An action-orientated review model to convert past experience into practice.
Give feedback that is clear, specific, and actionable by combining Feeling, Fact, and Comparison.
Get to the root cause of an issue by asking "why" repeatedly.
For understanding how great leaders and orgs inspire action by starting with a clear sense of purpose.
Start from the basics and find a new, more logical way of doing things.
Leadership effectiveness isn’t just about the leader’s style but about how well that style fits the situation.
Summary of typical conflicts in the workplace, discover proven strategies
Famous model in psychology and helps us understand what motivates people.
A framework enhances understanding, empathy, and responsiveness.
Simple models enhance your leadership skills.
Prioritize finance transformation work without burning out your team.
Using dual concern theory to understand and resolve conflicts.
Identify failure modes and prioritize risks.
Protect your emotional boundaries.
A simple practice to accept the anxiety, anger or sadness and start embracing them.
Deliver objective feedback by separating situation, behavior, and impact.
Your presence speaks louder than your words.
A simple way to start conversations.
A simple way to evaluate your relationships.
For better project planning, helps you simplify, organize, and get things done.
Make a good balance sheet of your life.
Make your pitch or message clear, logical, and action-oriented.
Sharpen your stakeholder management skills via finding who matters most.
Apply five communication elements to make ideas memorable and repeatable.
Start with 7%, Spark the Rest.
Gives you a simple and clear structure to build trust fast.
Understand users with clarity, even when resources are tight.
Change up the content every two minutes to keep people engaged.
Structure 30-minute meetings into focused parts for better feedback.
Continuously asking “So what might happen next?” to project how one event could trigger another.
Reveal your points step by step.
Helps you stay productive, maintain focus, and manage your energy across the entire day.
Focuses on the seven elements necessary for helping your customer.
Gather comprehensive information and provide clarity in various situations.
A systematic approach to studying and comprehending reading material effectively.
Learning and understanding complex concepts by teaching them to someone else
Answer behavioral interview questions clearly.
Deliver clear, structured arguments by stating your point first, proving it, and closing with clarity.
Expand self-awareness, uncover blind spots, and strengthen trust through structured feedback.
A creativity technique designed to generate a large number of ideas.
Highlights the imbalance between causes and effects
A four-step process that encourages user engagement and promotes habit formation.
Identifies 3 elements for behavior change: Motivation, Ability, and Prompt.
Separate facts from interpretations to respond to feedback calmly and solve the real problem.
Effective strategies for rapid learning.
A state of complete immersion and focused enjoyment in an activity.
Help groups move from information gathering to action in a structured and inclusive way.
Six negotiation principles help both sides get more of what they want.
A practical negotiation concept that defines where a deal is actually possible.
Explains how we remember experiences.
Allows you to handle challenges with clarity, whether you need to see the big picture or focus on the details.
Help individuals and groups connect personal stories to collective action.
Help you better structure, understand, and develop the team.
Developed from human psychology, it help us understand how the conscious and unconscious mind interacts.
Classic framework in marketing, helping business understand and influence each stage of the customer journey.
Adapts traditional marketing concept to the digital landscape.
Amodel redefines digital marketing by focusing on measurable growth and customer retention.
Optimize each stage of the customer journey, from brand awareness to loyalty.
Aim to eliminate confusion and miscommunication in both verbal and written forms
Turn complex ideas into clear cause-and-effect stories people remember.
Encourage active engagement with the material and reinforces memory with review.
This AI prompt framework helps you receive higher-quality feedback, and it’s very simple and effective
Define context, role, instruction, subject, preset, and exceptions to get high-quality AI feedback.
focusing on how brands can guide prospects from awareness to advocacy.
An easy framework to answer "Tell Me About Yourself" in a job interview.
A simple yet powerful tool that helps you analyze and solve problems in a structured way.
A storytelling framework that makes your message relatable, memorable, and impactful in any context.
Analyze industry competition beyond direct rivals to uncover structural profit drivers.
Align your team around the right goals, ensure that you’re always working toward meaningful outcomes that matter.
Narrate how an idea was born, built, and scaled to demonstrate its real-world impact.
Scan political, economic, social, and technological forces to spot macro risks and opportunities early.
A classic framework that provides a clear, structured approach to marketing.
Persuade and inform with clarity by structuring your message.
Scan political, economic, social, technological, environmental, and legal forces to reduce strategic blind spots.
Visualize how your business creates, delivers, and captures value on a single page.
Build a service culture that turns everyday interactions into lasting customer loyalty.
For building customer-focused marketing strategies.
Deliver clear, non-judgmental feedback by separating facts, impact, and next actions.
Emphasis on timing, ensuring actions are strategically aligned with deadlines for effective goal setting.
Generate new ideas by systematically remixing existing products, processes, and assumptions.
Built on four essential components that guide personal and professional development.
Evaluate whether your resources create real, defensible competitive advantage.
Define the success of leadership via team engaged, personal satisfaction, and organizational success.
Enhance your market segmentation and marketing strategy
Understand how context, location, and environment shape mobile customer decisions.
Emphasizes the balanced integration of Company, Customer, and Competitor for strategic decisions, avoiding a singular focus.
Turn SWOT insights into concrete strategic options and actions.
Grow your influence via focusing what you can control.
Being a great manager without losing your humanity.
Simple approach to clam the nervous system.
Align your marketing email with the proven customer journey strategy.
A valuable model to manage stress effectively.
Focus on the emotional and psychological transitions individuals experience during change.
Define measurable outcomes and success metrics before you commit to building features.
A Simple Trick to overcome procrastination and anxiety.
Evaluate internal strengths and weaknesses in strategy.
