There are exactly two ways a packaged methodology dies, and they look nothing alike.
The first death is freezing. Nobody touches the framework after launch. The assessment questions, the scoring logic, the workshop agenda — all of it stays exactly as it was the day you wrote it, while the market keeps moving underneath it. Two years later your practitioners are still delivering version 1.0 with perfect discipline, and clients can feel that it no longer fits their world.
The second death is fragmenting. Everybody touches the framework — independently, invisibly, and without coordination. Each practitioner patches the parts that annoy them, swaps in their own examples, reorders the modules. A year in, the "standard" engagement is being run six different ways under the same brand, your benchmarking data has quietly become incomparable, and nobody — including you — can say which version actually produces the best client outcomes.
Notice what both deaths have in common: neither one is a flaw in the methodology itself. They are flaws in the absence of an improvement process around it.
Michael Gerber built the antidote decades ago. His Business Development Process — Innovation, Quantification, Orchestration — is a loop that lets a methodology evolve continuously without splintering. If you run a certification network, a licensing model, or any delivery system where other people execute your IP, this loop is not optional infrastructure. It is the difference between an asset that compounds and an asset that decays.
Your Practitioners Are Already Experimenting — The Question Is Whether You Capture It
Innovation, Properly Bounded
Picture a certified practitioner delivering your diagnostic to a mid-market logistics client. The client objects to Question 14: it doesn't map to their industry. The practitioner adapts on the spot — different wording, industry-specific context — and the session lands well. The client leaves happy.
In most expertise businesses, that field insight goes nowhere. It lives and dies inside one person's head. Meanwhile other practitioners hit the identical friction on the identical question and invent their own private fixes. That is fragmenting, in slow motion — and it starts from something good: a practitioner solving a real problem.
Gerber's point about innovation is narrower than people assume. He is not asking for reinvention or blue-sky creativity. He means small, deliberate experiments inside the methodology's boundaries: a rephrased question, a different format for walking a client through results, a workshop agenda that gives discussion more room, a scoring rubric adjusted to capture nuance in one dimension. Each one is a contained hypothesis — change one element, in one engagement, with one client — while the core of the methodology stays untouched.
The discipline that makes this safe is the line between fixed and flexible. Decide explicitly which parts of the methodology are locked — the core framework, the scoring system, the promises the brand makes — and which parts practitioners may vary: phrasing, pacing, industry examples, supplementary material. Experiments live only in the flexible zone. The locked zone nobody touches, ever.
Without that line, "everyone innovating" is just fragmentation with a positive spin. With it, you get a network of field laboratories all stress-testing the edges of your IP while its center holds.
"It Felt Better" Is Not a Result
Quantification, or Why Feelings Don't Scale
Here is how most field experiments get evaluated: the practitioner tries the new approach, the room seemed more engaged, the conversation flowed, and the verdict comes back as "the new format works better." Better by what measure? Against what baseline? More engaged according to whom?
Gerber is blunt about this: innovation without measurement is guesswork wearing the costume of progress. And distributed guesswork is worse than individual guesswork, because a whole network "improving" the methodology on instinct compounds into chaos no one can untangle.
Quantification means deciding what you will measure — and what success would look like — before the experiment runs, not after.
For a diagnostic-style methodology, the candidate measures are straightforward:
- Completion. Do clients get through the diagnostic, or do they drop off partway?
- Score differentiation. Does the revised question produce spread in the answers, or do clients still bunch up around the same responses?
- Conversion. Does the new results format change the share of clients who buy the next tier of engagement?
- Satisfaction. How does post-engagement feedback compare against engagements run the standard way?
- Delivery confidence. Do practitioners find the variation easier to run, or harder?
None of this demands a data team or statistical training. It demands consistency. Ask for satisfaction on a 1-10 scale after every engagement, every time, and you can compare the average for the new format against the average for the old one. That comparison is not proof — it is a signal. But a signal beats a hunch by an order of magnitude, and hunches are all most methodology businesses ever collect.
Quantification is the filter standing between your methodology and its two deaths. It is what allows change without chaos: experiments that clear the bar get promoted; experiments that don't get retired. No measurement, no filter — and you are back to choosing between freezing and fragmenting.
