Guide product managers through the MITRE Problem Framing Canvas process by asking structured questions across three phases: Look Inward (examine your own assumptions and biases), Look Outward (understand who experiences the problem and who doesn't), and Reframe (synthesize insights into an actionable problem statement and "How Might We" question). Use this to ensure you're solving the right problem before jumping to solutions—avoiding confirmation bias, overlooked stakeholders, and solution-first thinking.
This is not a solution brainstorm—it's a problem framing tool that broadens perspective, challenges assumptions, and produces a clear, equity-driven problem statement.
The Problem Framing Canvas (MITRE Innovation Toolkit, v3) is a structured framework that helps teams explore a problem space comprehensively before proposing solutions. It's partitioned into three areas:
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ LOOK INWARD │
│ - What is the problem? (symptoms) │
│ - Why haven't we solved it? (new, hard, low priority, etc.) │
│ - How are we part of the problem? (assumptions, biases) │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ LOOK OUTWARD │
│ - Who experiences the problem? When/where/consequences? │
│ - Who else has it? Who doesn't have it? │
│ - Who's been left out? │
│ - Who benefits when problem exists/doesn't exist? │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ REFRAME │
│ - Stated another way, the problem is: [restatement] │
│ - How might we [action] as we aim to [objective]? │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Use workshop-facilitation as the default interaction protocol for this skill.
It defines:
Other (specify) when useful)This file defines the domain-specific assessment content. If there is a conflict, follow this file's domain logic.
Use template.md for the full fill-in structure.
This interactive skill follows a three-phase process, asking adaptive questions in each phase.
Agent suggests:
Before we frame your problem, let's gather context:
Problem Context:
Stakeholder Context:
You can paste this content directly, or describe the problem briefly.
Goal: Examine your own assumptions, biases, and how you might be part of the problem.
Agent asks: "What is the problem as you currently understand it? Describe the symptoms."
Offer 4 enumerated options:
Or describe your problem/symptoms.
User response: [Selection or custom]
Agent extracts:
Agent asks: "Why hasn't this problem been solved yet?"
Offer 6 enumerated options (can select multiple):
Or describe your own reason.
User response: [Selection or custom]
Agent captures:
Agent asks: "How might you (or your team) be part of the problem? What assumptions or biases are you bringing?"
Offer 4 enumerated options:
Or describe your specific assumptions/biases.
User response: [Selection or custom]
Agent captures:
Goal: Understand who experiences the problem, who benefits from it, and who's been left out.
Agent asks: "Who experiences this problem? When and where do they experience it? What consequences do they face?"
Agent prompts user to describe:
Adaptation: Use personas from context (proto-personas, JTBD, customer research)
User response: [Detailed description]
Agent captures:
Agent asks: "Who else has this problem? (Colleagues, competitors, other domains?) And who doesn't have it?"
Agent prompts:
User response: [Detailed description]
Agent captures:
Agent asks: "Who's been left out of the conversation so far? And who benefits when this problem exists or doesn't exist?"
Agent prompts:
Example:
User response: [Detailed description]
Agent captures:
Goal: Synthesize insights into a clear, actionable problem statement and "How Might We" question.
Agent says: "Based on everything we've explored, let's restate the problem in a new way."
Agent generates a refined problem statement using insights from Phases 1-2:
Template: "The problem is: [Who] struggles to [accomplish what] because [root cause], which leads to [consequence]. This affects [specific segments] and has been overlooked because [bias/assumption from Phase 1]."
Example (SaaS onboarding): "The problem is: Non-technical small business owners struggle to activate our product during onboarding because we use jargon-heavy UI and lack guided workflows, which leads to 60% abandonment within 24 hours. This disproportionately affects solopreneurs without technical support, and has been overlooked because our team optimizes for enterprise users who have IT departments."
Agent asks: "Does this restatement capture the core problem? Should we refine it?"
User response: [Approve or modify]
Agent says: "Now let's make it actionable with a 'How Might We' statement."
Template: "How might we [action that addresses the problem] as we aim to [objective/desired condition]?"
Example (SaaS onboarding): "How might we guide non-technical users through onboarding with plain-language prompts as we aim to increase activation from 40% to 70%?"
Agent asks: "Does this HMW statement set up the right solution space? Should we adjust?"
User response: [Approve or modify]
After completing the flow, the agent outputs:
# Problem Framing Canvas: [Problem Name]
**Date:** [Today's date]
---
## Phase 1: Look Inward
### What is the problem? (Symptoms)
[Description from Q1]
### Why haven't we solved it?
- [Barrier 1 from Q2]
- [Barrier 2]
- [Barrier 3]
### How are we part of the problem? (Assumptions & biases)
- [Assumption 1 from Q3]
- [Assumption 2]
- [Assumption 3]
**Which of these might be redesigned, reframed, or removed?**
[Reflection on biases to challenge]
---
## Phase 2: Look Outward
### Who experiences the problem?
**Who:** [Personas/segments from Q4]
**When/Where:** [Context]
**Consequences:** [Impact on users]
**Lived experience varies:** [How different users experience it differently]
### Who else has this problem?
**Who else:** [Examples from Q5]
**How they deal with it:** [Workarounds]
### Who doesn't have it?
[Counter-examples from Q5]
### Who's been left out?
[Marginalized voices from Q6]
### Who benefits?
**When problem exists:** [Beneficiaries of status quo]
**When problem doesn't exist:** [Who loses if solved]
---
## Phase 3: Reframe
### Stated another way, the problem is:
[Refined problem statement from Q7]
### How Might We...
**How might we** [action from Q8] **as we aim to** [objective from Q8]?
---
## Next Steps
1. **Validate with users:** Use `skills/discovery-interview-prep/SKILL.md` to test reframed problem with customers
2. **Generate solutions:** Use `skills/opportunity-solution-tree/SKILL.md` to explore solution space
3. **Create problem statement:** Use `skills/problem-statement/SKILL.md` to formalize for PRD/roadmap
4. **Identify opportunities:** Use HMW statement to brainstorm solution ideas
---
**Ready to explore solutions? Let me know if you'd like to refine the problem framing or move to solution generation.**
See examples/sample.md for full problem framing examples.
Mini example excerpt:
**Look Inward:** Churn spiked after onboarding change
**Look Outward:** New SMB users are most affected
**Reframe:** How might we reduce onboarding friction for first-time users?
Symptom: Team jumps straight to "Look Outward" without examining biases
Consequence: Groupthink persists, assumptions unchallenged
Fix: Force explicit discussion of assumptions and biases (Q2-Q3)
Symptom: Canvas completed without exploring who benefits from problem existing
Consequence: Miss political dynamics, resistance to change
Fix: Always ask "Who loses if this problem is solved?" (Q6)
Symptom: Reframed problem is vague ("Improve user experience")
Consequence: HMW statement isn't actionable
Fix: Make problem specific (who, what, when, consequence, root cause)
Symptom: "How might we add a mobile app?"
Consequence: Constrains solution space to one idea
Fix: Keep HMW broad: "How might we enable mobile-first users to access core workflows on any device?"
Symptom: PM fills out canvas alone
Consequence: Biases persist, marginalized voices still left out
Fix: Facilitate canvas workshop with cross-functional team + customer input
skills/problem-statement/SKILL.md — Converts reframed problem into formal problem statementskills/opportunity-solution-tree/SKILL.md — Uses HMW statement to generate solution optionsskills/discovery-interview-prep/SKILL.md — Validates reframed problem with customersSkill type: Interactive
Suggested filename: problem-framing-canvas.md
Suggested placement: /skills/interactive/
Dependencies: Uses skills/problem-statement/SKILL.md