth rate, margins, discount rate—to understand valuation sensitivity and identify key drivers
Values a diversified company by valuing each business segment separately and summing the results to identify conglomerate discount or premium
Calculates blended cost of capital by weighting cost of debt and equity by market value proportions, used as the DCF discount rate
№ 29 Category
AI / LLM Systems & Prompt Engineering
Coordinates multiple AI agents through a supervisor that decomposes tasks and delegates to specialist worker agents, aggregating their outputs
Structures autonomous AI agent behavior as a continuous loop of planning actions, executing them, observing results, and reflecting before the next step
Enables multiple LLM-powered agents to converse and collaborate on complex tasks through programmable conversation patterns and tool use
Improves LLM reasoning by prompting the model to show its step-by-step thought process before delivering a final answer
Trains AI models to self-critique and revise outputs against defined principles, improving safety without relying solely on human feedback
Provides the LLM with relevant background information, examples, and constraints within the prompt to improve output relevance and accuracy
Organizes AI agents into crews with defined roles, goals, and backstories that collaborate through structured task delegation
Treats LLM pipelines as programmable modules with learnable parameters, automatically optimizing prompts and few-shot examples through compilation
Provides the LLM with a small number of input-output examples within the prompt to demonstrate the desired format, style, or reasoning pattern
Optimizes prompts using evolutionary algorithms that simultaneously maximize multiple objectives, selecting prompt variants on a Pareto frontier
Structures information as a graph of entities and relationships within the prompt to help LLMs reason about connected knowledge more accurately
Augments retrieval-augmented generation with a knowledge graph layer that enables multi-hop reasoning across retrieved document communities
Inserts human review and approval at critical decision points in an automated AI workflow to catch errors and maintain accountability
Fine-tunes a language model on instruction-response pairs to improve its ability to follow diverse natural language instructions zero-shot
Builds stateful, cyclical multi-actor applications on top of LangChain by representing agent interactions as a directed graph with persistent state
Provides AI agents with distinct memory stores for past experiences, general knowledge, and learned skills to maintain context across interactions
Uses an LLM to generate or refine the optimal prompt for a downstream task rather than crafting the prompt entirely by hand
Automatically optimizes multi-stage LLM programs by proposing and evaluating instruction and few-shot example combinations using Bayesian optimization
Routes queries to the appropriate expert module—neural or symbolic—based on the nature of the task, combining LLM reasoning with external tools
Improves LLM answer quality by having multiple model instances debate a question from different positions, then synthesizing the most defensible conclusion
Executes multiple tool calls simultaneously rather than sequentially, reducing latency for tasks decomposable into independent subtasks
Optimizes continuous prompt embeddings rather than discrete tokens, achieving task-specific model adaptation with fewer trainable parameters than full fine-tuning
Grounds LLM responses in retrieved relevant documents, reducing hallucinations and enabling access to information beyond the model's training data
Structures a retrieval-augmented generation system with ingestion, indexing, retrieval, ranking, and generation stages each with distinct optimization considerations
Interleaves LLM reasoning steps with tool actions and observations in a loop that enables agents to solve multi-step problems requiring external information
Combines chain-of-thought reasoning with action generation in a unified prompting approach that improves agent reliability and interpretability
Improves agent performance by having the model reflect on past failures, storing verbal self-feedback to guide future attempts
Assigns a specific role or persona to an LLM at the prompt start to shape its tone, expertise level, and perspective
Provides the LLM a designated scratchpad section in the prompt to perform intermediate computations before producing the final answer
Samples multiple chain-of-thought reasoning paths from an LLM and selects the most common final answer, improving accuracy on complex reasoning tasks
Prompts the LLM to evaluate its own initial response against specified criteria and iteratively revise it until quality thresholds are met
Provides a lightweight SDK for orchestrating AI plugins, memory, and planner components to build enterprise-grade AI agents and copilots
Improves LLM reasoning by first asking a more abstract, general question to activate relevant background knowledge before tackling the specific problem
Decomposes complex tasks by having a supervisor agent plan and delegate subtasks to specialized subagents, aggregating results into a coherent output
Provides persistent instructions, persona, and constraints to an LLM at the system level, shaping its behavior throughout an entire conversation
Extends LLM capabilities by allowing models to call external functions or APIs during generation, grounding responses in real-time data and computation
Explores multiple reasoning branches simultaneously, allowing the LLM to backtrack and try different thought paths before committing to an answer
Elicits task completion from an LLM using only a natural language instruction with no examples, relying on pretrained knowledge alone
№ 30 Category
Sustainability & ESG
Certifies companies meeting rigorous verified standards of social and environmental performance, accountability, and transparency
Provides a global disclosure system that enables companies, cities, and states to measure and manage their environmental impacts and climate risks
Designs out waste and pollution by keeping products and materials in use through restorative loops of reuse, repair, remanufacturing, and recycling
Requires EU companies to disclose detailed sustainability information under standardized ESRS, applying to a broad set of large and listed companies
Defines a safe and just space for humanity between a social foundation floor and a planetary ecological ceiling in a circular framework
Provides the detailed topical standards mandated under CSRD covering environment, social, and governance disclosure requirements for EU companies
Provides globally used sustainability reporting standards for organizations to communicate their economic, environmental, and social impacts
Establishes baseline global sustainability disclosure requirements with S1 covering general requirements and S2 providing climate-specific standards
Provides a shared framework for understanding, measuring, and managing social and environmental impact across five dimensions
Identifies which sustainability issues matter based on their financial impact on the company and their impact on people and the environment
Provides a standardized framework for businesses to identify, measure, and value their impacts and dependencies on natural capital
