Problem Tree Analysis
This problem tree toolkit will guide you through building a Preliminary Problem Tree. The goal is to clarify the root causes, core problem, and consequences of a key challenge your project seeks to address:
✅ Break down complex challenges into root causes, core problems, and effects. ✅ Use AI strategically to accelerate desk research while maintaining quality. ✅ Build a preliminary Problem Tree that separates evidence from assumptions. ✅ Prepare targeted questions for stakeholder validation. ✅ Create a foundation for all subsequent project design work.
🧭 Why Problem Tree Analysis Matters
The Challenge
Most social impact projects struggle not because of bad intentions, but because of unclear problem definition. Without solid problem analysis, you end up with:
❌ Vague, unmeasurable goals. ❌ Activities that don't connect to outcomes. ❌ Solutions that miss the real issues. ❌ Proposals that confuse rather than convince funders.
📋 Step-by-Step Implementation Guide
Phase 1: Preparation
Define your problem scope
Write 1-2 sentence problem statement
Specify population, geography, timeframe
List what you already know
Set up documentation
Create folder for sources and citations
Prepare note-taking system (digital or analog)
Set up Problem Tree template
Build MCP prompt
Customize template with your context
Review and refine prompt language
Prepare to copy-paste into AI system
Phase 2: AI-Assisted Literature Review
Run MCP prompt
Execute in ChatGPT, Claude, or similar
Save complete output
Initial review for obvious issues
Quality verification
Check source credibility and recency
Verify 2-3 key citations
Note gaps or contradictions
Organize findings
Extract problem tree elements
Sort indicators and questions
Tag evidence vs. assumptions
Phase 3: Tree Construction
Draft core problem (10 min)
Refine based on AI output
Ensure specificity and clarity
Avoid causes or solutions
Map causes and effects (15 min)
Organize by levels and categories
Apply (E) and (A) tags
Check logical connections
Quality review (5 min)
Use provided checklist
Verify balance and depth
Identify priority assumptions
Phase 4: Stakeholder Preparation
Convert assumptions to questions (10 min)
Focus on highest-priority (A) items
Create open-ended, non-leading questions
Aim for 8-10 core questions
Plan validation approach (5 min)
Identify key stakeholder types needed
Consider access and engagement methods
Set timeline for validation activities