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// framework

Starbursting

Various (1980s–1990s creativity workshops)

Starbursting generates questions rather than answers by mapping Who, What, Where, When, Why, and How onto a six-pointed star — ensuring you've thoroughly explored a concept before committing time and money to building it.

// description

Starbursting generates questions rather than answers. A six-pointed star is drawn, with each point labeled with one of the classic interrogatives: Who, What, Where, When, Why, and How. The group then generates as many questions as possible for each point, applied to the idea or product under consideration. The technique ensures thorough exploration of a concept before committing resources to development.

// history

Starbursting emerged from the broader brainstorming tradition and is widely attributed to business creativity workshops of the 1980s and 1990s, though no single originator is documented. It gained popularity as a complement to traditional brainstorming because it addresses a common failure mode: teams that generate solutions before they fully understand the problem.

// example

A KDP publisher considering a new line of coloring books for adult women uses Starbursting. Who is the buyer — stressed professional, retired hobbyist, new mum, craft enthusiast? What style — realistic, abstract, mandala, botanical, narrative scenes? Where do they color — commute, sofa, dedicated crafting space? When do they buy — gifting season, their own birthday, impulse? Why would they choose this over an existing book — unique style, specific theme, quality paper? How do they discover it — Pinterest, Amazon search, gift recommendations? The "When" question surfaces a gifting-season opportunity the publisher had underweighted, and the "How" question reveals Pinterest as an underused channel for that audience.

// katharyne's take

Run a Starbursting session before you start any new product or niche. I make it a rule: before I touch a design tool or write a product description, I have to fill in all six star points with genuine questions about the product. The "When" question is almost always the most revealing — it forces you to think about buying triggers and seasonal patterns that completely change your marketing strategy. The "Why this over alternatives" question is essentially your positioning work done in advance.

// creative uses
// quick actions
// prompt ideas
Run a Starbursting session with me on this product idea: [describe your product — e.g. a colouring book for stressed professionals, a KDP puzzle journal for seniors, a Canva template pack for coaches]. For each of the six points — Who, What, Where, When, Why, How — generate at least 4 specific questions I need to answer before I build this. Then flag which 2 questions are most critical to validate first.
I'm planning a new [Etsy listing / KDP book / digital template]. Help me use the Starbursting "Why" point to stress-test my positioning: generate 8 different reasons a customer might choose this product over existing alternatives, then tell me which ones I'm currently not communicating in my product description.
Using Starbursting, help me turn this one content idea — [describe your topic or post concept] — into a full quarter's content plan. Generate 5 questions for each of the 6 star points, then show me how each question could become a standalone piece of content across [email / blog / YouTube / social].
See also: Brainstorming · Lotus Blossom Technique · Mind Mapping
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