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Lateral Provocations

optional-skills/creative/creative-ideation/references/methods/lateral-provocations.md

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Lateral Provocations

Edward de Bono, 1967–. The PO operator and five provocation moves for breaking pattern lock-in. PO is a linguistic marker that flags a statement as a deliberate provocation, not a claim — to be taken seriously even when implausible.

When to use

  • Idea is too safe / too obvious
  • Variations are all minor rephrasings of the same core
  • Suspect a hidden assumption is constraining the search
  • Group with low psychological safety needs permission to say wrong things

Don't use when

  • Disciplined development of an existing idea (provocations interrupt)
  • Engineering safety / legal / medical (provocations are exploratory)
  • Group will dismiss the provocation rather than engage

The five operators

1. Escape (negation). Take something normally true of the system; negate it.

  • Po: restaurants do not serve food.
  • Po: code review does not happen before merge.
  • Po: the meeting has no agenda.

2. Reversal. Reverse a relationship.

  • Po: the patient operates on the surgeon.
  • Po: the listener composes the song.
  • Po: the readers write the book.

3. Exaggeration. Push a parameter to extreme.

  • Po: the meeting has 1000 attendees.
  • Po: the novel has one sentence.
  • Po: the company has one customer.

4. Distortion. Change order, location, or relationship of components.

  • Po: customers pay before they're born.
  • Po: the recipe lists ingredients after the cooking instructions.
  • Po: revenue arrives the year before expenses.

5. Wishful thinking. State an impossible outcome.

  • Po: the medication cures before the patient is sick.
  • Po: the software ships without bugs.
  • Po: the painting paints itself.

Random-word technique

  1. Pick a random noun (dictionary at random page; or list of 1000 nouns + random index).
  2. List 5 connections between the random word and your problem, however tenuous.
  3. Use the strongest.

Example. Problem: my CLI is hard to discover. Random word: "lighthouse".

  • Lighthouses are visible from far; my CLI's affordances are not visible at all.
  • Lighthouses are lit at the right time; my CLI's help is always on, never contextual.
  • Lighthouses signal danger; my CLI doesn't signal when an action is irreversible. ← strongest
  • Lighthouse keepers signal back; mine has no two-way contact.
  • Lighthouses are passive; the ship approaches them.

Result: the CLI should signal danger when about to do something irreversible. Concrete, useful, not obvious from inside the original frame.

Procedure

Single-PO session

  1. State the problem.
  2. Pick an operator.
  3. Generate a PO statement.
  4. List 5 consequences if the PO statement were true.
  5. Pick the strongest consequence.
  6. Translate into a real proposal.

Stacked operators

Two operators on the same problem. Intersection often more interesting than either alone. Example: Escape ("po: meetings don't have agendas") + Reversal ("po: attendees set the agenda after the meeting") → an asynchronous "what we ended up discussing" doc, written collectively after the fact.

Anti-slop notes

  • Generic provocations ("po: things are different") are placeholders, not provocations. Specify what's changed and how.
  • Don't fake "random" word selection. "Innovation" or "synergy" defeats the operator. Use actual random.
  • Don't end at the provocation. The PO statement is means; an actionable proposal is the end.
  • Take the provocation seriously for at least 5 minutes. Dismissing it defeats the operation.
  • Pick the operator deliberately. Different operators surface different things: Escape → purpose; Reversal → relationship; Exaggeration → parameter; Distortion → sequencing; Wishful Thinking → constraint.

Source: de Bono, Lateral Thinking (Harper, 1970); Po: Beyond Yes and No (Penguin, 1972).