Basic Framework
Assesssystem-designresearch-cardSystem Design

System Design Card 392 — Caching / Assess

Caching — BASIC step map

Concern

Caching can remove load from the hot path, but only if keys, invalidation, and staleness are acceptable. Caching short-link lookups or popular feed fragments can change capacity needs dramatically.

The best answers feel deliberate, not improvised.

What Assess means for this concern

In BASIC, the Assess step is where you identify the main architectural pressures and choose which trade-offs are actually important. For Caching, that means the candidate should make this concern visible at the right moment instead of bolting it on at the end.

Design move

A good move is to compare plausible approaches before committing. Tie the concern back to the user flow, the workload, and the dominant trade-off. That keeps the design grounded and makes it easier for the interviewer to follow why a cache, queue, replica, partition, or rate limiter is actually necessary.

Common miss

The miss is adding a cache as decoration without clarifying what is cached and how it expires. BASIC helps because the staged flow keeps this concern proportional to the prompt and connected to the rest of the architecture.

BASIC prompt

“When I reach the Assess stage, how does Caching change the architecture, the trade-offs, or the review checklist?”

The real skill here
Assessment is comparison, not selection. Strong candidates explore at least two paths before committing. They don't just say 'I'll use a hash map' — they explain why the alternative (sorting, brute force, different data structure) is worse for this specific problem. That comparison is the signal.

References

S9 S14 S15

Related in System Design

January 16, 2023

BASIC for system design interviews: the most reliable sequence for thinking at architecture scale

System design interviews are not just “bigger coding interviews.”

April 10, 2025

System Design Card 356 — Requirements Clarification / Breakdown

Every design starts with defining what must be true for the system to be considered successful. A notification system for security alerts is a different system from a marketing…

April 12, 2025

System Design Card 357 — Requirements Clarification / Assess

Every design starts with defining what must be true for the system to be considered successful. A notification system for security alerts is a different system from a marketing…