| name | 4cs-research-structure |
| description | When beginning strategy research, structure discovery across four independent lenses — Company, Consumer, Category, Culture — and close each with an implication sentence ("If this is true, then our strategy must..."). Prevents lopsided research that skips lenses and forces findings to bridge into strategy direction rather than stopping at observation. |
| composition_level | atom |
| extraction-lens | capability |
| source_attribution | Matt Bond + Julian Cole (Strategy Finishing School, via Hivemind Library) |
| license | pending-consent |
| status | candidate |
4Cs Research Structure
When to use
- User is kicking off strategy work and needs research structure
- User's draft strategy is strong on one dimension but weak on others
- New client engagement requiring complete discovery foundation
- Campaign planning for a brand you haven't worked with before
When NOT to use
- User already has research done and wants tactical execution
- Project too narrow for 4Cs (single-channel optimization, e.g.)
- User wants a creative brief (use
get-to-by-brief-generation after research)
Core procedure
Step 1: Run research across four independent lenses
Company — what does the brand own?
- Values, product truths, distinctive assets, financial health
- What is the unfair advantage?
- Where does the brand have permission to play?
Consumer — who are they really?
- Tensions they live with, secret wants
- Where does the category fit in their life?
- What do they say vs. do (behavioral contradictions)?
Category — what are the rules?
- Growth trends, purchase drivers, loyalty dynamics
- Category clichés and conventions
- Where does the category disappoint?
Culture — what's happening in the world?
- Social shifts, media behavior, economic forces
- Cultural tensions the brand can tap
- What moment is this work landing in?
Step 2: End each C with an implication sentence
Format: "If this is true, then our strategy must ______."
This is the skill's force-function — it prevents 4Cs from becoming a box-tick exercise and bridges research into strategy direction.
Step 3: Coverage check before exit
If any C has fewer than 3 meaningful findings or no implication, do not proceed to strategy writing. Return to that lens. Lopsided research is the most common failure mode for this skill.
Output format
COMPANY
- [3+ findings]
- IMPLICATION: If this is true, then our strategy must...
CONSUMER
- [3+ findings]
- IMPLICATION: If this is true, then our strategy must...
CATEGORY
- [3+ findings]
- IMPLICATION: If this is true, then our strategy must...
CULTURE
- [3+ findings]
- IMPLICATION: If this is true, then our strategy must...
Failure modes
- Box-tick exercise. Findings without implications are observations, not strategy inputs. Force the implication sentence.
- Lopsided coverage. Team knows the consumer but not the category. The 4Cs only work when all four are covered.
- Generic findings. "Consumers care about quality" applies to anyone. Force findings specific to this brand × this category × this moment.
- Implications that are tactics. "We must run more LinkedIn ads" is a tactic; the implication should be strategic ("Our positioning must lead with the underground audience, not the mainstream").
Related skills
problem-insight-solution-formula — runs after 4Cs to formalize the strategic spine
get-to-by-brief-generation — translates strategy into creative brief
strategic-tension-weaponization — uses Culture findings to identify positioning opportunities