The Pyramid Principle is about communicating. Specifically: how to present your thinking so that a busy, senior person grasps your point immediately and can choose how deep to go.
The structure is simple: Start with the answer. Then support it with key arguments. Then support each argument with evidence. That’s a pyramid. The answer sits at the top. Below it, three or four supporting arguments. Below each argument, the data or reasoning that makes it hold. The audience reads top-down. They get the conclusion first, the logic second, the details third. They can stop at any level and still have something useful.
This is the opposite of how most people communicate. Most people build up: here’s the context, here’s the analysis, here’s what I explored, here’s what I found, and finally, here’s my recommendation. That’s a narrative. It works in novels. It’s terrible for executives.
Who created it? Barbara Minto developed the Pyramid Principle at McKinsey in the late 1960s. When hired, she tasked with improving the quality of written communication across the consultancy. Her observation: brilliant analysis were producing brilliant thinking that nobody could follow because they presented it in the order they discovered it rather than in the order that served the reader. Her book The Pyramid Principle (1987), became the foundational communication text for the consulting industry.
Why this matters?
The structure:
The logic of grouping. The supporting arguments at level 2 can be organized in two ways:
The “so what” test. Every level of the pyramid must pass the “so what” test. If the executive reads your governing thought and says “so what?” it’s not specific enough. If she reads a supporting argument and says “so what?” it’s not connected clearly enough to the conclusion. If she reads a piece of evidence and says “so what?” it doesn’t clearly support its argument. The test works at every level: does this statement clearly serve the level above it? If not, it’s either the wrong place, needs rewording, or doesn’t belong in the pyramid at all.
The introduction. Before the pyramid begins, you need a brief introduction that orients the reader. Minto’s formula is Situation, Complication, Answer:
Common pitfalls: