Core Constraints

A core constraint is the irreducible truth at the center of a problem domain. It’s what remains when you’ve abstracted away everything non-essential.

Every business has them. Most businesses haven’t named them.


Why they matter

Markets change. Technologies shift. Customer preferences evolve. But core constraints are stable — they describe what is fundamentally true about a problem, not what happens to be true today.

When you build your business identity around core constraints, you gain:

  • Clarity — you know what decisions to make and which to skip
  • Resilience — your strategy doesn’t break when the market shifts
  • Narrative power — you can explain your value in terms that stick

This is the foundation of everything Positive Constraint does.


Examples from past work

CompanyConstraint 1Constraint 2
TapoutsChild safetyKids-first design
CortiSenseHealthy productionLeast overhead
User1stInclusivenessVelocity
LEAP CommerceServiceabilityVelocity

How they’re found

Core constraints don’t come from brainstorming. They come from abstraction — from getting close to the problem domain, interviewing stakeholders, and then stepping back far enough to see the shape of the thing.

See The Process for the full methodology.