Defines nine Earth system processes with quantified boundaries within which humanity can operate safely without triggering abrupt global change
Provides six principles for incorporating ESG factors into investment analysis and ownership practices signed by institutional investors globally
Designs farming systems that restore soil health, increase biodiversity, and sequester carbon as positive-impact alternatives to extractive conventional agriculture
Provides industry-specific sustainability accounting standards for 77 industries identifying the ESG issues most likely to affect financial performance
Provides companies with a clearly defined path for reducing emissions in line with Paris Agreement goals through validated science-based targets
Measures and accounts for the social, environmental, and economic value created by an organization relative to resources invested
Recommends disclosures of climate-related risks and opportunities across governance, strategy, risk management, and metrics and targets
Provides a framework for organizations to assess, manage, and disclose nature-related risks and opportunities, complementing TCFD for biodiversity
Calls on companies worldwide to align strategy and operations with ten principles covering human rights, labor, environment, and anti-corruption
Provides 17 interconnected global goals adopted by UN member states to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure prosperity by 2030
№ 31 Category
Implementation Science
Provides structured approaches for implementing evidence-based practices at scale through installation, initial, full, and innovation implementation stages
Organizes implementation determinants into five domains—intervention, outer setting, inner setting, individuals, process—to guide research and practice
Addresses long-term sustainability by treating interventions as continuously adapting to changing contexts rather than fixed protocols
Guides implementation of evidence-based practices through four sequential phases with attention to outer and inner context factors at each stage
Provides a compilation of 73 discrete implementation strategies organized into nine clusters for use in selecting implementation tactics
Provides a taxonomy for systematically documenting intentional adaptations to evidence-based interventions during implementation
Guides practitioners through ten accountability questions covering needs assessment, goal setting, program selection, planning, and evaluation
Extends PARIHS by positioning facilitation as the active ingredient that assesses and responds to innovation, recipient, and context factors
Guides the synthesis, dissemination, and exchange of research knowledge between researchers and decision-makers to improve health outcomes
Integrates knowledge creation and action cycles, guiding the process of moving research through synthesis, tailoring, and implementation to evaluation
Predicts implementation outcomes for digital health technologies by assessing complexity across seven domains
Proposes that successful implementation is a function of evidence strength, context quality, and facilitation effectiveness
Integrates the RE-AIM evaluation framework with implementation drivers to plan for both effectiveness and sustainability from the outset
Provides a 14-step framework for planning and executing high-quality implementation of evidence-based programs
Evaluates public health interventions across five dimensions to assess real-world impact beyond efficacy trials
Identifies 14 domains of theoretical constructs that influence behavior change, guiding selection of implementation strategies and behavior change techniques
Maps the science of translating research evidence into clinical practice through dissemination, adoption, implementation, and outcomes evaluation
№ 32 Category
Ethics & Governance
Defines five protections for Americans in the age of automated systems: safe systems, freedom from discrimination, data privacy, notice, and human alternatives
Requires that risk be reduced as far as is reasonably practicable, balancing risk reduction benefits against costs and difficulty of mitigation
Centers moral reasoning on relationships, caring, and context rather than abstract principles, emphasizing responsiveness to particular others' needs
Resolves moral dilemmas by analyzing analogous precedent cases and transferring their resolutions to the present case rather than applying universal rules
Evaluates actions solely by their outcomes, holding that the right act is whichever produces the greatest good for the greatest number
Holds that certain actions are intrinsically right or wrong regardless of consequences, guided by universal moral duties and the categorical imperative
Grounds moral norms in rational communicative agreement, holding that valid norms must be acceptable to all affected parties in open discourse
Regulates AI systems in the EU based on risk classification—unacceptable, high, limited, minimal—with proportionate obligations at each tier
Examines how gender, power, and social context shape moral experience and challenges androcentric biases in traditional ethical theories
Requires those entrusted with others' assets or interests—directors, advisors, trustees—to act solely in the beneficiary's best interest
Integrates an organization's approach to governance, enterprise risk management, and regulatory compliance into a unified management capability
Communicates how an organization creates value over time by integrating financial and non-financial information across six capitals
Provides voluntary guidance for managing AI risks across four functions—Govern, Map, Measure, Manage—to improve AI system trustworthiness
Establishes five principles for responsible stewardship of trustworthy AI—inclusive growth, human-centered values, transparency, robustness, accountability
Applies four mid-level principles to bioethical dilemmas rather than single-theory derivations, balancing respect for persons, benefit, harm avoidance, and fairness
Establishes organizational principles—fairness, accountability, transparency, safety—for the ethical development and deployment of AI systems
Grounds moral judgments in the concept of fundamental rights that constrain action regardless of utilitarian calculations, protecting individual dignity
Holds that managers act as stewards of shareholder value and trust, aligning their interests with the organization's rather than pursuing self-interest
Provides the governance architecture for implementing and monitoring the 17 UN SDGs across national governments and international institutions
Uses the classic trolley dilemma to contrast utilitarian and deontological moral intuitions in ethics education and applied moral philosophy
Provides methodologies and tools—Corruption Perceptions Index, surveys—for measuring, advocating against, and reducing corruption globally
Provides the first global normative instrument on AI ethics, adopted by 193 member states, establishing principles and policy guidance for trustworthy AI
Establishes the foundational international norms protecting civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights as standards for all nations
Judges actions by whether they maximize overall happiness or utility, requiring decision-makers to consider consequences for all affected parties
Focuses moral development on cultivating character traits—courage, honesty, justice, prudence—that enable human flourishing rather than following rules or maximizing outcomes