Most frameworks are forward-looking. SCR structures what’s happening and what to do. Issue trees map where to look. The 2x2 matrix helps you choose between options. Hypothesis-driven thinking tests whether your guess is right.
The pre-mortem does something completely different. It assumes you’ve already made the decision. It assumes you moved forward. And then it assumes you failed. The question is: “We did it. It’s twelve months later. It failed catastrophically. Why?”
This framework is specifically designed to map risks proactively, before any failure occurs, by imagining a future catastrophe and working backward. It acts as a “prospective postmortem,” conducted at the project’s start or when a plan is concrete, to surface blind spots, optimism bias, and hidden vulnerabilities that teams overlook in forward planning.
That’s the exercise: Project yourself into a future where the decision was made and everything went wrong. Then work backward to identify why it went wrong. Not what might go wrong, but what DID go wrong, past tense, as if it already happened.
The shift from “might” to “did” is the key move. When you ask people “what could go wrong?” they self-censor. They don’t want to seem negative or paranoid. They offer safe, obvious risks. But when you said “it failed, tell me why,” something unlocks. People give you the real fears. The ones they’ve been holding privately. The ugly scenarios they didn’t want to voice because it would sound disloyal or pessimistic.
Who created it? American research psychologist, Gary Klein. He developed the pre-mortem as part of his work on naturalistic decision making. He noticed that most risk analysis happens in a way that’s psychologically biased toward optimism: once a team committed to a plan, they unconsciously filter out disconfirming information. The pre-mortem breaks that dynamic by making failure the starting assumption rather than an uncomfortable possibility. The 2007 HBR piece by Klein made the pre-mortem widely known.
Why does it matter? When an executive has made a decision and is about to move, she doesn’t need more encouragement. What she needs is someone who can safely surface risks she’s not seeing, without being perceived as negative, disloyal, or obstructive. The pre-mortem gives you a structure for doing exactly that. You’re not saying “I think this will fail.” You’re saying “Let’ s assume it failed. What would we wish we’d see in advance?” That framing changes the emotional dynamic entirely.
How organizations use it. The military uses it in mission planning, before an operation, the team imagines the mission failed and identifies the most likely causes. NASA uses it in engineering reviews. Consulting firms use it before presenting final recommendations to clients: “If the client implements this and it doesn’t work, what did we miss?” For example, hospitals use it in surgical planning.
The format is usually a tension. The leader says: “Imagine it’s one year from now. We implemented this plan and it was a disaster. Take two minutes and write down every reason you can think of for why it failed.” Everyone writes independently. This prevents groupthink. Then the reasons are shared, discussed, and the most critical ones addressed before moving forward.
Variations:
How to go about it:
Common pitfalls:
One more note. The pre-mortem works best when it happens after the team has committed to a plan but before execution begins. There’s a sweet spot: the decision is made, energy and optimism are high, and people feel safe enough to voice concerns because the plan is already approved. If you do it too early, there’s no concrete plan to stress-test. If you do it too late, concerns feel like sabotage.