// description
A strengths-based approach to organisational change that focuses on what's working well (the "positive core") rather than what's broken. Uses four phases: Discover (what gives life?), Dream (what might be?), Design (what should be?), Destiny (how will it be?).
// history
Developed by David Cooperrider and Suresh Srivastva at Case Western Reserve University in the late 1980s, Appreciative Inquiry arose as a critique of traditional deficit-based problem solving. Their research showed that organisations improve faster when they study and amplify their strengths rather than obsessively analysing their weaknesses. AI has been used for large-scale organisational transformation at companies like Roadway Express, GTE, and the United Nations.
// example
Instead of asking "why don't more people buy my courses?", ask "what do my happiest students have in common, and what made them enrol?" Discover: they came from YouTube content that showed concrete results. Dream: what if every piece of content demonstrated a specific transformation? Design: create a content calendar around before/after showcases. Destiny: implement and track enrolment from that content specifically.
// katharyne's take
Most problem solving is deficit-focused — we zoom in on what's wrong and try to fix it. Appreciative Inquiry flips that. Ask: when have things gone brilliantly, and why? I use this after a successful launch to reverse-engineer what worked, so I can do more of it on purpose. Your "positive core" — the things that make your business uniquely yours — is the thing most worth building on. Everything else is just noise.
// creative uses
- After your best-performing KDP or Etsy month, run an AI Discover session: pull your top 10 selling products and look for patterns — niche, price point, cover style, keyword structure. These are your positive core. Design your next quarter's product creation around amplifying those exact patterns, not chasing new trends.
- Apply AI to your email list: filter for your top 20% most engaged subscribers and survey them with one question — "What made you sign up, and what keeps you opening these emails?" The answers define your Dream state for your email content. Build your next three months of email content around their answers.
- Use the four Discover-Dream-Design-Destiny phases to build a course content strategy from your best-ever student results: Discover (what did they achieve?), Dream (what if every student got that outcome?), Design (what curriculum structure produces it consistently?), Destiny (implement and measure against that student's results as the benchmark).
// quick actions
- Look at your five best-ever Etsy reviews. Read them carefully. Write down every word or phrase the buyer used to describe the value. These are your product's actual positive core — use these exact words in your next listing rewrite. You can't invent better copy than what your buyers already wrote for you.
- Identify your single best-performing product across all channels. Ask: what is specifically true about this product that isn't true about the others? Replicate those exact characteristics in your next three products before building anything new.
- Run a five-minute AI session on your YouTube channel or newsletter right now: which episode or issue got the most responses, replies, or shares? Ask why — what specific element made it resonate? Schedule a similar piece of content for next week, built on that same element.
// prompt ideas
Run an Appreciative Inquiry Discover phase with me for my creator business. Instead of asking what's broken, ask me questions about when things have gone best — my best-selling products, my most engaged audience moments, my favourite work. Then help me identify the "positive core" patterns I should be building more of deliberately.
I have a list of my top [5–10] performing products on [KDP / Etsy / Gumroad]: [list them with their key metrics]. Using Appreciative Inquiry, help me identify what these products have in common — niche specificity, format, audience, price point, visual style — and use those patterns to brief my next three products.
Here are five of my best-ever customer reviews or student testimonials: [paste them]. Apply Appreciative Inquiry: extract the language buyers use about value, help me see my "positive core" through their eyes, and turn those insights into three concrete content or product ideas that amplify what's already working.