Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT) as an Integration within the ShiftGrit Core Method™
Overview
Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT) is a short-term, goal-directed psychotherapy that concentrates on a client's desired future and existing strengths rather than on the origins or analysis of presenting problems. It is grounded in the premise that clients already possess resources and partial solutions, and that therapy works by identifying and amplifying what is already going well.
How it works
Rather than exploring the causes of difficulties, the therapist and client co-construct concrete, attainable goals and examine times when the problem is absent or less severe (exceptions). Characteristic techniques include the "miracle question," scaling questions, exception-finding questions, and compliments, which are used to elicit detailed descriptions of a preferred future and to build on incremental progress. Treatment is typically brief, often delivered in a small number of sessions.
What it is used for
SFBT has been applied across a broad range of presentations and settings, including depression, anxiety, behavioural and conduct difficulties in children and adolescents, family and couple concerns, substance use, and stress within schools, healthcare, and social services. Reviews report small to moderate benefits for internalizing problems such as depression and anxiety, though the evidence base is mixed in quality and effect sizes vary by population and outcome.
Origins and evidence base
SFBT was developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s by Steve de Shazer, Insoo Kim Berg, and their colleagues at the Brief Family Therapy Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where the model was refined inductively through systematic observation of therapy sessions. Its empirical base has grown to include numerous controlled trials and several systematic reviews and meta-analyses; findings are generally supportive of modest effectiveness, while methodological limitations in parts of the literature continue to be noted.
Within the ShiftGrit Core Method™
Many clients arrive able to recount every moment that went wrong while the moments that went right barely register. That tilt is part of how an active limiting belief works, keeping attention locked on what is not working and quietly filtering out the times a person already coped or made headway. The course a client moves through rests on the ShiftGrit Core Method™, the foundation everything else is built on. Pattern Theory™ explains and locates the belief holding a pattern in place, and reconditioning is what loosens and changes that belief so it no longer runs the show. Solution-Focused Brief Therapy is a finishing layer we add on top of that foundation when it helps, used alongside the method rather than in place of it: through carefully chosen questions, our clinicians help a client notice and name the times things have already gone well. We reach for it once the belief has been reconditioned, so the new outlook can settle into proof a client has seen for themselves instead of resting on faith.
Illustrative example
Picture someone carrying the belief "I am powerless," whose attention keeps landing on the times nothing they did seemed to matter. Once that belief has been reconditioned through the Core Method™, one of our clinicians might use SFBT to ask where, even in small ways this past week, they took an action that actually had an effect. Naming those moments helps them notice they are already living outside the old belief, giving the new outlook concrete examples of their own to stand on.
Based on: Gingerich, W. J., and Peterson, L. T. (2013). Effectiveness of Solution-Focused Brief Therapy: A Systematic Qualitative Review of Controlled Outcome Studies. Research on Social Work Practice, 23(3), 266-283. [source]