The Step Almost Everyone Skips
Orchestration Turns One Person's Insight into Everyone's Standard
Suppose the experiment succeeds. Client satisfaction is up 12% on the new approach, conversion is up 8%, and three other practitioners who ran the same variation saw comparable numbers. In most networks, this is where the story quietly ends — a validated improvement that remains the private property of four people.
Orchestration is the unglamorous third step that almost every founder skips. It means the validated change gets written into the Operations Manual. The training materials get revised. Every practitioner in the network is told, and anyone certified on the old version gets retrained. The improvement stops being a tip, a best practice, or a suggestion from the field. It becomes the standard — the only sanctioned way to deliver that element.
This is the moment the loop pays off. One practitioner's field discovery, confirmed by data, upgrades the entire network at once. The methodology improves not because someone clever had an idea, but because a system existed to capture the idea, test it, and ship it to everyone.
Skip orchestration and you slide into what Gerber calls management by abdication: handing delivery to practitioners without the systems they need and trusting they will work it out. Abdication is not delegation. Delegation transfers responsibility along with accountability and support; abdication transfers responsibility and nothing else. The predictable sequel is uneven quality, eroding client experience, and the founder dragged back into the delivery work they built the network to escape.
A functioning orchestration step prevents that slide, because every practitioner always holds the current best version of the methodology — not whichever version they happened to be trained on.
Put the Loop on a Calendar
The Cadence from Field Note to Standard
The loop is not a project you run once. It is a rhythm, and the rhythm has four speeds.
Every week, the field reports in. What landed? What fell flat? Which client comment punctured an assumption? Keep the format light — a five-minute form, a short voice note. The point is to capture insight while it is fresh, before it dissolves into a vague memory of something that maybe happened last month.
Every month, the strongest signals become tests. Someone central — you, or a methodology lead — reads the weekly reports, spots the patterns, and designs contained experiments. If three healthcare practitioners independently flag the same question, that is not noise; that is a test waiting to be run across a handful of engagements with before-and-after data.
Every quarter, what passed gets shipped. Variations that measurably improved outcomes are locked into the methodology: manual updated, a short training refresh delivered, the change made standard for the whole network rather than the lucky few who stumbled onto it.
Every year, the whole system goes under review. Step back from individual elements and interrogate the methodology itself. Are the dimensions still the right dimensions? Are the benchmarks current? Should scoring thresholds shift given a year of accumulated data? This is also the moment for full network retraining, certification curriculum updates, and fresh benchmark publications.
The cadence has a side effect that matters as much as the improvements themselves: practitioners stop feeling like licensees of a frozen product and start feeling like contributors to a living one. When your field observation shows up in the next quarterly release, you own a piece of the system. That ownership shows up as engagement, as retention, and as a community that defends the standard instead of working around it.
It also changes the asset math. A static methodology depreciates from the day it ships. A methodology running this loop appreciates — slightly better each quarter, measurably stronger each year — until the distance between your compounding system and a rival's frozen one is too wide to close.
The Danger Isn't Deviation — It's Perfect Compliance with a Stale Playbook
Founders instinctively guard against the visible failure: practitioners going off-script. So they build compliance checklists, quality audits, certification renewals — all aimed at preventing deviation.
The failure that actually kills networks is quieter. It is practitioners executing flawlessly against a methodology nobody has updated in two years, while client expectations moved, the market shifted, and newer competitors arrived with fresher approaches. Compliance was perfect. The thing they complied with had expired.
Gerber anticipated this in the very name of his central concept. The Franchise Prototype is a prototype — not a finished artifact, but a working model that exists to be tested, measured, and improved without end. The word carries the whole philosophy: iteration is the natural state, completion is an illusion, and a system that stops evolving has already started dying. The only open question is how long the decay stays invisible.
The three steps police each other. Innovation without quantification breeds chaos. Quantification without orchestration breeds reports nobody acts on. Orchestration without innovation breeds a beautifully consistent fossil.
Run all three on a rhythm and you get something rare: a methodology that improves every quarter and stays identical across every practitioner who delivers it. That is more than quality control. That is a moat that digs itself deeper every cycle.