The Seven Things Every Service Business Must Document Before Scaling
Methodology steps, diagnostic tool, delivery process, quality standards, pricing rules, client selection criteria, and success metrics. Skip any one and scaling breaks.
Michael Gerber's most powerful idea is deceptively simple: your business should run like a franchise even if you never intend to franchise it. Before you hire your first employee, certify your first partner, or license your first practitioner, you must build what Gerber calls the Franchise Prototype — a complete, documented, testable model of how your business operates.
Ray Kroc did not build a hamburger business. He built a business system that produces consistent hamburgers through ordinary people following extraordinary systems. Your job is the same.
Most service business founders skip this step. They hire someone, hand them a few client files, say "watch how I do it," and call that training. Six months later they wonder why quality has collapsed, clients are complaining, and they are spending more time fixing other people's work than they ever spent doing it themselves.
Gerber has a name for this failure mode: "management by abdication." It's not delegation. Delegation transfers responsibility with accountability and systems. Abdication transfers responsibility without either. The result is inconsistent delivery, declining quality, and the founder getting pulled back into the work they tried to escape.
The solution isn't more supervision. It's better documentation. And better documentation starts with knowing exactly what to document.
At minimum, your Operations Manual must cover seven areas. Skip any one of them, and scaling breaks in predictable ways.
01 — Your Methodology Steps
Every Phase, Every Decision, Every Handoff
The first thing to document is the complete sequence of your engagement — from initial contact through final deliverable. What happens in each phase. What the inputs and outputs are. What decisions must be made and by whom.
This sounds obvious. It isn't. Most service business founders have never written down their process from start to finish because the process lives in their head. They make dozens of micro-decisions in every engagement — when to probe deeper, when to change approach, when to escalate — without conscious awareness that they are doing it. The expertise is so deeply embedded that it feels like instinct rather than process.
But instinct doesn't scale. Only process scales.
Gerber's most provocative instruction applies here: "Pretend that the business you own is the prototype for 5,000 more just like it." You may never build 5,000 locations. But designing as if you will forces a level of rigour that casual documentation never achieves.
"When you document a process thinking 'I need to remember this,' you write notes. When you document a process thinking 'someone I have never met, in a country I have never visited, needs to follow this and produce the same results,' you write a system."
The franchise mindset changes the entire character of what you produce. Not "how I run a workshop" but "how anyone runs this workshop, step by step, with scripts, timing, materials, and fallback plans." Not "how I handle a difficult client" but "here are the five most common client objections, the recommended response for each, and the escalation path if the response doesn't work."
Mike Michalowicz prescribes what he calls Live Capture for getting this done without paralysis: record yourself doing the work, narrate your decisions, and hand the recording to the person who will take it over. Next time you deliver a client engagement, record it. Annotate the decision points: "This client said X, which tells me Y, so I am pivoting to approach Z." The first version will have gaps. That's fine. A 70 percent complete process document that exists is infinitely more valuable than a 100 percent perfect document that lives in your head.
Ship the imperfect version. Refine it through practice. By the third iteration, it will be excellent.
02 — Your Diagnostic Tool
The Assessment That Must Produce Identical Output Regardless of Location
The second element to document is your diagnostic tool in its entirety: the assessment questions, the scoring methodology, the interpretation guidelines, the report format. Every element must be documented so that a trained practitioner produces the same diagnostic output regardless of whether they are in London, Dubai, Sao Paulo, or New York.
This is where most founders discover the gap between what they do and what they think they do. When you deliver your own diagnostic, you unconsciously adjust questions based on client responses, weight certain answers differently depending on context, and interpret scores through the lens of hundreds of previous assessments you have conducted. None of that is in the document. It's in your head.
Your documentation must include:
- The exact questions — worded precisely, with no room for practitioner improvisation on the scored portion.
- The scoring methodology — how each response maps to a number, how numbers are weighted across dimensions, what the aggregate calculation looks like.
- The interpretation guidelines — what a score of 42 means, how it differs from a score of 68, what each maturity level signifies (e.g., 1-20 = Foundational, 21-40 = Developing, 41-60 = Established, 61-80 = Advanced, 81-100 = Leading).
