Skip to content

Cascade Analysis Guide

"Direct costs are what you see. Cascade costs are what you pay."

This guide shows you how to map and analyze cascades — the cost multiplication that turns a $119K problem into a $2.2M+ impact.

Why Cascade Analysis Matters

Most cost analysis stops at the visible problem:

  • IT issue? Count IT labor hours.
  • Customer complaint? Track support tickets.
  • Quality defect? Measure rework time.

They miss the cascade:

  • IT issue → Employee overtime → Quality degradation → Customer churn
  • Customer complaint → Revenue risk → Employee morale → More quality issues
  • Quality defect → Customer trust loss → Regulatory scrutiny → Operational overhaul

Cascade analysis reveals the full impact.

The 5-Step Cascade Mapping Process

Step 1: Identify the Origin Dimension

Question: Where did the problem originate?

DimensionCore SignalData Source
Customer (D1)Support tickets, NPS drop, churn noticesCRM, helpdesk
Employee (D2)Overtime spike, engagement drop, resignationsHRIS, pulse surveys
Revenue (D3)Invoice disputes, payment delays, margin compressionAR aging, financial reports
Regulatory (D4)Audit findings, compliance gaps, violationsCompliance tracker, legal
Quality (D5)Defect rate spike, customer complaints, reworkQA system, support tickets
Operational (D6)System downtime, bottlenecks, manual workaroundsAPM, process metrics

Example: Parts inventory issues discovered in aviation maintenance facility

  • Origin Dimension: Operational (D6)
  • Direct Signal: Recurring stockouts, expedited orders
  • Direct Cost: $119,000 annually in direct labor and material waste

Step 2: Score the Origin Using 3D Lens

Apply Sound × Space × Time to quantify severity:

LensQuestionScore 1-3Score 4-6Score 7-10
Sound (Urgency)How urgent is this?Future riskCurrent issueCrisis
Space (Scope)How widespread?IsolatedDepartmentEnterprise
Time (Trajectory)Getting better or worse?One-timeRecurringAccelerating

Example: Aviation Maintenance Parts Inventory

Sound = 8   (Critical — impacts all maintenance operations)
Space = 7   (All maintenance bays affected)
Time = 7.5  (Recurring weekly, accelerating)

Origin Score = (8 × 7 × 7.5) ÷ 10 = 42.0

Interpretation: High severity (39.2 > 30). Expect significant cascades.

Step 3: Map Primary Cascade Pathways

Use the Primary Cascade Patterns table to predict likely targets:

OriginPrimary TargetProbabilitySecondary TargetProbabilityTertiary TargetProbability
OperationalQuality80%Employee75%Revenue60%

For each cascade target, document:

  1. Evidence of cascade (observable signals)
  2. 3D score for the cascade dimension
  3. Estimated cost (direct cost × multiplier)

Example: Aviation Maintenance Parts Inventory Cascades

OPERATIONAL (Origin)

├── CASCADE 1: QUALITY (80% probability)
│   Evidence:
│   - Aircraft maintenance delays
│   - Extended aircraft downtime
│   - Rushed repairs when parts finally arrive
│   3D Score: Sound=8, Space=7, Time=6 → 28.0
│   Cost: $119K × 80% × 3.5 = $330,000

├── CASCADE 2: EMPLOYEE (75% probability)
│   Evidence:
│   - Technician overtime waiting for parts
│   - Frustration with inventory system
│   - Increased turnover discussions
│   3D Score: Sound=7, Space=6, Time=6.3 → 26.5
│   Cost: $119K × 75% × 4.2 = $370,000

└── CASCADE 3: REVENUE (65% probability)
    Evidence:
    - Penalty clauses triggered for delays
    - Airlines threatening contract termination
    - Lost expansion opportunities
    3D Score: Sound=9, Space=6, Time=6.7 → 36.0
    Cost: $119K × 65% × 11.4 = $880,000

Step 4: Map Secondary Cascades (Level 2)

Don't stop at Level 1. Cascades propagate.

