What the diagnostic produces

Results.
In their
own words.

Every case study below follows the same structure. Before. Score. Failure pattern. Intervention. Commercial outcome. No anonymous claims. No inflated metrics.

A note on proof

The Proposition Architect does not invent metrics, fabricate outcomes, or claim credit for results that cannot be attributed to the work. What is here is what happened. Where a client has asked to remain anonymous, the sector is named and the outcome is real.

01
Professional Services
Mirror Trap identified. Pipeline productive within weeks.
Reviewed
Diagnostic tier used
The Mirror Trap
The situation

A professional services director was attracting the wrong prospects, writing proposals they were not going to win, and spending hours on discovery calls that went nowhere.

The proposition reflected what the business did rather than the specific problem the right buyer needed solved. The ideal client profile was too broad to self-select.

What was found

The Mirror Trap was the primary pattern. The proposition was leading with capability and breadth. The right buyer was not recognising themselves in it.

The ICP was misaligned. The Specific dimension scored 2 out of 5. Targeting was fixed before any further spend was recommended.

What changed
£85k
new business
“Thank you, it has really helped with my business plan. We have just won a new piece of business worth over £85,000 per annum, and our pipeline is very healthy.”
02
Regional Insurance Broker
Second proposition surfaced. First acquisition completed.
Reviewed
Diagnostic tier used
The Wrong Invite
The situation

A regional insurance broker had a second commercial proposition buried inside his business. It was not visible in his website or his pitch.

The business had outgrown its positioning. A more valuable proposition was sitting invisible alongside the primary one.

What was found

The diagnostic surfaced the second proposition and identified the priority areas to address. New proposition assets and web copy were designed around both commercial offerings.

The Fit Test layer and the Visible Path layer were both underscoring. The positioning was not reflecting what the business had actually become.

What changed
First
acquisition
“I have had some quiet time this morning and thought I would give you some feedback on the report. In short, I love it.”

The broker has since completed his first acquisition, with a growing pipeline for more.

03
Wellbeing Consultancy
Wrong Invite identified. Proposition rebuilt around one buyer.
Free
Diagnostic tier used
The Wrong Invite
The situation

A wellbeing consultancy founder was generating inbound enquiries but consistently attracting the wrong clients. The conversations were outside the sweet spot and not converting at the right level.

The proposition was casting too wide a net. The right buyer did not feel directly spoken to.

What was found

The Wrong Invite was the active pattern. The Specific dimension scored 2 out of 5. The Standout dimension scored 2 out of 5.

The proposition was rebuilt around a defined problem and a specific buyer. The fix was narrowing before amplifying.

What changed
Clarity
in days
“The report gave me clarity fast. You nailed the core problem and, more importantly, gave it structure. That is exactly what I needed to shift my thinking from broad offer to problem-solution-led outreach.” Christina Rittchen, Founder
The four patterns

Every result traces back
to one of these

Pattern 01
The Mirror Trap

The proposition reflects capabilities, not the buyer's problem. Buyers have to translate. Most do not bother. Wins happen despite the proposition, not because of it.

Rebuild Layer 1 around the buyer's problem first
Pattern 02
The Wrong Invite

Positioning too broad. Wrong buyers show up. Right buyers do not recognise themselves. Pipeline fills with conversations that should not be happening.

Tighten Layer 2 to specific situations, not general claims
Pattern 03
The Trophy Cabinet

Proof is displayed but not narrated. Logos, names, years of experience. No outcomes. No context. Buyers see credentials. They do not form belief.

Narrate proof with before, pattern, and commercial outcome
Pattern 04
The Comparison Trap

Weak differentiation forces price comparison. Cheapest wins. Margin disappears. Relationships replace positioning as the only reliable route to a deal.

Strengthen Standout and name a method no competitor owns
How case studies are structured

Every case follows
the same six sections

A case study that cannot answer all six questions is not proof. It is a testimonial. Proof requires the before, the score, the pattern, the intervention, and the commercial result.

  • 01
    The Situation
    What the business looked like before the diagnostic
  • 02
    The Score
    Combined score out of 60 and named failure pattern
  • 03
    What Was Found
    The specific layer or dimension that was the binding constraint
  • 04
    What Changed
    The proposition before and after, where permitted
  • 05
    The Result
    Commercial outcome in specific terms
  • 06
    In Their Words
    The client's own account, attributed where permitted
What the diagnostic is not
We do not
claim credit
we did not earn
  • 01No fabricated metrics. Every number in these case studies was provided by the client or verified against public information.
  • 02No invented case studies. If a client did not share a result, we do not claim one. Assumptions are always labelled as assumptions.
  • 03No anonymous success claims. Where a client has asked to remain unidentified, the sector is named and the result is real.
  • 04No inflated attribution. The diagnostic names the problem and provides the fix sequence. The client does the work. Both facts are true.