- The report format — exactly how findings are presented, what visualisations are used, what the narrative structure looks like.
- The conversation guide — how to probe responses during the 60-90 minute guided session, what follow-up questions to ask, how to handle ambiguous answers.
When a client engages with your methodology in one city, they should receive the same quality of diagnostic and the same rigor of analysis they would receive in any other. Not because the practitioner is a genius, but because the system they follow is excellent.
03 — Your Delivery Process
Structure, Sessions, Materials, and Client Touchpoints
The third area is how an engagement is actually delivered. How many sessions are involved. What happens in each session. What materials are used. What the client receives at each stage. What the handoffs look like between phases.
Gino Wickman's 3-Step Process Documenter provides the simplest approach to getting this done:
- Identify your 6-10 core processes — the major repeatable activities in your business.
- Document each using the 20/80 rule: 20 percent of the steps that produce 80 percent of the results, in 1-5 pages each.
- Package them as "Your Way" — a branded operations manual that every practitioner follows.
The temptation is to document everything exhaustively. Resist it. Wickman's 20/80 rule is deliberate: if you try to capture every micro-step, you will never finish the documentation. Capture the 20 percent of steps that determine 80 percent of the outcome quality. Let practitioners fill in the remaining details through training and practice.
The delivery process documentation should be specific enough that a new practitioner can follow it independently after training, but flexible enough that experienced practitioners can adapt to client context without breaking the methodology. The sweet spot is structured freedom — a clear framework with defined decision points where professional judgment applies.
Don't wait for perfection. Perfection before transfer is procrastination disguised as diligence.
04 — Your Quality Standards
What "Good" Looks Like — Defined, Measured, and Enforced
The fourth area is the one that separates methodology businesses that scale successfully from those that scale and then collapse: quality standards. What "good" looks like. Minimum client satisfaction scores. Report formatting requirements. Methodology adherence checklists. The criteria by which you will evaluate whether a practitioner's delivery meets the standard.
Without documented quality standards, "quality" means whatever the individual practitioner thinks it means. One practitioner delivers a 40-page assessment report with detailed data visualisation. Another delivers a 5-page summary with bullet points. Both believe they are doing good work. The client experience is wildly inconsistent, and your brand becomes unpredictable.
Quality standards must be specific and observable:
- Report requirements: Minimum page count, required sections, mandatory visualisations, branding standards, formatting templates.
- Client satisfaction thresholds: Minimum NPS or satisfaction scores, with defined escalation procedures when scores drop below threshold.
- Methodology adherence: Checklists for each engagement phase — did the practitioner complete all required steps, use the correct tools, follow the prescribed sequence?
- Peer review protocols: How and when practitioner work is reviewed by senior practitioners or the central team.
Gerber's ultimate standard for the Franchise Prototype asks a powerful question: "Can ordinary people produce extraordinary results, predictably, consistently, and at scale?" This isn't an insult to your practitioners. It's a design principle. The system should compensate for individual variation. A practitioner who is a 7 out of 10 in talent should produce results nearly as good as a practitioner who is a 9 out of 10 — because the system guides them through the same rigorous process.
If your methodology requires genius-level practitioners to produce good results, it isn't scalable. If it produces good results through well-trained, competent practitioners following a documented process, it is.
05 — Your Pricing Rules
Fees, Tiers, Proposals, and the Anti-Discounting Protocol
The fifth area is how engagements are priced — and this is where undocumented businesses haemorrhage value fastest. Without pricing rules, every practitioner invents their own approach. One discounts aggressively to close deals. Another overprices and loses prospects. A third gives away the diagnostic for free to "win bigger projects." The result is margin erosion, brand confusion, and a race to the bottom that the founder cannot see until it is too late.
Your pricing documentation must cover:
- Fee floors: The absolute minimum price for each engagement type. No exceptions.
- Tier structure: How engagements are packaged into tiers — always three options, always presented top-down (highest-value option first).
- Proposal presentation: How proposals are presented, what language to use, how to frame the investment in terms of value rather than cost.
