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// framework

Concept Fan

Edward de Bono

The Concept Fan radiates a problem in two directions — Why (to find higher-level purpose) and How (to generate specific solutions) — revealing that the original problem statement is usually just one of several paths to the actual goal.

// description

The concept fan starts with the problem at the center of a fan shape and works outward in two directions. Moving left (toward the broad end), you ask "Why?" to identify the higher-level purpose behind the problem. Moving right (toward the narrow end), you ask "How?" to generate specific solutions. Each broader purpose can generate its own set of more specific approaches, producing multiple solution paths radiating from different framings of the same problem.

// history

De Bono described the concept fan in his work on lateral thinking, presenting it as a tool for escaping fixation on a single approach. By moving to a more abstract level (the purpose), the thinker opens up entirely new categories of solution that are invisible when fixated on the original problem statement.

// example

A KDP publisher wants to increase book sales. The concept fan asks why: the higher purpose is to increase income. Moving one level broader: the purpose is financial sustainability as a creator. Now, moving right from "financial sustainability," the fan generates new solution paths beyond book sales: consulting, speaking, courses, licensing, merchandise, template software. Moving right from "increase book sales" specifically generates paths like: improve covers, adjust pricing, run ads, expand to new marketplaces, bundle titles. The fan reveals that the original problem (book sales) was only one of several paths to the actual goal (financial sustainability).

// katharyne's take

I use the concept fan when I'm stuck on a problem that feels like it only has one solution. Moving up one level of abstraction almost always reveals that there are other ways to achieve the same goal that I hadn't even considered. This is literally how I discovered that building software tools (Tangent Templates) was a path to creator income — I asked "why do I want to sell more KDP books?" and eventually reached "I want to help creators build sustainable businesses," which opened up a completely different product category. Don't underestimate the "why" direction of the fan.

// creative uses
// quick actions
// prompt ideas
Guide me through a Concept Fan session on this problem: [describe your current business or creative challenge]. Start by asking me "why" three times to move up to higher levels of purpose, then help me generate at least five solution paths at each level. I want to find approaches I haven't considered yet.
I keep coming back to the same solution for [problem in my KDP / Etsy / creator business]. Use the Concept Fan to help me break out of this fixation — move up to the broader purpose behind my goal, then generate at least 10 ways to achieve that broader purpose that have nothing to do with my current approach.
My current income comes from [describe your main revenue stream]. Apply the Concept Fan by asking why this matters until we reach my deepest financial and creative goal, then generate a list of 8–10 completely different product or business model paths that could serve that same goal. Rank them by feasibility and novelty.
See also: Mind Mapping · Lateral Thinking · Creative Problem Solving (CPS)
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