⌂ Index1 · Master Proof2 · SIGNAL Hub3 · Setup4 · Content Library5 · Launch Sched.6 · Analysis7 · Readiness Audit8 · Playbook9 · Contingency
🔒 Proprietary & Confidential — Internal Only — a candid self-audit, not a sales document

Companion to all six other documents

Readiness Audit

What's overlooked, not considered, or not included across the whole package — expanded, with the numbering conflicts between documents actually reconciled, not just noted.

← Back to the Index

Contents

  1. Fix these five first
  2. The structural question — one brand or two?
  3. Legal & liability blind spots
  4. The missing cost side
  5. Retention & member-experience gaps
  6. Tactical gaps in what's already built
  7. Opportunities — what to add, not just fix
  8. Reconciling the monetization numbering
  9. The full punch list, sequenced

01

Fix these five first

Everything else in this audit is real, but these five block or materially de-risk everything downstream of them. Read the rest when you have time; treat these as the ones worth a conversation this week. (This list is about risk and gaps. For genuinely new ideas nobody's proposed yet, skip to Opportunities. For what to actually do if any of these — or anything else — goes wrong, see the Contingency & Pivot Plan.)

1

Decide: one brand or two?

Beam/SIGNAL (friendly, marketing) and SOL (serious, investigative) are structurally different businesses sharing one package. Every downstream content, hiring, and legal decision depends on this being settled first.

Why first: content already being produced (this week's cards, trivia) is being built blind to the answer.
2

Talk to an insurance broker about media liability

"Investigative reporting" is a different risk class than a web-dev blog. General liability doesn't cover defamation or media claims — errors & omissions (media liability) coverage does.

Why first: this is the one item where the cost of being wrong (an uninsured claim) is existential, not just inconvenient.
3

Write a one-page sourcing standard before Act I

What counts as "sourced enough" to publish, who fact-checks, what triggers a correction. SOL's entire value proposition is credibility — the standard needs to exist before the first piece, not after the first complaint.

Why first: retrofitting editorial standards after a mistake is reputationally worse than not having published yet.
4

Model the actual cost side, not just revenue

Every scenario in Strategic Analysis is revenue-only. There's no line item for Joe's production hours, Mike's involvement, tool costs, or the migration cost off a hosted platform.

Why first: "$1,440/mo MRR" isn't a business decision until you know what it cost to get there.
5

Design what happens after someone subscribes

The funnel in every document stops at "they convert." No onboarding, no cancellation flow, no win-back. Retention — which Strategic Analysis itself calls the real lever — has zero described mechanism.

Why first: cheaper to design before Act III than to retrofit once the first cancellations start.

02

The structural question — one brand or two?

SIGNAL/Beam and SOL are bundled into one "Vivere Internal" package, but they're not the same business. Naming the difference plainly:

 SIGNAL / BeamSOL
What it isVivere's own marketing content, to sell more web-dev clientsA paid investigative-journalism subscription — a media company
MonetizationLeads → contracts & retainersRecurring subscriptions (membership)
VoiceWarm, mascot-fronted, "we build the signal, then broadcast it"Serious, sourced, "teach people how to think, not what to think"
Content built so far10 cards, 3 shorts scripts, a mascot with 4 posesZero pillar investigations chosen or written
Risk profileOrdinary marketing/brand riskDefamation, sourcing, correction-policy, media-liability risk

Both docs that touch this already flag it as open (Signal Hub: "Beam final pick — approve the beacon direction or swap the concept"; Master Proof: "does the investigative flagship use the SIGNAL mascot, or its own more serious visual identity?"). What hasn't been said plainly: this isn't a mascot styling question, it's a brand-architecture question.

Three real paths, not one

A reasonable default if this isn't resolved soon: path three. It gets SOL the gravitas it needs without inventing an entirely separate operation, and it keeps the "we built this ourselves" sales story intact for the web-dev business. But this is a brand call, not a technical one — worth deciding on purpose rather than by default.

