Picture the final round of a competitive sales process. Two firms, comparable credentials, comparable fees. The first one closes its pitch with: "We'll partner closely with your team to drive meaningful, lasting improvement."
The second one says: "Your diagnostic puts you at Level 2 today. We will move you to Level 3 within 90 days, measured by the same standardized assessment you just completed — and if you haven't reached Level 3 by day 90, we keep working at no additional cost until you have."
One of those firms is about to win a $50,000 engagement, and it isn't close. Not because its consultants are smarter, and not because its methodology is objectively better. It wins because it made a claim that could fail — and the buyer can tell.
In Scaling Up, Verne Harnish insists that a brand promise only counts if it can be measured. "We deliver great service" doesn't pass the test. "If we don't respond within 4 hours, we credit your account" does. One is a mood; the other is a contract.
Here's the simplest way to audit your own positioning: could a client ever prove that you broke your promise? If the answer is no, you haven't made a promise. You've written decoration. And decoration doesn't move buyers — it bores them.
Why Service Buyers Default to Distrust
The Invisible-Quality Trap
Harry Beckwith named the core problem decades ago in Selling the Invisible: a service cannot be sampled before it's bought. Nobody gets to pilot a consulting engagement the way they'd test-drive a car or try on a jacket. The buyer commits first and discovers the quality later — which means every purchase decision is made in a fog.
Buyers respond to that fog the only way they can: with proxies. Beckwith observed that when quality is invisible, people lean on indirect signals to guess at it. Price is one — expensive reads as good. Specificity is the other, and it's the one most founders ignore.
Now look at what most expertise businesses feed into that fog. "Transformative results." "World-class advisory." "Unlocking potential." After a buyer has read the same warm vocabulary on a dozen websites, the words stop registering at all. Worse than not persuading, generic claims actively breed suspicion — because this buyer has probably already paid a firm that promised transformation and shipped a forgettable slide deck.
A specific claim cuts through precisely because of what it implies about the firm making it. Saying "we help companies improve" costs nothing and risks nothing. Saying "our clients raise their maturity score by at least 10 points inside 90 days, or we extend our support free of charge" puts revenue on the line. Only a firm with deep conviction in its method would dare. The buyer can't see your quality — but they can see your willingness to be tested, and they treat it as the next best thing.
Adjectives are free, and buyers price them accordingly. A number, a deadline, and a consequence cost you something — which is exactly why they're believed.
The Real Reason Your Promise Is Vague
It's Fear, Not Strategy
If verifiable promises convert this well, why is almost nobody making them? Don't look for a strategic explanation. The cause is emotional.
An unfalsifiable claim is psychologically comfortable. Nobody can ever hold "transformative results" against you, because transformation lives in the eye of the beholder — there's always a story that lets the founder off the hook. Put a number and a date on the claim, though, and it becomes binary. The score moved 10 points by day 90 or it didn't. No interpretive wiggle room. No place to hide.
And yes — sometimes you will miss. A client's internal politics will sabotage the rollout. An external shock will land mid-engagement. You will occasionally have to honor your recourse clause, and it will sting.
But run the arithmetic. A firm that makes promises with teeth wins more engagements, because its marketing is believed where competitors' marketing is filtered out. Even a firm that ends up triggering its recourse mechanism on 10% of engagements comes out ahead, because the volume gained from credible positioning swamps the cost of the occasional make-good. The vague firm pays a different price — invisibility — and pays it on every deal it never even gets invited to.
Ron Baker's pricing data points to a parallel rule: roughly a third of your prospects should turn down your proposals on price. A 100% close rate doesn't mean you're brilliant — it means you're cheap. Promises work the same way. If your promise is so safe you could never fail to keep it, it's too weak to differentiate you. The teeth are the point.
Reframe the risk honestly: the accountable promise risks an occasional payout. The unaccountable promise guarantees you stay indistinguishable from everyone else in your market — and indistinguishable firms compete on price until they lose.
Engineering a Promise That Can Be Held Against You
Four Components, Built in Order
A promise with teeth isn't copywriting. It's a small piece of business architecture with four load-bearing parts — and the order you build them in matters.
