The Most Important Asset You'll Ever Build: Your Proprietary Diagnostic Tool
Every successful service business has one. EOS has the Organizational Checkup. Gallup has StrengthsFinder. Priestley's KPI Scorecard generated $20M from 90,000 completions. Your diagnostic is simultaneously a sales tool, positioning device, data generator, competitive moat, and product.
Look at any methodology business that has scaled successfully, and you will find a diagnostic tool at its core. EOS has the Organizational Checkup. Gallup has StrengthsFinder. Net Promoter Score is a one-question diagnostic that two-thirds of the Fortune 1000 adopted. DISC powers entire industries. Daniel Priestley's KPI Scorecard generated 90,000 completions and $20 million in attributed revenue.
This isn't coincidence. It's the single most powerful pattern in professional services.
If you're building a service business — consulting, coaching, advisory, or any form of expertise-driven work — and you don't have a proprietary diagnostic tool, you're leaving your most valuable asset unbuilt. You're competing on personality instead of methodology. You're improvising when you should be measuring.
The diagnostic isn't a nice-to-have. It's the foundation everything else is built on.
01 — The Five Functions
Why a Diagnostic Does More Than You Think
Most people think of a diagnostic as a lead-generation tool. Something you put on your website to capture emails. That misunderstanding is why most diagnostics fail. A proprietary diagnostic serves five functions simultaneously, and each one is essential to building a scalable service business.
1. Sales tool. The diagnostic opens doors that cold calls cannot. "Would a structured assessment help you understand where you stand?" is a fundamentally different conversation than "Would you like to hire a consultant?" One positions you as a peer exploring a problem together. The other positions you as a vendor begging for work. Blair Enns, in The Win Without Pitching Manifesto, calls this the "polite battle for control." When you say "Before we can recommend anything, we need to conduct our assessment," you establish the practitioner-patient dynamic. You lead; the client follows.
2. Positioning device. A proprietary diagnostic says: "We have a structured methodology. We don't improvise. We measure." It separates you from every generalist who shows up with a slide deck and a willingness to do whatever the client asks. In a world where most consultants look identical, the diagnostic is the first tangible proof that you're different.
3. Data generator. Every completed assessment produces data. Over time, that data creates benchmarks. Benchmarks create industry reports. Industry reports create thought leadership. Thought leadership attracts more assessments. This is the data flywheel, and it's one of the most powerful competitive moats in professional services. We will explore this in depth shortly.
4. Competitive moat. Your questions, your scoring methodology, your benchmarking data — these take years to develop and refine. A competitor can copy your website in a day. They can't copy ten thousand completed assessments and the insights those assessments produce.
5. Product in its own right. This is the function most founders miss entirely. The diagnostic isn't a freebie. It's a product. Clients pay for the insight it produces. It has a price, a scope, and a deliverable. Treat it as your core product, not as a lead-generation gimmick.
"Without a tight positioning, there are no similar scenarios. Without similar scenarios, there is no pattern matching. Without pattern matching, there is no intelligence." — David Baker
Baker's insight reveals the deeper value of the diagnostic: it's the instrument through which pattern matching becomes systematic. Each completed assessment adds to your database of comparable situations. The tenth assessment you deliver will be good. The hundredth will be excellent. The thousandth will be extraordinary — because your pattern library will be unmatched.
Without the diagnostic, you're starting from scratch with every client. With it, you're compounding intelligence with every engagement.
02 — The Design
How to Build a Diagnostic That Actually Works
A diagnostic should produce a clear, quantifiable score. Not a vague assessment. Not a qualitative opinion. A number. Numbers create accountability, enable comparison, and make progress measurable. Here are the design principles that separate effective diagnostics from glorified surveys.
Structured dimensions. Break your area of expertise into 3-7 distinct dimensions (pillars, categories, domains). Each dimension should be independently measurable and independently actionable. If a client scores poorly on one dimension, they should know exactly what to fix without needing to overhaul everything.
Standardized questions. 20-40 questions total, distributed across dimensions. Questions should be answerable on a consistent scale (1-5 or 1-10). Avoid open-ended questions in the scored portion — save those for the conversation afterward.
