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Issue trees
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in practice
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Issue trees help to identify the key issue or question
that the project should address, and break it down into its smaller
component parts. They can be used:
- at the beginning of a piece of strategy work to identify key
workstreams
- to plan individual workstreams
- to analyse specific key questions
- to communicate the shape and direction of the work.
The trees are a useful reference point throughout a
project providing context and showing how each piece of work fits into the
whole. A well thought out tree should also inform how to structure
communications about the project, including the final report.
Issue trees
Before embarking on the detailed thinking, some time
should be spent thinking through the overarching question that the project
is attempting to answer. One way of creating this statement of the problem
is to note down some of the areas of enquiry and, crucially, those areas
that lie outside the scope of the project. The opening question must be
wide enough to encompass the full overview of the strategy if it is to be
used to plan the project. Defining the starting point can be the most
difficult part of building an issue tree.
The next layer should set out a series of questions
that together answer the question above them in the tree. For example, if
the starting question is "How can we most effectively increase
employment rates through improving access to childcare?" the next
layer in the tree might comprise two further questions:
- What are the most effective forms of childcare to help parents into
work?
- How can government best support parents in accessing these forms of
childcare?
The answers to these two questions should provide the answer to the
original, higher level question. These two questions will then be further
broken down, and so on, until a level of questions is reached that address
the fundamental root causes of the original issue. Specific analysis can
then be designed to address each one.
Each time a question is broken out into lower level
questions, these lower-level questions should together give the answer to
the higher level question. Moreover, these lower level questions should
together cover all the issues needing to be resolved, but should not
overlap each other. Questions to be resolved should fall into one of the
buckets, not both. In more technical parlance, this is known as Mutually
Exclusive, Collectively Exhaustive.
Although it may seem cumbersome, writing out the
questions in full is very helpful as it forces clarity of thinking.
This issue
tree template may be helpful.
For any problem, there will be a number of ways of
drawing out the issue tree, frequently resting on the way in which the
first set of branches is constructed. It is worth having a number of
attempts at the tree (perhaps done by different members of the team),
using different structures. The trees can then be evaluated on the basis
of how well they seem to be working best in terms of breaking down the
issues into smaller, answerable questions; in terms of breaking the
project out into workstreams; and in terms of structuring future
communications (reports or other documents). Techniques that can be
helpful during the question-development process include brainstorming and
other creativity tools. They will help you approach the issue from a fresh
perspective.
Hypothesis Tree
A variant of an issue tree is a hypothesis tree. While
issue trees are likely to be most useful early on in the project when
developing the project plan, hypothesis trees tend to be more useful later
on in the project in structuring the conclusions and subsequent
communications.
If an issue tree starts with one question; a hypothesis
tree starts with one statement. Each level of the hypothesis tree is
linked with the questions "why?" or "how?". This
ensures that the lower level hypotheses together answer the higher level
hypothesis. An example of this might be: higher level hypothesis:
"Government can best support parents moving into work by ensuring
availability of out-of-school childcare in the local area through
pump-priming of provision of this type". The next layer of the tree
will answer "Why?":
- Out-of-school care will have the greatest effects in getting parents
into work.
- The price of out-of-school care is reasonable, it is the
availability that is the problem, caused by difficulties amongst
out-of-school clubs in meeting start-up costs.
Note that to some extent, using a hypothesis tree
relies on having some knowledge of the content of the likely solutions.
Work planning
Issue or hypothesis trees can feed directly into
detailed work planning. A work plan could have sub-issues on the left hand
side, with activities to answer the question, sources and outputs on the
right. For example:
Issue |
Sub-issue |
Activities |
Sources |
Outputs |
Responsible |
Due date |
|
What are the most effective forms of childcare to help parents
into work? |
What forms of childcare are most working parents currently using? |
Review the evidence on use of childcare by working parents |
Parents Demand for Childcare Survey |
Paper on the most effective childcare to get parents into work,
including estimated impact |
|
|
Strengths
- A powerful tool providing the opening question is right - wide
enough but not so wide that issues outside the scope of the study are
included - to find the most effective initial breakdown.
- Can be used to structure the development of the project and define
the workstreams.
Weaknesses
- Interdependent issues may be divided across branches of the tree. It
is worth keeping this in mind.
- Does not give any sense of priorities. The team should focus on
those areas of the tree that are likely to have the most impact on the
eventual conclusions and impact of the project.
Resources
"The Pyramid Principle" by Barbara Minto
gives an explanation of the type of logic involved in thinking in tree
structures.
Structuring the thinking - Issue trees
In Practice: SU Childcare Project
The SU Childcare project used an issue tree to identify
all the issues in the childcare arena. By breaking out all the questions
in this way, the team:
- designed the overall project plan
- constructed workstreams
- gave a kick-start to the process of work planning within these
workstreams
- began to think about the structure of the report and other
communications.
The team decided to develop the tree in some detail as
it was proving helpful in work planning.
Example: A
fully worked-out example from the Childcare project
The team continued to revisit the issue tree as the
project unfolded as a means of monitoring progress and to kick start
thinking as new workstreams were started up.
The first couple of levels of the tree and, crucially, the opening
problem statement, were discussed as a team - though a number of team
members had attempted first cuts from which we worked. A smaller team then
further developed the tree and translated it into the project plan.
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