Start with the scorekeeping. Before you decide what to claim, decide how the claim will be judged. If your promise references a "maturity score," that score has to come from a transparent, standardized instrument — not from your gut feel at the end of the engagement. A promise judged by the founder's opinion is no promise at all. This is why the measurement methodology comes first: it constrains every other component to things you can actually verify.
Then name the outcome. Not "growth," not "better performance" — a defined change in a defined metric. "Move from Level 2 to Level 3 on our readiness assessment." "Cut time-to-hire by 25%." "Reach SOC 2 compliance within 120 days." The bar: you and the client should be able to look at the result together and agree, without argument, whether it happened.
Then bound it in time. An outcome with no deadline is a hope. "Within 90 days" turns it into a commitment with a natural checkpoint. The deadline also works in your favor: a client who stalls their own participation for half a year can't later claim you fell short, because the clock and the conditions were explicit from day one.
Finally, attach a consequence. What does it cost you if the target is missed? This is the component founders flinch at, and it's the one that makes everything upstream believable. The recourse doesn't need to be ruinous — "we continue at no charge until you get there," "we refund 50% of the fee," "we extend the advisory relationship by a quarter." It needs to prove you share the downside.
Assemble all four and you've converted marketing language into a commercial commitment — the one thing that lets a buyer believe you before they've experienced your work. No headline, however clever, can do that job.
No Instrument, No Promise
Why the Diagnostic Has to Exist First
Notice what the first component quietly demands: a proprietary diagnostic. You cannot promise measurable change without a baseline, and you cannot establish a baseline without a structured assessment that produces comparable scores over time. "Improvement" relative to what, exactly?
The diagnostic is what turns invisible expertise into numbers a skeptic can check. It replaces "things feel better around here" with "your score moved from 42 to 67." It manufactures the before-and-after that the entire promise rests on.
Once the instrument exists, a compounding loop switches on:
- The assessment establishes the baseline — the precondition for any verifiable claim.
- The verifiable claim wins attention in a market full of unmeasurable ones.
- The reassessment documents that you delivered, producing testimonial and case-study evidence.
- That evidence hardens the next sales conversation, making the promise more credible each cycle.
The established methodology businesses all run this loop. EOS puts companies through its Organizational Checkup before implementation and again afterward, and that before-and-after data shows up in every marketing asset it produces. Gallup's StrengthsFinder generates individual scores that anchor its development promises. In each case the diagnostic isn't a lead magnet bolted onto the business — it's the machinery the brand promise runs on.
Follow the chain backward and the conclusion is uncomfortable: no diagnostic means no baseline, no baseline means no measurable promise, no measurable promise means you're shouting the same vague claims as everyone else — which means competing on price, which means losing.
One Promise Is Strong. A Stack Is a Moat.
A single verifiable promise will differentiate you. Several of them, layered across different dimensions of the client experience, become something rivals can't realistically imitate — because matching the words would require matching the operations behind them.
The headline promise answers "will this actually work?" — "Clients raise their maturity score by at least 10 points within 90 days." This is the claim that anchors the value conversation.
The speed promise answers "will they waste my time?" — "Every diagnostic report lands within 5 business days of data collection." A small commitment that signals operational discipline.
The consistency promise answers "can I trust whoever they send?" — the same assessment, the same standards, the same process from a certified practitioner whether the engagement runs in London, Dubai, or Sao Paulo. Essential once you're delivering through a network rather than in person.
The risk-reversal promise answers "what if I regret this?" — if the diagnostic insights don't satisfy a first-time client, the diagnostic fee comes back, no questions asked.
Each layer neutralizes a different objection before it's voiced. And here's the moat logic: a competitor can mimic any one of these lines on their website tomorrow. Honoring all four requires a standardized instrument, disciplined delivery operations, a quality-controlled practitioner network, and the institutional nerve to absorb the occasional payout. Most firms will read the list and quietly decline. Good.
Stop describing yourself and start committing yourself. A claim a skeptic can verify will outsell a paragraph of adjectives every time — and once your promises have teeth, you'll never again have to argue for the premium.