For each Level 1 cascade, check for further cascades:

QUALITY (Level 1 cascade)

└── CASCADE: CUSTOMER (85% probability)
    Evidence:
    - Major airlines questioning maintenance reliability
    - Contract renewal hesitation
    - Requiring detailed reports on delays
    3D Score: Sound=7, Space=7, Time=5.8 → 27.5
    Cost: $330K × 85% × 1.6 = $440,000

REVENUE (Level 1 cascade)

└── CASCADE: REGULATORY (30% probability)
    Evidence:
    - FAA documentation concerns
    - Missing records for parts traceability
    - Audit trail gaps for maintenance activities
    3D Score: Sound=6, Space=4, Time=4.6 → 11.0
    Cost: $880K × 30% × 0.23 = $61,000

Note: Avoid double-counting. If Quality already cascaded to Customer at Level 1, don't count it again at Level 2.

Step 5: Calculate Total Impact

Sum all cascade costs across all levels:

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│            TOTAL CASCADE IMPACT                 │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│                                                 │
│ LEVEL 0 (Origin):                               │
│ ├── Operational:          $119,000              │
│                                                 │
│ LEVEL 1 (Primary Cascades):                     │
│ ├── Quality:              $330,000              │
│ ├── Employee:             $370,000              │
│ └── Revenue:              $880,000              │
│                                                 │
│ LEVEL 2 (Secondary Cascades):                   │
│ ├── Customer:             $440,000              │
│ └── Regulatory:            $61,000              │
│                                                 │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ TOTAL IMPACT:          $2,200,000               │
│ MULTIPLIER:                18.5×                │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Impact Summary:

MetricValue
Direct Cost$119,000
Cascade Cost$2,081,000
Total Impact$2,200,000
Multiplier18.5×
Dimensions Affected6 of 6
Cascade Depth2 levels

Real-World Example: Aviation Maintenance Facility Parts Inventory Case

Background

Company: Major aviation maintenance facility, $200M annual revenue, 500 employees

Problem: Recurring parts inventory issues causing aircraft maintenance delays and extended downtime. Issue persisted for 6 months before full impact analysis.

Direct Cost: $119,000 annually in direct labor and material waste.

Step-by-Step Analysis

Step 1: Origin Identification

  • Origin Dimension: Operational (D6)
  • Root Cause: Parts inventory management system inadequate for demand variability
  • Detection: Pattern analysis of maintenance delays and expedited orders

Step 2: Origin Scoring

LensScoreReasoning
Sound8Critical operations — all maintenance bays impacted
Space7All maintenance operations, multiple aircraft types affected
Time7.5Persisted 6 months, accelerating as fleet grows
Total42.0High severity

Step 3: Level 1 Cascades

CASCADE 1: Operational → Quality (80%)

FactorDetail
EvidenceAircraft downtime extended, maintenance delays, rushed repairs
Sound × Space × Time8 × 7 × 6 = 28.0
Base Impact$119K × 80% = $95.2K
Multiplier3.5× (aircraft AOG costs, rushed work quality, re-inspections)
Cascade Cost$330,000

CASCADE 2: Operational → Employee (75%)

FactorDetail
EvidenceTechnician overtime, frustration with inventory system, turnover risk
Sound × Space × Time7 × 6 × 6.3 = 26.5
Base Impact$119K × 75% = $89.25K
Multiplier4.2× (specialized aviation mechanics, certification requirements, training costs)
Cascade Cost$370,000

CASCADE 3: Operational → Revenue (65%)

FactorDetail
EvidencePenalty clauses triggered, contract termination threats, lost opportunities
Sound × Space × Time9 × 6 × 6.7 = 36.0
Base Impact$119K × 65% = $77.35K
Multiplier11.4× (major airline contracts, penalty clauses, reputation damage in industry)
Cascade Cost$880,000

Step 4: Level 2 Cascades

CASCADE 4: Quality → Customer (85%)

