The Revenue Predictability Diagnostic

Revenue Risk and Reliability Diagnostic Assessment

Welcome

The Revenue Predictability Diagnostic

The Revenue Predictability Diagnostic surfaces the leadership conditions that determine whether revenue remains predictable - or quietly destabilises under pressure.

It examines forecast accuracy, margin integrity, and execution consistency when timelines compress and scrutiny increases.

This is not a personality test.
There is no score.

This diagnostic identifies where revenue predictability is being lost - and why.

You receive a clear leadership profile showing whether each capability is Stable, Exposed, or At Risk across five critical dimensions:

Authority Under Pressure
Decision consistency that holds in Week 12 and doesn’t collapse after Week 1.

Decision Psychology in B2B Sales
The ability to surface resistance in Week 2 - before it becomes a late-stage escalation.

Revenue & Role Clarity
Leadership time aligned to revenue-productive work, not consumed by firefighting caused by role ambiguity.

Leadership Intervention as a Discipline
Margin protected through qualification and accountability - not reactive rescuing.

Executive Influence
Expertise that is visible and transferable, strengthening talent attraction and board confidence rather than remaining invisible.

You’ll receive a detailed report (email + downloadable PDF) showing which leadership capability gap carries the highest revenue cost - and what infrastructure must be installed to restore control.

Run the Revenue Predictability Diagnostic →

Click Next to begin

Your Information

POSITIONING & AUTHORITY UNDER PRESSURE
PRESENCE & DECISION PSYCHOLOGY
Question 1 of 20
When pressure increases late in the quarter, I hold the same leadership standards as I do earlier in the cycle.
POSITIONING & AUTHORITY UNDER PRESSURE
PRESENCE & DECISION PSYCHOLOGY
Question 2 of 20
When senior leaders or the board get involved, my team still owns and drives the decision.
POSITIONING & AUTHORITY UNDER PRESSURE
PRESENCE & DECISION PSYCHOLOGY
Question 3 of 20
When situations become tense, my team continues to act without waiting for me to step in.
POSITIONING & AUTHORITY UNDER PRESSURE
PRESENCE & DECISION PSYCHOLOGY
Question 4 of 20
When the stakes are high, I usually step in and take control to keep things on track.
PRECISION & REVENUE / ROLE CLARITY
PROFITABILITY & COACHING AS A LEADERSHIP DISCIPLINE
Question 5 of 20
When a decision slows down, I can clearly identify what is causing the hesitation before acting.
PRECISION & REVENUE / ROLE CLARITY
PROFITABILITY & COACHING AS A LEADERSHIP DISCIPLINE
Question 6 of 20
I seek to understand concerns or objections before pushing a decision forward.
PRECISION & REVENUE / ROLE CLARITY
PROFITABILITY & COACHING AS A LEADERSHIP DISCIPLINE
Question 7 of 20
Concerns or objections rarely show up late in the decision process.
PRECISION & REVENUE / ROLE CLARITY
PROFITABILITY & COACHING AS A LEADERSHIP DISCIPLINE
Question 8 of 20
When people hesitate, applying more pressure usually moves the decision forward.
PROMINENCE & EXECUTIVE INFLUENCE
Question 9 of 20
Leaders on my team can clearly explain how their role directly impacts revenue.
PROMINENCE & EXECUTIVE INFLUENCE
Question 10 of 20
Expectations and performance standards are clearly defined, not left open to interpretation.
PROMINENCE & EXECUTIVE INFLUENCE
Question 11 of 20
Pipeline and forecast discussions focus on decision quality, not just activity or effort.
PROMINENCE & EXECUTIVE INFLUENCE
Question 12 of 20
Capable people don't really need clearly defined roles or standards to perform well.
MODULE 4
Question 13 of 20
Coaching usually happens before problems show up, not only when something is already going wrong.
MODULE 4
Question 14 of 20
My coaching reduces the need for people to come back to me with the same issues.
MODULE 4
Question 15 of 20
Deals are slowed down or stopped when qualification standards are not met — even under pressure.
MODULE 4
Question 16 of 20
When problems show up, fixing them myself feels faster than slowing things down to coach.
MODULE 5
Question 17 of 20
People outside my immediate team understand how I think and make decisions.
MODULE 5
Question 18 of 20
My point of view influences senior or executive decisions, not just reporting conversations.
MODULE 5
Question 19 of 20
Important initiatives continue to move forward without my constant involvement.
MODULE 5
Question 20 of 20
When I'm not involved, important decisions tend to stall or lose direction.
Use arrow keys (← →) or number keys (1-5) to navigate