$297—Complete guided audit

The full picture.
Every stage.
Nothing left vague.

Every other template asks you to fill in fields. This one guides you through the same thinking process used in a professional journey audit—five stages, guided prompts, worked examples, and a readiness check that tells you honestly whether you're set up to implement what you find.

Guided User Journey Audit Workbook
A complete guided audit of your buyer's journey—find the gaps, fix the right things first.
Parts4
Stages covered5—Awareness through Post-Purchase
Time2–3 hours in one sitting
FormatGuided prompts with examples
DeliveryInstant download
$297
One-time.
No subscription.
Get the workbook →
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Set aside
2–3 hours.
Do it in one sitting.

Read the annotation panels after you write each answer—not before. Reading the example first anchors your answer to someone else's business. Write first. Then check.

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Guided User Journey Audit Workbook
Get a coffee. This one's worth sitting with. Work through all five stages before reading the Audit Summary in Part 3.
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This isn't a template. It's a thinking process.

Most audit tools ask you to fill in fields. This one guides you through the same process a professional would use when auditing a client's journey—with the same questions, in the same order, for the same reason.

Every question has a pre-filled example showing what an honest answer looks like, a warning about the most common mistake people make at that stage, and a note on what your answer usually reveals about the health of your journey.

The panels are designed to be read after you write your answer, not before. Reading the example first anchors your response to someone else's business. The value of this workbook is entirely proportional to how honest you are inside it.

"Discomfort is usually the sound of something true becoming visible."
Some sections will be uncomfortable. Not a design flaw. This is a private document—no one else is grading it. Answer what's actually true right now, not what you're planning to fix. The audit is only as useful as you are honest inside it.

Four parts. Work through them in order.

Complete the five guided stages before reading the Audit Summary. The summary is only useful once you've done the full thinking—not as a shortcut through it.

1
Guided Prompts
Five stages—the actual work

Awareness, Consideration, Decision, Purchase and Post-Purchase—each with writing prompts, a worked example, the most common mistake at that stage, and an interpretation of what your answer usually reveals. This is where the audit happens.

2
Decision Gates
Read carefully—not filler

A short section at the end of each stage that helps you assess your own blind spots before moving on. These are the questions a professional auditor would ask after reviewing your answers. They're designed to surface what you avoided saying.

3
Audit Summary
Complete after all five stages

Five output fields that distill everything you've mapped into the decisions that actually move things forward. Complete this after Part 1—not during. It synthesizes your findings rather than replaces them.

4
Readiness Check
The honest question most people skip

Four questions that tell you honestly whether you're set up to implement what you've found—or whether something needs to change first. The most expensive thing in any business isn't hiring help. It's spending months implementing something incorrectly and then hiring help anyway.

Awareness
How strangers find you and what they do first
Consideration
What they need to believe before they'll go further
Decision
The final doubt sitting between interest and yes
Purchase
What happens in the moment the money moves
Post-Purchase
Where referrals are won or lost—and most businesses go cold

Three panels. Read them in sequence, after you write.

Every question in Part I follows the same structure. Write your answer first. Then read the panels in order.

Panel 1
Example Answer

A realistic response from a real business—not a perfect answer, an honest one. Use it to calibrate your own response, not as a template to copy.

Read this after you've written your answer. Reading it first anchors your response to someone else's business—not yours.

Panel 2
Common Mistake

The thing most people write instead of the real answer. If your answer sounds like the mistake description, go back. It usually means you gave the pitch-ready version instead of the true one.

This panel is the most uncomfortable one. Sit with it.

Panel 3
What This Usually Means

A short interpretation of what patterns show up when founders answer this question. Helps you read your own answer with some outside perspective, without requiring someone else to read it for you.

Read this last. It's the interpretation of what you wrote—not a prompt for what to write.

The right tool at the right stage.

The Audit Workbook is the most comprehensive tool in the range. It's designed for founders who want the full picture—not a score, not a section diagnosis, but a complete mapped view of every stage their buyer moves through.

It works best after you've done some of the diagnostic work—the Leak Finder, the Clarity Checklist, or a cycle of the Implementation Kit. You can come to it cold, but you'll get more from it if you already have a working hypothesis about where your journey is breaking.

Set aside two to three hours, ideally in one sitting. Get a coffee. This isn't a quick exercise—and the value is proportional to the time you give it.

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Guided User Journey Audit Workbook
Five stages. Guided prompts with worked examples and interpretation panels. A full audit summary and a readiness check at the end. The complete picture of your buyer's journey—honestly mapped.
Get the workbook for $297 →

One-time payment. No subscription. Instant download.

Do I need to have used the other products first?
No. You can use the Audit Workbook as your starting point. But you'll get more from it if you have a working hypothesis about where your journey is breaking—the Leak Finder and Clarity Checklist are faster routes to that hypothesis.
Why 2–3 hours? Can I do it in stages?
You can, but one sitting is strongly recommended. The audit builds—your answer to the Consideration stage prompts is informed by what you wrote in Awareness. Breaking it across days risks losing that continuity. Treat it like a thinking session, not a form to fill in over a week.
What's the Readiness Check for?
It asks four questions that tell you whether you're set up to implement what you've found—skills, time, confidence and resource. The most expensive outcome isn't a bad audit. It's a good audit followed by six months of incorrect implementation. The Readiness Check is designed to prevent that.
What do I do after the audit?
The Audit Summary at the end of Part 3 gives you a clear list of what to fix and in what order. From there, the Journey Fix Templates give you the frameworks to fix specific problems, and the Implementation Kit gives you the 30-day system to get them live.
Guided User Journey Audit Workbook
Five stages. The complete picture.
Find the gaps. Fix the right things first.
Get the workbook → $297—one-time payment, instant access