Weighted scoring. Not all dimensions are equally important. Weight them based on their impact on outcomes. The weighting itself is proprietary IP. This is one of the subtle ways your diagnostic becomes impossible to replicate — even if someone copies your questions, the weighting reflects years of pattern recognition they don't have.
Clear maturity levels. Map scores to named maturity levels. For example: 1-20 = Foundational, 21-40 = Developing, 41-60 = Established, 61-80 = Advanced, 81-100 = Leading. Names make scores meaningful and communicable. A CEO won't remember "you scored 37." They'll remember "you're at the Developing stage."
Actionable output. The assessment report must do more than assign a score. It must identify specific gaps and connect each gap to a recommended action. The gap analysis is what converts the diagnostic from an interesting exercise into a compelling reason to engage further.
Notice the pattern across every successful diagnostic in history: simple (20-40 questions or fewer), quantified (produces a number or category), proprietary (unique to the creator), and actionable (the result tells you what to do next). None of them try to assess everything. They assess the right things well enough to create an "aha moment" that motivates action.
"People hear what they see." — Harry Beckwith, Selling the Invisible
Beckwith's principle applies directly to your diagnostic report. In invisible services, visual quality is the proxy for methodological quality. Your assessment report should look world-class — professional design, clear data visualization with radar charts, heat maps, and trend lines, consistent branding. A poorly formatted report undermines the methodology behind it, regardless of how rigorous the assessment actually is.
Invest in design. The report is the first tangible artifact your client holds, and it will shape their perception of everything that follows.
03 — The Experience
Why the Best Diagnostics Are Conversations, Not Surveys
There's a critical distinction between diagnostics that generate leads and diagnostics that generate relationships. The difference is the experience.
The best diagnostics aren't surveys you email and forget. They're structured conversations — 60 to 90 minutes of guided questioning where the practitioner sits with the client, asks questions, probes responses, and builds understanding. The conversation itself builds trust. The output is important, but the experience of being genuinely listened to and intelligently questioned is what converts a diagnostic into an ongoing relationship.
This is also where freemium strategy becomes essential.
Hermann Simon's research on freemium pricing, detailed in Confessions of the Pricing Man, shows that optimizing the free-to-paid boundary yields approximately 20% revenue improvement. The principle is straightforward: the free version must be genuinely useful — it attracts users — but must create obvious upgrade pressure, so users immediately see what they're missing.
Here's how the boundary should work:
- Free version: 1 dimension, 5-10 questions, aggregate score only, no benchmarking, generic tips, self-serve online
- Paid version: All dimensions, 20-40 questions, dimension-by-dimension breakdown with gap analysis, industry benchmarks, prioritized action plan, expert-guided session with interpretation, quarterly reassessment tracking
The free version reveals enough to be interesting but not enough to be actionable. The full version is where the insight occurs — the "aha moment" that makes clients say "now I understand what we need to do."
"Under no circumstances will we part with our thinking without appropriate compensation." — Blair Enns
Never give away the full diagnostic to "win bigger projects." Baker warns that free diagnostics commoditize the highest-value step in your process. The diagnostic is the product. Price it accordingly.
04 — The Pricing
Why Undercharging Destroys Your Positioning
Simon's framework for diagnostic pricing rests on a single insight: price signals quality when buyers can't evaluate quality directly.
In services, quality is invisible before purchase. A client can't test-drive your consulting the way they test-drive a car. The only quality signal available before purchase is price. Consider what different price points communicate:
- $500 signals "quick online quiz"
- $5,000 signals "serious diagnostic backed by proprietary methodology"
- $25,000 signals "enterprise-grade evaluation with benchmarking and strategic recommendations"
Harry Beckwith adds: "Charge by the years, not by the hour." Your diagnostic draws on years — sometimes decades — of methodology development, pattern recognition, and industry expertise. The price should reflect the accumulated IP, not the hours required to deliver it.
