What Is a Problem, Really?

Day 2 of 30 · Done is better - Build What Matters

Learn to separate symptoms from the real challenge.


Learning goal

  • Define problem vs symptom.
  • Identify the real challenge behind observable signs.
  • Apply the separation in one real situation.

Why it matters

  • Treating symptoms wastes effort and leaves the cause intact.
  • The first thing you see is often not the root cause.
  • Action on the wrong target creates noise, not progress.

Key idea

A problem is a gap between current state and desired state. A symptom is what you observe. Find what would have to be true for the symptom to exist; that points to the real problem.


Procedure

  1. List what you observe (symptoms).
  2. Ask: what would have to be true for this to happen?
  3. Identify the gap between current and desired state.
  4. State the problem in one sentence.
  5. Check: is this actionable?

Example

Scenario: A team keeps missing deadlines.

Diagnosis: Missing deadlines is a symptom; the problem might be unclear scope, no buffer, or wrong capacity.

Better approach: Ask what would have to be true for deadlines to be missed; find the gap (e.g. scope creep); state the problem as an actionable gap.


Common mistakes

  • Treating the first observable sign as the problem.
  • Solving symptoms repeatedly without finding the cause.
  • Stating the problem in vague or non-actionable terms.

Today's move

Pick one situation where something keeps going wrong. List symptoms, then write one sentence: what is the real problem (the gap)?


Self-check

  • You can explain the key idea in one sentence.
  • You have one concrete move to do today.
Day 2: What Is a Problem, Really? | Done is better - Build What Matters | Amanoba