- Anti-discounting protocol: The specific steps a practitioner must follow before any price reduction is offered. What three alternatives must be presented before a discount is even considered.
Not "here is my pricing" but "here is the pricing framework, how to present it, how to handle pushback, and the three alternatives to offer before any discount." The difference between those two documents is the difference between a system and a suggestion.
Pricing is brand strategy. Every time a practitioner discounts without protocol, they are not just losing margin — they are telling the market that your methodology is worth less than you claim.
06 — Your Client Selection Criteria
Not Every Prospect Is a Good Client
The sixth area is the one most service businesses never formalise: who you should and shouldn't work with. Not every prospect is a good client. And bad-fit clients consume disproportionate resources while producing disproportionately poor outcomes — which then damage your reputation and demoralise your team.
Michalowicz's Pumpkin Plan provides the framework. Your "top pumpkins" are the clients who generate the most value with the least friction. They are in your sweet spot — the right industry, the right company size, the right problem, and the right level of commitment to change. Your documentation should define these criteria explicitly:
- Ideal client profile: What industries, company sizes, revenue ranges, and challenges are in your sweet spot?
- Qualification criteria: What must be true about a prospect before you invest time in a proposal? Budget authority, strategic priority, commitment to the process?
- Warning signs: What are the red flags that signal a bad-fit client? History of starting and abandoning initiatives? Resistance to following a structured methodology? Expectation that the consultant will do all the work while the client observes?
- Disqualification protocol: How to gracefully decline a prospect who isn't a good fit. What language to use. When to refer them to a different provider.
Without documented client selection criteria, practitioners will take on any client who can pay. This isn't ambition. It's the fastest path to inconsistent results, burned-out practitioners, and a brand that stands for nothing in particular.
The discipline to say no to bad-fit clients is what creates the capacity to deliver extraordinary results for good-fit clients. Document the criteria so your team can exercise that discipline without needing your judgment on every prospect.
07 — Your Success Metrics
Measurable Promises, Not Vague Commitments
The seventh and final area is how you measure whether your methodology worked. What data you collect. How you demonstrate ROI. What your brand promise is and how you verify it.
Verne Harnish adds a critical requirement here: brand promises must be measurable. "Great service" isn't a brand promise. "Response within 4 hours or we credit your account" is a brand promise. "We help companies improve" isn't measurable. "Clients improve their maturity score by at least 10 points within 90 days, or we provide additional support at no charge" is measurable — and powerful.
"A measurable brand promise creates accountability, builds trust, and differentiates you from every competitor who hides behind vague commitments."
Your success metrics documentation should define:
- Outcome metrics: What specific, quantifiable change does your methodology produce? Score improvements, efficiency gains, revenue impact, time savings?
- Leading indicators: What early signals show that the engagement is on track? Assessment score changes at the 30-day mark, client engagement levels, milestone completion rates?
- Data collection protocol: When and how is outcome data collected? Pre-engagement baseline, mid-engagement checkpoint, post-engagement measurement, 90-day follow-up?
- ROI demonstration: How do you calculate and present the return on investment? What formula do you use? What comparisons make the value tangible?
Without success metrics, you're asking clients to trust that your methodology works based on your word. With success metrics, you are providing proof. The case studies that EOS, SAFe, FranklinCovey, and every other scaled methodology business uses to attract new clients are only possible because they measured outcomes systematically from the beginning.
The rhythm of measurement should be structured into the methodology itself. Gerber's Innovation-Quantification-Orchestration cycle provides the framework: innovate by trying new approaches, quantify by measuring results, and orchestrate by locking what works into the system. This cycle never stops. The moment your methodology becomes static, it begins to decay. But innovations must be captured centrally, validated through data, and standardised across the network — not left as local experiments that fragment the brand.
Seven areas. None optional. Methodology steps, diagnostic tool, delivery process, quality standards, pricing rules, client selection criteria, and success metrics. The businesses that documented all seven before scaling — EOS, SAFe, FranklinCovey, StoryBrand — became industries. The businesses that skipped documentation and scaled anyway became cautionary tales. The system doesn't need to be perfect. It needs to exist.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.