FactorDetail
EvidenceMajor airlines questioning maintenance reliability, contract hesitation
Sound × Space × Time7 × 7 × 5.8 = 27.5
Base Impact$330K × 85% = $280.5K
Multiplier1.6× (airline reputation sensitivity, detailed reporting requirements)
Cascade Cost$440,000

CASCADE 5: Revenue → Regulatory (30%)

FactorDetail
EvidenceFAA documentation concerns, missing parts traceability, audit trail gaps
Sound × Space × Time6 × 4 × 4.6 = 11.0
Base Impact$880K × 30% = $264K
Multiplier0.23× (preventive audit costs, documentation remediation)
Cascade Cost$61,000

Step 5: Total Impact

Direct Cost (Operational):          $119,000
Cascade Cost (All dimensions):   $2,081,000
───────────────────────────────────────────
TOTAL IMPACT:                   $2,200,000
MULTIPLIER:                          18.5×

Lessons Learned

  1. Early detection is critical — 6-month delay allowed cascade to compound
  2. Revenue dimension had highest impact — Airline contract penalties are severe
  3. Employee turnover risk underestimated — Specialized aviation mechanics are costly to replace
  4. Regulatory cascade was preventable — Better parts traceability documentation needed

Cascade Analysis Template

Use this template for your own cascade analysis:

markdown
# Cascade Analysis: [Problem Name]

## Origin Dimension: [Dimension Name]

**Direct Cost:** $________
**Root Cause:** ________________________________

### 3D Scoring
- Sound (Urgency): ___
- Space (Scope): ___
- Time (Trajectory): ___
- **Origin Score:** ___

## Level 1 Cascades

### Cascade 1: [Dimension] ([Probability]%)
- **Evidence:** ________________________________
- **3D Score:** Sound × Space × Time = ___
- **Base Impact:** $________ × ___% = $________
- **Multiplier:** ___×
- **Cascade Cost:** $________

[Repeat for each Level 1 cascade]

## Level 2 Cascades

### Cascade [N]: [Dimension] ([Probability]%)
- **Evidence:** ________________________________
- **3D Score:** Sound × Space × Time = ___
- **Base Impact:** $________ × ___% = $________
- **Multiplier:** ___×
- **Cascade Cost:** $________

[Repeat for each Level 2 cascade]

## Total Impact Summary

| Level | Dimensions | Total Cost |
|-------|------------|------------|
| Level 0 (Origin) | 1 | $________ |
| Level 1 | ___ | $________ |
| Level 2 | ___ | $________ |
| **TOTAL** | **___** | **$________** |

**Multiplier:** ___×

## Recommendations

1. ________________________________________
2. ________________________________________
3. ________________________________________

Common Cascade Analysis Mistakes

MistakeImpactHow to Avoid
Stopping at Level 1Undercounts cascade by 30-50%Always map at least 2 levels
Ignoring low-probability cascadesMisses high-severity tertiary impactsTrack all cascades >20% probability
Double-countingInflates totalsMark cascades already counted
Using same multiplier for allInaccurate estimatesUse dimension-specific multipliers
Forgetting time dimensionMisses accelerating trendsAlways include trajectory in 3D score

When to Conduct Cascade Analysis

High-Priority Scenarios

  • Major incidents (system outages, security breaches)
  • Customer escalations (executive complaints, churn threats)
  • Regulatory issues (audit findings, compliance violations)
  • Strategic decisions (restructuring, acquisitions, platform migrations)

Regular Practice

  • Quarterly business reviews — Analyze top 3 issues from quarter
  • Post-incident reviews — Include cascade analysis in retrospectives
  • Budget planning — Estimate cascade costs for known risks
  • Vendor selection — Predict cascade impact of vendor failures

Next Steps

📊 Cascade Pathways — Master map of all cascade patterns

📖 Case Studies — More real-world cascade examples

🔍 Observable Properties — Detect cascade signals early

🎯 Scoring Methodology — Calculate dimension scores and multipliers


Remember: The cost you don't see is the cost that multiplies. Map the cascade. 🪶