Execution Card 456 — Opening the Problem / Breakdown
Situation
The first minute of an interview determines whether the rest of your answer feels controlled or improvised. The risk is straightforward: If you rush straight into solution mode, you may lock onto the wrong version of the problem.
Why the Breakdown step matters here
At this moment, BASIC asks you to decompose the prompt into named parts. That matters because interview performance is often lost not to lack of knowledge, but to loss of sequence.
BASIC move
In this situation, the best move is to split the problem before trying to solve it. Use the stage question as a control prompt: What exactly is the problem asking, what are the constraints, and what is the shape of the input and output? That keeps the interview from becoming reactive.
Practice script
“In the opening the problem moment, I am at the Breakdown stage, so my next job is to split the problem before trying to solve it, not to skip ahead.”
Failure pattern
When candidates ignore this stage, they often create the very confusion they were hoping to avoid. BASIC works here because it converts an emotional moment into a procedural one.