04

The missing cost side

Strategic Analysis models revenue in real depth — bear/base/bull scenarios, LTV, CAC, a 12-month horizon. There is no corresponding cost model anywhere in the package. Below is the shape one would take — deliberately left as an empty template, since filling it with guessed numbers would be worse than leaving it blank.

Cost categoryWhat belongs hereCurrently modeled?
Production timeHours/week on SOL research & writing, valued at what that time is worth doing client work insteadNot modeled
SIGNAL content timeHours/week on cards, trivia, shorts filming/editingNot modeled
Tools & softwareMembership platform fees, Stripe processing, any paid AI/automation toolingRates mentioned; not totaled
Platform migrationThe eventual hosted→native Cloudflare paywall build, explicitly planned as a future projectNot modeled
Insurance & legalMedia liability coverage, any trademark/legal reviewNot modeled (see Section 3)
Mike's time/compensationWhatever his actual involvement ends up beingNot modeled
Why this matters more than another revenue scenario: "$1,440/mo MRR" (the base case in Strategic Analysis) sounds like a clear win in isolation. Whether it actually is depends entirely on what it cost in hours and dollars to get there — and right now there's no way to answer that question from anything in this package.

05

Retention & member-experience gaps

Every funnel diagram in this package ends at "they convert." Strategic Analysis itself says retention, not acquisition, is where subscription revenue actually compounds — but nothing describes what happens to a member after they subscribe.

Onboarding — undescribed

  • No welcome sequence for a new subscriber
  • No "here's how to get the most out of this" orientation
  • No described first-week experience at all

Churn — undescribed

  • No cancellation flow (also a compliance gap — see Section 3)
  • No exit survey to learn why people leave
  • No win-back sequence for lapsed members

Community — unaddressed

  • No comments, Discord, or member-to-member layer
  • For many 2026 membership products this is the actual retention driver, more than the content itself

Support — unaddressed

  • No plan for who answers billing/login questions
  • Thin at 20 members; real operational load at 200
The cheap fix: none of this needs to be built before Act I. It needs to be designed before Act III (when the paywall opens), so the first real subscriber doesn't hit a gap nobody thought about. A one-page "member lifecycle" sketch — welcome email, 30-day check-in, cancellation flow, win-back email — would close most of this in an afternoon.

06

Tactical gaps in what's already built

Specific to the Content Library and Launch Schedule built this session — smaller than the sections above, but worth a punch list of their own before real posting starts.

07

Opportunities — what to add, not just fix

Everything above is about risk and gaps in what already exists. This section is different: ideas nobody has proposed anywhere in this package yet, additive rather than corrective.

The flagship idea

A "State of [Delta/Montrose County] Small Business Web" investigative report. Pick a real, checkable question — how many local businesses have a website at all, how many load fast, how many are on HTTPS, how many actually rank on Google — go verify it directly, and publish it as a genuine SOL-grade investigation with real local data. This is the one idea that does double duty: it's real journalism (serious, sourced, credible — the exact bar SOL is trying to clear), it's a lead-gen machine (every business named without a site, or with a slow one, is a warm prospect), it's local-press bait (this is precisely the kind of story a county paper picks up and links to), and it's a natural sponsor magnet once it has reach. Nothing else planned does all four at once — and it's a strong candidate to literally be one of the "first 2–3 pillar investigations" that Master Proof and this package's own CLAUDE.md already flag as an open decision, so it doesn't have to be additional scope so much as a concrete answer to a question already on the list.