The test for whether you have priced correctly is Baker's "one-third rejection rate." Roughly one-third of prospects should reject your diagnostic on price. If everyone says yes, you're undercharging. If everyone says no, your positioning needs work.
Most founders set their diagnostic price too low out of fear. They worry that charging $5,000 or $10,000 for an assessment will scare clients away. But the opposite happens: underpricing attracts price-sensitive clients who value neither the methodology nor the relationship, while repelling exactly the clients you want — the ones who understand that serious insight commands serious investment.
Your price isn't just a number on an invoice. It's the first and loudest statement about the quality of your thinking.
05 — The Data Flywheel
The Most Underappreciated Asset in Professional Services
This is where the diagnostic transforms from a sales tool into an unassailable competitive advantage. Every assessment creates benchmarking data that makes the next assessment more valuable. This compounding effect — the data flywheel — is the engine of a methodology business.
Consider the progression:
- Assessments 1-50: You have a diagnostic. It produces a score. Useful, but uncontextualized. Clients get a number but have no way to know if that number is good or bad.
- Assessments 51-200: You can tell clients how they compare to the average. "You scored 42. The median for companies your size is 55." Now the score has meaning.
- Assessments 201-500: You can segment benchmarks by industry, company size, geography, and maturity level. "You are in the bottom quartile for manufacturing companies in your revenue range." Now the score has precision.
- Assessments 500+: You can publish industry reports. You can identify trends. You can predict which organizations will struggle and which will succeed. Your data becomes proprietary intelligence that no competitor can replicate without doing the same volume of assessments over the same number of years.
Daniel Priestley quantifies this directly: his KPI diagnostic generated 90,000 completions and $20 million in attributed revenue. That data asset is worth more than any content library, any speaker reel, any website redesign. It's the foundation of everything Dent Global sells.
The data flywheel isn't a nice-to-have. It's the difference between a service business that stays small and one that becomes a category leader.
And here is the crucial insight most founders miss: you can't start building this flywheel later. Every assessment you deliver without capturing structured, comparable data is a wasted data point. The flywheel starts turning the moment you launch your diagnostic — but only if you design for it from the beginning.
Start capturing data with assessment number one. By the time you reach assessment number five hundred, you will have an asset no amount of money can buy.
06 — The Empires
Diagnostics That Built Billion-Dollar Businesses
To make this concrete, consider the diagnostics that became the cornerstone of some of the most successful methodology businesses in the world.
The EOS Organizational Checkup — 20 questions across 6 components, scored 1-5. This simple tool is the entry point for over 200,000 company engagements. It's the "hook" that sells EOS implementation, and it has made EOS one of the most recognized business operating systems on the planet.
Gallup StrengthsFinder (now CliftonStrengths) — 177 paired statements identifying your top 5 strengths. Over 30 million completions. It spawned a global coaching industry. The book alone has sold over 20 million copies. The assessment isn't a bonus feature of the book — the book is the marketing for the assessment.
Net Promoter Score — A single question: "How likely are you to recommend?" on a 0-10 scale. Fred Reichheld and Bain turned this one question into an entire consulting practice category, adopted by two-thirds of the Fortune 1000.
The DISC Assessment — 28 groups of four adjectives categorizing behavior into four styles. Used by over 70% of Fortune 500 companies, with thousands of certified practitioners worldwide delivering it.
StoryBrand BrandScript — Donald Miller's 7-part framework (Character, Problem, Guide, Plan, Call to Action, Failure, Success). The entry point for StoryBrand certification, generating millions in workshop and licensing revenue.
Priestley's KPI Scorecard — 40 questions across key performance indicators. 90,000+ completions. $20 million in attributed revenue. The entire Dent Global pipeline is driven by this single tool.
The pattern is unmistakable. Every one of these diagnostics is simple, quantified, proprietary, and actionable. None are comprehensive — they deliberately leave gaps that the full engagement addresses.
Your diagnostic doesn't need to assess everything. It needs to assess the right things well enough to create an "aha moment" that motivates action. The gap between what the diagnostic reveals and what the client needs to do about it — that gap is your business.
Every month without a diagnostic is a month of wasted data. Start building yours now.
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.