Frameworks usually start with a question. SCR asks: what’s the situation, what’s broken, what do we do? Issue trees ask: what are all the possible reasons? The 2x2 matrix asks: what are the two dimensions that matter most when choosing between multiple options?
Hypothesis-driven thinking flips the direction. Instead of starting with a question and exploring outward, you start with an answer, or your best guess about what’s true, and then work backward to figure out what would need to be true for your guess to be right.
The structure is: I believe X to be true, then I should see evidence A, B, and C. Let me look for A, B, and C. If I find them, my hypothesis holds. If I don’t, I update or abandon it. That’s it. Guess first. Test second. Update third.
When an executive says: “I don’t know what’s going on,” there are two ways to help her. The first is the issue tree approach: map everything systematically, let the answer emerge from the analysis. That’s thorough but slow. The second is the hypothesis approach: form a point of view fast, based on pattern recognition and experience, then test it. This is how the best diagnosticians, investigators, and strategists actually work in practice. They don’t explore neutrally. They walk in with a hunch and then try to prove it or disprove it.
Think of financial analyst Meredith Whitney. She didn’t do an issue tree on Bear Stearns. She had a hypothesis: this bank is insolvent, and then she looked for the specific evidence that would confirm or destroy that hypothesis. Traders lying about volume. Leverage ratios. Lending standards. Each data point was a test of her hypothesis, not open exploration.
The key discipline: A good hypothesis has three properties.
Who uses it? Scientists, obviously. The entire scientific method is hypothesis-driven. But also intelligence analysts, doctors diagnosing patients, detectives investigating cases, VCs evaluating startups, and consultants who need to move fast. It’s faster than open exploration because it focuses your attention on the evidence that matters most.
Framework comparison: SCR is how you communicate a conclusion. Issue trees are how you map a problem space. The 2x2 is how you structure a decision. Hypothesis-driven thinking is how you move fast through uncertainty when you can’t afford to explore everything. It’s the framework for when you have a hunch and need to know whether to trust it.
A hypothesis IS a compression. It takes everything you’ve observed and collapses it into a single testable claim. A hypothesis is explicitly provisional. You’re not saying “this is the answer,” but “this is my best guess and here’s how we test it.” If you’re wrong, you update. Nothing is permanently lost.
Who developed it:
How consulting companies typically use it:
The key cultural element is that no one is attached to the original hypothesis. It’s a tool. Being wrong early is expected and even valued, it means you learned something. What’s not acceptable is exploring without direction or spending weeks gathering data without a point of view to test against.
Variations:
Common pitfalls:
The emotional dimension matters. Forming a hypothesis requires courage. You’re putting a stake in the ground before you have full information. Testing it requires honesty, you have to genuinely look for disconfirming evidence, not just go through the motions. Updating requires humility: you have to admit when you’re wrong. And abandoning requires tolerance: letting go of something you invested in.