Sooner or later, every founder who turns a methodology into an assessment runs into the same design question. The prospect finishes the questions and lands on the results page. What do they see for free — and what sits behind the paywall?
Most founders answer that question badly, and in one of two predictable directions. The cost of answering it badly is not marginal.
Hermann Simon, writing in Confessions of the Pricing Man, examined freemium boundaries across industries and concluded that placing the free-to-paid line correctly is worth approximately a 20% revenue improvement — without acquiring a single additional user and without changing a single price. The entire gain comes from moving one line to the right place.
The rule that should govern where that line falls is simple to state: the free tier exists to make someone aware they have a problem. The paid tier exists to make them able to solve it. Everything that follows is an application of that one sentence.
The Two Failure Modes
Over-Givers, Under-Givers, and What Each One Costs
The over-givers hand out the complete assessment — every dimension scored, full recommendations attached — and hope that generosity converts into engagements. Blair Enns, in The Win Without Pitching Manifesto, leaves no room for interpretation here: "Under no circumstances will we part with our thinking without appropriate compensation." On the same theme, Ron Baker warns that a fully free diagnostic commoditizes the single highest-value step in your process. The diagnostic is where you demonstrate expertise, surface problems the client did not know they had, and earn the authority to prescribe. Teach the market that this comes at zero cost and you will struggle to ever charge for it again.
The under-givers run the opposite play. A handful of throwaway questions, one vague paragraph of results, and an aggressive upgrade button. A teaser that thin is not a diagnostic — it is a lead form wearing a costume. Prospects recognize it on sight, learn nothing about your methodology from it, and feel no pull whatsoever toward the paid version.
Both camps share the same underlying mistake: they treat the boundary as a marketing tactic, when it is actually the central product-design decision of a diagnostic-driven business.
Free Diagnoses, Paid Treats
The Psychological Job Each Tier Has to Do
Start with a medical parallel. A routine screening that returns a cholesterol reading of 280 does not end the conversation — it starts one. Nobody leaves that appointment satisfied that they now "know it is high." They want to know what is causing it, how serious it is, and what the plan is. The screening is your free tier. The full workup, the specialist interpretation, the personalized treatment plan — that is the paid tier.
A well-built free assessment produces the same condition in a business prospect. Call it productive discomfort: a credible score saying something is off, paired with an immediate urge to understand why. That state is the entire conversion engine. A free tier that never creates it leaves the paid tier with nothing to convert. A free tier that fully resolves it leaves the prospect with no reason to buy.
Creating that state takes real substance. The free version should take 5-10 minutes to complete, cover at least one complete dimension of your methodology, and return a score that actually means something. The test is what the prospect thinks when they finish. "That was useful" wins. "That was a pitch" loses — permanently.
"The free tier's job is to make the problem visible. The paid tier's job is to make it solvable. Blur that line and you either give the business away or never start one."
One more lever belongs here: let the prospect see the shape of what they have not yet seen. When the results page displays five dimensions but scores only one of them, the question forms on its own — what about the other four? Curiosity the prospect generates themselves is a stronger upgrade mechanism than any sales copy you could write.
Six Dials That Set the Line
Where Free Should End, Element by Element
Simon's research supplies the principle; working diagnostic businesses supply the pattern. There are six elements where the free/paid split has to be decided, and the right split is consistent across all of them:
Scope. Free covers one dimension in 5-10 questions. Paid covers every dimension in 20-40. Enough breadth to be credible — never enough to be complete.
Output. The free tier returns a single aggregate number. The paid tier breaks results down dimension by dimension, with a gap analysis attached. One tells the prospect that something is wrong. The other tells them what is wrong and where.
Benchmarks. Free gets none. Paid gets comparisons by industry and company size — because a raw number floats without context. "You scored 42" is a data point. "You scored 42 against a median of 68 for companies your size" is a story. And stories, not data points, are what move buying decisions.
Recommendations. Free gets general guidance anyone could offer. Paid gets a prioritized prescription: your communication dimension came in at 31, driven mainly by weak cross-departmental feedback loops — here are three interventions, in order of impact. Specificity is the thing people pay for.
