First principles thinking is about breaking things down to their core truths — not relying on assumptions or what everyone else does.
Complex product and market problems are often overwhelming because they come bundled with assumptions, legacy solutions, and contradictory inputs. The actual job is to strip away all of that noise and identify the core truths that matter — the first principles. This helps you see the problem clearly and build solutions that address the real user needs and market realities.
If you cannot break down a problem into its fundamental elements and identify the key drivers, you will waste energy solving the wrong problem or copying competitors without differentiation.
Break down problems into their most basic elements
The first step in first principles thinking is to decompose the complex problem into smaller, manageable parts. This is not just listing symptoms or surface features — it is identifying the essential components that make the problem what it is.
For example, if you are working on an e-commerce platform, the problem "customers abandon carts" is too vague. Break it down:
- Who are the customers abandoning carts? New users? Returning users?
- What are the reasons? Price, delivery time, payment options?
- What is the core user need? Convenience, trust, speed?
The goal is to isolate the basic elements that underlie the problem. This often requires asking "why" multiple times. The "5 Whys" technique is useful here — keep drilling down until you reach a root cause that is actionable.
Breaking down the problem like this helps you avoid jumping to solutions based on assumptions or incomplete data.
Identify the underlying principles that govern the problem
Once you have broken down the problem into its fundamental elements, the next step is to identify the underlying principles or truths that govern those elements. These are the cause-and-effect relationships or user needs that do not change across contexts.
For example, for the e-commerce platform:
- Customers want a convenient and trustworthy shopping experience.
- Payment friction is a major barrier to conversion.
- Clear communication reduces user confusion and abandonment.
These principles are not specific to your product alone — they apply broadly. Recognizing them helps you focus on what really matters.
Product strategy meeting at a Series A SaaS startup in Bangalore
You (PM): “Our retention is low in tier-2 cities. What are the fundamentals here?”
Neha (UX): “Users need simple interfaces and support in local languages.”
Karthik (Data): “Payment failures spike due to limited wallet options popular in those regions.”
You (PM): “So the core principle is that friction in payment and language barriers reduce trust and usage.”
CEO: “Makes sense. Let's prioritize solving those.”
Understanding the underlying principles to inform prioritization
Build solutions from first principles and iterate
With the underlying principles in hand, you can now build solutions that directly address them. This means starting from scratch, not copying competitors or patching existing features.
For example, if the core principle is "payment friction kills conversion," your solution might be to design a minimal, localized payment experience optimized for the most popular wallets and UPI methods in your target regions.
The solution should be simple, focused, and testable. Then, you must test it with real users, gather feedback, and iterate.
- Pick a product problem you are currently facing or interested in.
- Break it down into its most basic elements by asking "why" repeatedly.
- Identify the underlying principles driving those elements.
- Sketch a solution concept that addresses these principles directly.
- Write down how you would test this solution with users.
Examples from Indian product companies
Freshworks CRM: Identifying key drivers
Freshworks used first principles thinking to break down their CRM adoption problem. They identified that collaboration and organization are essential to project success. Their solution focused on simplifying collaboration features and making the tool intuitive for sales teams, rather than copying complex CRM workflows from incumbents.
Headspace: Core problem of stress and anxiety
Headspace identified the fundamental user need as lack of mindfulness. They built simple, accessible guided exercises rather than a complex wellness platform. This stripped-to-core approach helped them scale globally.
Messaging app example
A PM working on a messaging app broke down the problem to three principles: fast communication, security, and user-friendly interface. Instead of copying all features from WhatsApp, they focused on optimizing these principles for Indian users with poor network connectivity and privacy concerns.
Techniques to identify underlying principles
- SWOT analysis: Understand strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats related to your product or market.
- 5 Whys: Keep asking "why" to drill to the root cause.
- Mind mapping: Visually organize problem elements and their connections.
- Root cause analysis: Systematically analyze data to find fundamental issues.
The trap of copying competitors
Most product teams fall into the trap of copying features from competitors or best practices without questioning whether those features address their own users' first principles.
The honest truth: what works in one market or for one user base often does not translate elsewhere. You must identify your own core truths.
Product review at a mid-stage Indian fintech startup
CEO: “Flipkart and PhonePe have launched QR code payments. We should too.”
You (PM): “Before we do, let’s confirm if our users actually want that or if they prefer UPI IDs.”
Design Lead: “User interviews show most prefer UPI IDs for ease and trust.”
You (PM): “Then our first principle is convenience and trust. QR codes might be future, but today’s priority is simplifying UPI flows.”
Avoiding the competitor-copy trap by focusing on user principles
Test yourself: Applying first principles thinking
You are PM at a Series B Indian SaaS startup. Customer feedback shows low adoption of a new feature designed to improve team collaboration. Your CEO wants to double down on adding more features. You have limited engineering bandwidth.
The call: How do you apply first principles thinking to decide your next steps?
Your reasoning:
You are PM at a Series B Indian SaaS startup. Customer feedback shows low adoption of a new feature designed to improve team collaboration. Your CEO wants to double down on adding more features. You have limited engineering bandwidth.
Your task: How do you apply first principles thinking to decide your next steps?
your reasoning:
From the field: Talvinder on first principles thinking
Where to go next
- Learn to conduct user interviews that reveal core needs: User Research Methods
- Develop product strategy grounded in first principles: Product Vision and Strategy
- Master problem decomposition techniques: Problem Solving Frameworks
- Understand how to prioritize based on user impact: Prioritization Techniques