You're three weeks into a case. The client wants to know why sales are declining. Your team has pulled: customer surveys, competitor pricing data, sales rep performance metrics, product quality scores, market share trends, distribution channel data, and website analytics.
You have 47 spreadsheets. 12 PowerPoint decks. 200 hours of analysis.
And you still don't know why sales are declining.
Your manager asks: 'What's your hypothesis?'
You freeze. You've been analyzing everything, but you haven't been thinking about anything.
This is the trap junior consultants fall into. They confuse activity with progress. They pull every dataset, run every analysis, build every chart. But they're not solving the problem – they're drowning in data.
Senior consultants work differently. They start with a hypothesis: 'I think sales are declining because our prices increased faster than competitors.' Then they test it. If it's wrong, they move to hypothesis #2. If it's right, they dig deeper to quantify the impact.
This is hypothesis-driven thinking. It's the difference between wandering through a forest collecting leaves and following a map to find treasure.