Delivery. Free is self-serve online, and scales without you. Paid is expert-guided — a trained practitioner walking the client through the results live, asking the follow-up questions, making the numbers mean something. Beckwith's observation about invisible services applies in full here: the experience is the product, and the guided session is where the genuine "aha moment" happens.
Follow-up. Free ends at the results page. Paid includes quarterly reassessment, with progress tracked over time. This is the dial that converts a one-off transaction into a relationship — and a diagnostic into recurring revenue.
Run your eye down the list and the same asymmetry repeats six times. Free delivers the what. Paid delivers the why, the how, and the compared to whom. That is not artificial gating — each paid step genuinely contains more insight than the step before it.
The Asset You Build by Giving
Why a Free Completion Is Worth More Than a Lead
Daniel Priestley's KPI diagnostic has been completed more than 90,000 times and is credited with $20 million in attributed revenue. The free version genuinely works — it produces a real score — while deliberately stopping short of saying what to do about it. But the more interesting number is not the revenue. It is what 90,000 completions did to the product itself.
Every completion lands in your benchmark database. At 50 completions, you have a diagnostic. At 200, you have benchmarks worth quoting. At 500, you can segment by industry, company size, and geography. Past 1,000, you own a dataset that a new competitor cannot recreate without years of accumulated completions of their own.
The loop then feeds itself. Completions deepen the data. The data sharpens the benchmarks. Sharper benchmarks raise the value of the paid tier. A more valuable paid tier supports higher prices. Higher prices fund the marketing that brings in the next wave of free completions.
There is a design implication hiding in this: the free tier should capture the very same data points the paid tier does — only fewer of them. If the paid assessment runs five dimensions across 40 questions, the free version should run one dimension with its complete question set, so its data flows straight into the benchmarking engine. Watered-down partial data is much less useful.
"Treat the free assessment as a data engine, not a loss leader. Every completion makes the paid tier worth more — and the business harder to copy."
Seen this way, Priestley's 90,000 completions were never merely 90,000 leads. They were 90,000 entries in a benchmark set that makes every subsequent assessment more contextual, more credible, and harder for anyone else to match.
What Your Price Says Before You Do
Signaling, Qualification, and Useful Friction
Simon makes a second point that service founders routinely miss: when buyers cannot evaluate quality directly, they read it from the price. For diagnostics, this cuts in both directions.
A fully free tier attracts volume — completions, data, leads. It also attracts the wrong volume: resource collectors, tire-kickers, people who will consume your attention and never spend a cent. The metric that matters is not completions. It is qualified completions — prospects who finish the free version and immediately feel the pull toward the paid one.
Baker's one-third rejection rate works as the calibration check. Roughly a third of prospects should decline on price. If everyone completes the free tier and nobody upgrades, the free tier gives away too much or the paid tier promises too little. If nobody completes the free tier at all, it is too long, too vague, or badly positioned.
A small toll on the free tier helps with both problems. Asking for an email address, a company name, or a one-line description of the challenge barely dents completion among serious prospects — and filters out most of the noise. Someone unwilling to trade an email for an assessment was never going to trade money for the follow-up.
The paid tier's number then does its own positioning work. A $500 assessment reads as an automated quiz with light interpretation. A $5,000 assessment reads as a serious, methodology-backed diagnostic with expert reading of the results. A $25,000 assessment reads as an enterprise-grade evaluation with benchmarking, strategic recommendations, and board-ready reporting. The price has framed the entire conversation before you have said a word.
Do Not Bury the Upgrade
The Highest-Intent Moment You Already Own
Purchase intent peaks in the seconds after the free results load — the prospect is staring at their number and wanting the rest of the picture. Demand that they "book a call," fill in a contact form, or wait for someone to reach out, and you have inserted friction at the exact moment it costs the most. The paid tier belongs one click away from the score, framed as the obvious continuation: you have seen the headline number — here is how to see everything underneath it.
Place the boundary well and the diagnostic becomes a self-reinforcing machine: attracting prospects, compounding the data asset, converting the qualified, and renewing itself through reassessment.
Place it badly and you end up with impressive completion counts, a growing database, and a revenue line that never follows.