Foundation for personal success and leadership.
Evaluate external opportunities and threats in strategic decision-making.
Help people to deliver strong messages or express complex ideas.
Details the process of change through five stages.
An easy time management method that boost your focus and productivity.
Describe the natural path most products follow.
Helps businesses balance willingness to pay and willingness to sell
Help you write better AI prompts.
A simple prompt that saves time and gets better result.
Move beyond information overload and make truly wise decisions.
Bring clarity, reduce friction to the stakeholder communication.
A simple guide to describe the complex environment.
Move away from confusion via recognizing emotional and chaotic forces.
Just take one small, meaningful step instead of a giant leap.
It’s not the situation that causes your emotions — it’s how you think about it.
Brings clarity, reduces risk, and gives your product the best chance of success.
Capture feedback, act on it, make changes stick, and report back with clarity.
Highlight product value, connect with customer needs, and build long-term trust
Increase engagement and commitment in the workplace.
Uncovers the emotional drivers behind employee reactions.
Uncover real customer pain through thoughtful, guided questioning.
Better fomulate your brand’s marketing strategy.
Gives sales people a clear roadmap to follow.
Guiding you through three 15-year stages for your 45-year career.
Turn raw ideas into market-ready products through a disciplined, four-stage innovation pipeline.
A simple and practical way to break free from negative emotions.
Build a clear system to improve content, ensuring long-term marketing impact.
Structure your answers and emphasize takeaways to show real growth.
Discover the real problem before solving it.
Strengthen alignment between your priorities and your manager’s expectations.
Replace scattered planning with deliberate action.
Help you stay focused, filter noise, and improve output, which is deeply aligned with your intent.
Help you persuade effectively, build trust, and gain support in any professional setting.
Knowing where you are helps you choose what to do next with intention instead of habit.
Speak their language, not yours.
Helps you study and improve by giving you a clear way to plan your effort.
Understand how to study with purpose, without wasted effort.
To make effective decisions quickly in rapidly changing situations.
Scan external risks and opportunities early using five macro lenses to guide strategy, market entry, and innovation.
Filter AI use cases by risk, readiness, and measurable business value before committing real resources.
Creates a closed loop that ensures learning outcomes align with business objectives
Gives teams a clear way to observe, classify, and interpret user behavior.
Map user journeys from first attraction to lasting memory by structuring experiences across five critical stages.
Design consistent customer service experiences through connection, support, resolution, and continuous improvement.
Helps communicators control emotional rhythm and attention over time.
Analyze where your product creates value and identify the layers where real differentiation happens.
Resolve complications with concise, executive-ready solutions.
Provides a framework for comparing markets beyond surface-level metrics.
Helps people clarify goals, assess situation, explore options, and take actions.
Evaluate internal strengths and weaknesses against external opportunities and threats to identify real strategic choices.
Structure complex messages into a clear narrative that leads the audience to your conclusion.
Structured communication framework which is supporting your point with logically organized details and effective information delivery.
Apply five communication elements to make ideas memorable and repeatable.
No application mappings are available for this framework yet.
You may have given a great speech or written a detailed report, but people still forget it. This happens more often than we think—not because the idea wasn’t good, but because it wasn’t delivered in a way that made it stick.
To help people solve this problem, Patrick Henry Winston, a well-known professor at MIT and a pioneer in artificial intelligence, introduced a simple but powerful model called Winston’s Star.
This model appears in his book Make It Clear: Speak and Write to Persuade and Inform, a guide designed to help readers enhance their speaking and writing skills.
Winston’s Star includes five simple but powerful elements: Slogan, Symbol, Salient Idea, Surprise, and Story.

When these are used together, they help your audience understand your idea, remember it, and even repeat it to others. Let’s take a closer look at each part.
A slogan is a short phrase that captures the core of your idea. It works like a headline and it should be easy to remember and easy to say.
In a report, you might use it in the title, abstract, or conclusion. In a talk, you might say it out loud and repeat it for emphasis.
For example, in Winston’s own research, projects had names like Genesis (a system for story understanding) and Watson (a game-playing system). These names weren’t random—they acted as slogans that helped people remember the key work behind them.
Tip: Try using a phrase with rhythm or repetition. Make it short and catchy.
People remember images faster than words, so choose a symbol that connects directly to your message.
This could be a simple drawing, a meaningful object, or even a mental image that supports the slogan.
A famous example mentioned in the book is Charles Minard’s chart showing Napoleon’s invasion of Russia. It turned a complex story into one powerful visual that communicated loss and failure at a glance. Over time, the image itself became a symbol of the idea it carried.
Tip: Keep your symbol simple and easy to recognize. One strong visual is better than many complicated ones.
Even in long talks, people usually remember only a few key ideas. That’s why it’s important to highlight your most important point clearly and directly. Winston called this the “salient” idea—it stands out.
For example, instead of trying to impress your audience with ten smart thoughts, pick one or two strong ones and say them with clarity. Add your slogan to this part, so the idea becomes both clear and memorable.
Tip: Use phrases like “If you remember only one thing from today, it should be this…” to signal your main point.
Surprise grabs attention.
People are naturally curious when something doesn’t go as expected. In speeches or reports, surprises can come from unexpected facts, a sudden twist, or a striking contrast.
The surprise should connect to your idea. A surprise without meaning won’t stick.
Stories are the emotional engine of communication.
A good story answers (Find more Storytelling techniques) questions like: Who had this idea? What problem were they trying to solve? What did they go through? People remember feelings more than facts, and stories deliver both.
Tip: A short, true story that shows struggle, curiosity, or a turning point works best. It builds trust and makes your idea feel real.