The honesty changelog

What we changed, and why.

This is a running record of the corrections we have made to ourselves — especially the uncomfortable ones. We publish it because nobody fabricates their own mistakes. If we got something wrong, you will read about it here, in our own words.

TransparencyJuly 4, 2026

We now publish our own bottleneck

What changed: The scoreboard now shows the full value chain — completed assessment → contact left → human follow-up → development plan ordered → paid — and automatically flags the single stage with the biggest drop-off as our “current constraint.”

Why it matters: You cannot fix what you will not name. Publishing the constraint (per Goldratt’s Theory of Constraints) forces everyone — us, our partners, our agents — to focus effort on the one place that actually lifts results, instead of the comfortable busywork.

CorrectionJuly 4, 2026

The “1,400+ assessments” number was wrong. It is 86.

What changed: We had described the platform as having “1,400+ assessments completed.” While building the live scoreboard we discovered that 1,434 was the count of individual answered questions, not completed assessments. The real number of completed assessments is 86. Every page that showed the old figure now reads the true count live from the database.

Why it matters: This is the whole point of the platform: measurable, or it did not happen. The moment we built something that only reports verified facts, it caught a number that was not one — and we would rather correct ourselves in public than let an inflated claim stand.

CorrectionJuly 3, 2026

Removed every fabricated dollar figure from the site

What changed: We stripped out all projected revenue, valuations, ROI multipliers, and “up to $X” earnings claims from the investor, partner, and solutions pages. What remains are only real, operator-set transaction prices and verifiable counts.

Why it matters: A number we cannot back is a liability, not an asset. We would rather be honestly early and pre-revenue than impressively fictional.

ImprovementJuly 3, 2026

Softened fear-based assessment language into growth language

What changed: Renamed the lowest readiness tiers from “Critical Risk” and “Low Readiness” to “Early Foundations” and “Building Readiness,” and rewrote the guidance to be truthful and challenging without using fear.

Why it matters: Truth over comfort does not mean cruelty. We tell people exactly where they stand — and we frame it so they can actually move, not freeze.

This log only grows. We never quietly delete an entry — that would defeat the entire point.

This is what accountability looks like.

See the live numbers for yourself, or put your name on the standard we hold ourselves to.