Five more, ranked by fit

IdeaWhy it worksPriority
Interactive audit toolEverything currently planned is one-way broadcast (shorts, cards, trivia). A free "is your site costing you customers" instant checker (speed, mobile score, HTTPS, basics) converts far better than a card, because the visitor gets a personalized result — and it's a live demo of the exact capability being sold.High
A separate, low-commitment newsletterSOL's membership is a real ask ($10–25/mo). There's nothing for a business owner who's curious but not ready to pay — a free "one web tip a month" list nurtures that middle group instead of losing them between "watched a Short" and "booked a call."High
Video testimonials as a content typeCompletely absent from the plan despite being one of the highest-converting formats for a service business. A 30-second client saying "here's what changed" outperforms a lot of what's currently scoped.High
A referral programThe seasonal arc's Epilogue mentions "referral asks" in passing, but there's no actual structure — what does a referrer get? For a word-of-mouth local business this is usually the cheapest lead source available, and it's barely sketched.Medium
Framework licensing or a paid courseThe Master Framework already exists elsewhere in Vivere Internal. Licensing it, or teaching it as a cohort course, is a genuinely different and more scalable revenue line than one-to-one client work — nobody has proposed it yet.Lower / longer-term
One more, cheap enough to just do: a public build log or changelog — not this internal one, an actual public-facing version. "Build in public" is proven in dev/indie-hacker circles specifically because watching progress creates its own anticipation and trust, and Vivere is already keeping this kind of log internally; making a version of it public costs almost nothing extra.

08

Reconciling the monetization numbering

This one's already fixed, not just flagged — worth explaining what was wrong and what changed, since it's a good example of the kind of drift that happens across a package written over multiple sessions.

Three documents each described SIGNAL's monetization, and they disagreed with each other on what "Rail 2" meant:

DocumentOld schemeIssue
Signal Hub (before this audit)"Two rails" — Rail 1 = leads, Rail 2 = ad/sponsorIts own table below the header already used a 3-tier priority scheme where ad/sponsor was "3," not "2" — the header contradicted its own table
Setup GuideThree rails — Rail 1 = leads, Rail 2 = productized SIGNAL, Rail 3 = ad/sponsorInternally consistent
Launch ScheduleContent→revenue map using "Rail 1 + Rail 2"Already followed Setup Guide's 3-rail scheme, which made it disagree with Signal Hub's header

Fixed as part of this audit: Signal Hub's monetization header now reads "Three rails" and its stat boxes correctly show Rail 1 (leads), Rail 2 (productized SIGNAL — scaling), Rail 3 (ad/sponsor — on reach), matching Setup Guide and Launch Schedule exactly. The canonical version going forward, across every document: Rail 1 = leads, Rail 2 = productized SIGNAL-per-client, Rail 3 = ad/sponsor.

Note this doesn't touch Master Proof's revenue model — that document's "1 Membership MRR / 2 Sponsors / 3 Ads / 4 Client sales" ranking is deliberately a different framework, because SOL's membership business has different revenue mechanics than SIGNAL's lead-generation business. That's intentional, not an inconsistency — see Section 2 for why these are genuinely two different things.

09

The full punch list, sequenced

Everything above, fixes and additions both, in the order it's cheapest to do it.

WhenItemSection
Before any more contentDecide one brand or two (SOL vs. Beam/SIGNAL)§2
Before any more contentWrite the one-page sourcing/correction standard for SOL§3
Before Act I (first investigations)Call an insurance broker about media liability coverage§3
Before Act ITrademark search on SIGNAL / PULSE / SOL§3
As Act I — this can be the pillar investigationScope and report the "State of [County] Small Business Web" investigation§7
Start now, runs in parallelLaunch the free low-commitment web-dev newsletter§7
Before filming the 3 shortsBuild 2–4 more variations per card family; generate Story/OG crops; export the animated loop; sketch a thumbnail template§6
Before scaling any paid distributionBuild the interactive audit tool (site speed/HTTPS/mobile checker)§7
Ongoing, starting with the next clientStart collecting video testimonials as a standing content type§7
Before claiming this "profitable"Build the cost-side model — time, tools, migration, insurance§4
Once there's an initial happy-client baseDesign and launch a referral program§7
Before Act III (paywall opens)Design the member lifecycle — onboarding, cancellation, win-back, support§5
Before Act IIISettle Mike's role, split, and IP assignment on paper§3
Before Rail 3 (sponsors) activatesConfirm FTC disclosure practice for sponsored content§3
OngoingRe-verify sales-tax treatment of the membership once pricing is final§3
Longer-term, post-launchEvaluate framework licensing / a paid course as a scalable revenue line§7