The Product Selection Funnel cuts through choice overload. Every investment earns its place on the path from where you are to where you're going.
Most organisations don't lose to a bad product. They lose to the one they shouldn't have bought. The funnel is how you stop making that choice twice.
A strategic framework that narrows thousands of product options down to the few that fit your operational reality and compound toward your long-term direction.
Not a catalogue. A prioritisation.
Because choice without structure is cost. The funnel replaces vendor selection by instinct with selection by intent.
Every filter removes investments that don't compound toward your vision — leaving the shortlist that does.
Four moments in the operating cycle where the funnel earns its weight. If you're in any of these, you're in it.
Before you commit capital, the funnel confirms the chosen build actually maps to where the business is going.
When a portfolio drifts, the funnel identifies which lines still compound and which are burning runway.
New conditions change the shortlist. The funnel recalibrates so your decisions track the market, not the memo.
Planning without the funnel is wish-casting. With the funnel, every budget line has a reason that outlives the cycle.
Five steps. Each one narrower than the last. By the end, the shortlist is obvious — and the reasons are defensible.
Before evaluating options, we map where the organisation actually is — operationally, financially, capacity-wise — against where leadership says it's going. Mismatches surface here, not later.
Every product or vendor lands in one of three tiers: required, differentiating, or optional. Nothing bypasses this step. Nothing is "important" without its tier.
Each candidate is scored on two axes: does it fit the current operation, and does it compound toward the stated direction. Options that score high on one and low on the other get flagged, not purchased.
The shortlist is short on purpose. Three to five candidates that pass every filter. The decision is now between options that all belong — not between options that happened to be pitched.
The funnel isn't a one-time exercise. Quarterly recalibration keeps the shortlist aligned with market, capacity, and direction changes. Yesterday's shortlist is this quarter's review list.
Each benefit exists because the funnel removes something that was costing you — not because it adds something that sounds good in a deck.
Options filtered to your operational specifics — not the vendor's standard menu.
Every decision has a documented reason. No one remembers "why did we buy that?"
Every investment earns its weight against the same filter. No commitments live outside the arc.
The funnel tracks with your direction as it shifts. Tomorrow's shortlist inherits yesterday's reasoning.
The funnel stays tuned as you scale. Recalibration is built in, not a re-engagement.
Strategic alignment works when both sides can read the board. The funnel is how we make that visible.
The decision logic is visible. No black box. Each filter and score is documented so any reviewer can trace the path from options to shortlist.
Assessments come from operational reality — counts, capacity, cycle times — not feelings. The funnel reports what the business actually supports.
The funnel adapts per engagement. The filters that matter for a hundred-seat team aren't the filters for an enterprise — both sets live in the same framework.
No investment enters without earning it. Every committed budget line has a defensible reason — and a review point — so the risk of silent drift is measured, not assumed.
Start with an operational assessment. We map your current state against your intent and build the shortlist from there.
Request the Funnel Assessment