The 24-Month Implementation Timeline: Month by Month
12 critical Year 1 milestones. 8 quarters with specific activities. Assessment volume targets from 15 (Month 3) to 200+ (Month 12). If you hit all 12 milestones, you have a business.
Every framework in this series — positioning, pricing, diagnostics, certification, sales, governance — is only as valuable as the order in which you execute it. Build the certification program before proving the diagnostic works? Wasted effort. Launch the annual summit before you have case studies to present? Empty ceremony.
Sequencing matters more than speed. Each month builds on the previous one. When in doubt, slow down and get the current phase right rather than rushing to the next.
What follows is the 24-month implementation timeline drawn from the complete methodology. It covers Year 1 (Build and Prove) and Year 2 (Scale and Systematize) — broken into 8 quarters with specific milestones, assessment volume targets, and decision points.
Year 1 has 12 critical milestones. If you hit all 12, you have a business. If you miss more than 3, you have a problem.
Year 1: Build and Prove
The 12 Milestones That Determine Success or Failure
Before diving into the quarter-by-quarter detail, here are the 12 milestones that matter most. Print them. Check them off. Obsess over the ones you haven't hit yet.
- Month 1: Positioning artifacts completed and shared with all practitioners.
- Month 2: First practitioners certified and delivering assessments.
- Month 3: All founding practitioners certified. First client satisfaction data collected.
- Month 4: First case studies produced from real engagements.
- Month 5: Cross-referral network activated — first referral made and tracked.
- Month 6: Partner Assessment Chart completed. Top and bottom performers identified.
- Month 7: Methodology updated based on field feedback (v2.0 released).
- Month 8: First benchmark report published from aggregated assessment data.
- Month 9: Individual ROI demonstrated to each practitioner. Conversion preparation begins.
- Month 10: Underperforming practitioners given formal improvement plans.
- Month 11: Year 2 pricing communicated transparently. Non-price alternatives ready.
- Month 12: Annual summit held. 80%+ conversion commitment secured. Cohort 2 criteria set.
Each milestone is a gate. Don't skip to Month 9 activities while Month 3 activities are incomplete. The sequence is the strategy.
Q1 (Months 1-3): Systematize and Certify
The Goal Is Not Revenue. It's Data.
Everything in Q1 serves a single purpose: get a standardized offering into the hands of certified practitioners generating real-world data. Revenue is a byproduct, not the objective.
Month 1. Complete your V/TO (Vision/Traction Organizer). Create positioning artifacts — the one-sentence positioning statement, the sales story, the messaging document. Begin onboarding 5-10 founding partners. Launch the weekly L10 meeting and communication channel. Measure: partner onboarding progress and founder time allocation.
Month 2. First partners certified and delivering their initial assessments. Begin Live Capture of key delivery processes — record yourself doing the work so it can be taught. Launch the monthly partner call and content calendar. Measure: certifications completed, first assessments started.
Month 3. All founding partners certified. Cross-pillar introductions made. Launch the quarterly review process. First iteration of the Partner Assessment Chart. Measure: assessments delivered, partner activity rate. Assessment volume target: 15-30 total.
The critical decision at end of Q1: which partners are already emerging as A-grade performers? Which need extra support? Early identification prevents surprises later.
Q2 (Months 4-6): Activate and Prove
Proof of Concept: It Works Without the Founder
Month 4. First case studies emerge from real engagements — real results, real metrics, told as stories not summaries. Methodology refinements based on field feedback. Cross-referral tracking begins. Assessment volume target: 40-50 total.
Month 5. Cross-referral network activating. First partner-led engagements completed without founder involvement. The podcast recording schedule or partner spotlight series launches. Key question: are partners pricing on value or falling back to hourly?
Month 6. First Partner Assessment Chart completed — every partner scored on delivery quality, commercial performance, and community contribution. Take the first vacation test: one full day offline. What breaks? Assessment volume target: 60-80 total.
Critical decision at end of Q2: what intervention do underperformers need? And who are the emerging leaders who could eventually facilitate calls, mentor newcomers, and represent the brand?
"If your first partner-led engagement delivers results without you in the room, you've proven the methodology is transferable. Everything after that is optimization."
By the end of Q2, you should have undeniable evidence that the methodology works when delivered by people other than you. If you don't have that evidence, don't move to Q3. Fix the delivery gap first.
Q3-Q4 (Months 7-12): Deepen, Convert, Celebrate
From Proof to Revenue Model
Month 7-8. Methodology v2.0 incorporating all field feedback. First ecosystem-wide benchmark report published. Advanced coaching for your top 5-8 partners. Assessment volume target: 100-120 total by end of Month 8. The data flywheel starts producing real insight when you cross the 100-assessment threshold.
Month 9. Conversion preparation begins. Demonstrate individual ROI to each practitioner: revenue generated, clients acquired, referrals received. Build the value proposition document — a one-page case showing why the certification fee is trivially low compared to the demonstrated return. Preview Year 2 pricing.
Month 10-11. Underperformers get formal 90-day improvement plans. Year 2 pricing communicated six months before it takes effect. Anti-discounting protocol documented and ready. Non-price alternatives prepared for every predictable pushback.
Month 12. The annual summit — part celebration, part strategic planning, part training. Year 1 results presented. Conversion commitments secured. Cohort 2 criteria finalized. Assessment volume target: 150-200+ total.
Target: 80%+ conversion from free to paid. Below 70%, the value proposition needs strengthening before you launch Cohort 2. Above 90%, you may be undercharging.
Year 2: Scale and Systematize
Proving It Works Without You
If Year 1 was about proving the model works, Year 2 is about proving it works without you. Four quarters with four distinct objectives.
Q5 (Months 13-15): Convert and Expand. First recurring revenue collected. Cohort 2 applications open, selection begins. Founding partners become mentors for newcomers. Key question: is the certification program transferable — can mentors teach it without the founder?
Q6 (Months 16-18): Systematize and Test Independence. Governance infrastructure formalizes — Partner Advisory Council nominations and election. Community manager hired. And the ultimate test: the four-week vacation. Founder completely offline for one month. Michalowicz's Clockwork diagnostic in action. What breaks? Document exactly what broke. Those are the systems still needed.
Q7 (Months 19-21): Govern and Mature. The Advisory Council takes real ownership. Methodology evolves through community input, not just founder direction. New vertical playbooks created by specialist partners. Key decision: should you open Cohort 3, or optimize before expanding further?
Q8 (Months 22-24): Renew and Plan. Second annual summit. Two full years of data. Multi-year retention data tells you whether the model is sustainable. The Month 24 question, drawn from both Jarvis and Harnish: grow or optimize? Jarvis argues that optimization is usually the right answer — deeper quality, better margins, more sustainable. Harnish argues growth is right if your systems can support it. Both are correct. The answer depends on what you built this for.
Make the decision deliberately, not by default. A founder who drifts into Year 3 without making this choice will find it made for them — usually by cash flow constraints or partner attrition.
Twenty-four months. Twelve milestones in Year 1. Four quarterly objectives in Year 2. The sequencing is the strategy. Move through it deliberately. Fix problems in the current phase before advancing to the next. And remember: the businesses that emerge from Month 24 with a proven, systematized, founder-independent platform didn't get there by moving fast. They got there by getting each phase right.
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.