The Proposition Architect is not a general commercial review. It is designed for specific moments when a broken proposition is the constraint costing deals.
Each situation below describes a founder who arrived at the same underlying problem by a different route. In every case the proposition was the constraint. The diagnostic named it. The fix sequence resolved it.
New website. Improved LinkedIn. Maybe a rebrand. Pipeline has not responded. You are starting to suspect the website was never the real problem.
More spend is being considered. Another agency. A sales hire. A marketing push. If the proposition problem is not named first, every pound spent amplifies a broken message.
Your work is measurably better than the competition. Buyers keep comparing you to cheaper alternatives anyway. Every proposal risks a discount conversation.
Margin is being given away on deals that should have been won on value. Every discount trains the next buyer to expect one. Relationships become the only reliable route to a deal.
Inbound is working but the conversations are wrong. Too small, outside the sweet spot, from buyers who will not commit at the right level. The right clients are not recognising themselves.
Discovery time is spent on conversations that will not convert at the right value. Delivery capacity fills with work that does not build the portfolio the business wants. The founder is busy but not building.
A move upmarket, a raise, a strategic hire, or an eventual exit. The current proposition was built for where you were. It will not get you where you are going.
A raise or exit conversation with a weak proposition costs multiples. Either in dilution, in valuation, or in the time spent explaining a business that investors cannot immediately understand. The cost is not felt today. It is felt when it matters most.
The business has evolved. The proposition has not. Every first conversation requires correction. Referrals carry the old version forward.
First impressions create positioning before the founder has a chance to reframe. The longer the outdated proposition runs, the more anchored the market becomes to a version of the business that no longer exists.
Pipeline exists but it runs through your relationships. The business cannot grow beyond your network because the proposition is not doing any commercial work on its own.
Growth is capped by the founder's personal bandwidth. Every holiday, illness, or period of heavy delivery means pipeline dries up. The business is not scalable, raisable, or exitable in its current state.
The diagnostic is designed to be honest. If it scores you above 50/60, it will tell you directly that you do not have a proposition problem.
Volume is not the constraint when the conversations are wrong. The diagnostic distinguishes between a lead generation problem and a targeting problem before any spend is recommended.
Every market feels price-sensitive when propositions are undifferentiated. The diagnostic distinguishes between a market problem and a positioning problem. They have different fixes.
The diagnostic does not ask you to redo the website. It identifies whether the proposition the website carries is the problem. Sometimes it is one page. Sometimes it is one sentence.
Specificity is not limiting. It is clarifying. The diagnostic tests whether current breadth is producing the right conversations or the wrong ones. The score makes it objective.
The Mirror Trap is almost impossible to see from inside the business. An external diagnostic names what the founder cannot see in their own messaging. That is the value of the outside read.
A sales hire without a working proposition produces expensive, demoralising underperformance. The diagnostic tells you which to fix first. Most of the time, the proposition is the constraint.