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Clarity Before AI — Lead Intake
Part One: Lead Intake (Questions 1 to 5)
QUESTION 1
What is your full name?
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QUESTION 2
What is the name of your organization?
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QUESTION 3
Which industry best describes your organization?
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QUESTION 4
What is your email address?
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QUESTION 5
What is your biggest operational concern right now? Describe it in a few sentences.
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Part Two: Pillar Assessment
Pillar One: Operational Visibility (Questions 6, 7, 8)
QUESTION 6
How would you describe your organization's ability to see what is happening across all departments or operational areas in real time?
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How would you describe your organization's ability to see what is happening across all departments or operational areas in real time?
A
We have documented systems and dashboards that give us a real-time view across the whole operation.
B
We can see most of what is happening but it requires pulling from several different places.
C
Visibility depends on who you ask. Each department knows their own area but nobody has the full picture.
D
We find out what happened after the fact. There is no real-time visibility.
QUESTION 7
If a key team member left tomorrow, how much operational knowledge would leave with them?
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If a key team member left tomorrow, how much operational knowledge would leave with them?
A
Very little. Our processes are documented and anyone could step in.
B
Some. We have documentation but there are gaps that only certain people know how to fill.
C
A lot. Most of our process knowledge lives in people's heads, not in writing.
D
Almost everything. We have no documentation and losing that person would be a serious disruption.
QUESTION 8
How clearly are roles and responsibilities defined across your operation?
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How clearly are roles and responsibilities defined across your operation?
A
Every role has a documented job description and accountability structure that is current and followed.
B
Most roles are defined but some responsibilities are informal or overlap without clear ownership.
C
Roles are assigned but rarely documented. People know what they do from habit, not from a written standard
D
Roles are unclear and often duplicated or missed because there is no formal structure.
Pillar Two: Compliance Readiness (Questions 9, 10, 11)
QUESTION 9
If a regulator walked through your door today without warning, how prepared would your organization be
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If a regulator walked through your door today without warning, how prepared would your organization be
A
Fully prepared. Our documentation is current, accessible, and audit-ready at all times.
B
Mostly prepared. We would need a little time to locate and organize some documents.
C
Partially prepared. We have documentation but it is outdated or incomplete in several areas.
D
Not prepared. An unexpected audit would be a serious problem for us right now.
QUESTION 10
How often are your standard operating procedures reviewed and updated?
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How often are your standard operating procedures reviewed and updated?
A
Regularly, on a defined schedule, with a process for tracking changes.
B
Occasionally, usually when something goes wrong or a regulation changes.
C
Rarely. Our SOPs were written a while ago and most have not been touched since.
D
We do not have formal SOPs or they exist but nobody follows them.
QUESTION 11
How does your organization track and respond to regulatory changes that affect your industry?
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How does your organization track and respond to regulatory changes that affect your industry?
A
We have a defined process for monitoring regulatory updates and updating our documentation accordingly.
B
We stay aware through industry news and update our practices when we learn about changes.
C
We usually find out about regulatory changes when something is flagged during a review or audit.
D
We do not have a system for tracking regulatory changes and have been caught off guard before.
Pillar Three: Resource Efficiency (Questions 12, 13, 14)
QUESTION 12
Do you track output and quality against your team's workload to know when they are stretched too thin?
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Do you track output and quality against your team's workload to know when they are stretched too thin?
A
Yes. We have a clear way to measure output quality against workload and act on it before performance suffers.
B
Somewhat. We notice when people are stretched but it is usually after the fact rather than proactive.
C
Rarely. We track deliverables but do not formally connect workload to quality or team capacity.
D
No. We do not currently track output quality against workload in any consistent way.
QUESTION 13
Do you have visibility into which efforts are advancing the business versus draining resources?
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Do you have visibility into which efforts are advancing the business versus draining resources?
A
Yes. We have a clear way to measure which activities produce results and which consume resources without a return.
B
Somewhat. We have a general sense but it is based on observation, not documented data.
C
Not really. We track activity but have no formal way to connect effort to business outcomes.
D
No. We do not currently measure whether our efforts are producing results or draining resources.
QUESTION 14
When your organization faces a resource shortage, staff gap, or budget constraint, how does leadership respond?
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When your organization faces a resource shortage, staff gap, or budget constraint, how does leadership respond?
A
We have documented contingency plans and can respond quickly without major disruption.
B
We manage it case by case but it usually takes longer than it should to stabilize.
C
Resource gaps cause significant disruption and we are often in reactive mode.
D
Resource shortages regularly create crises and we have no formal plan for addressing them.
Pillar Four: Technical Alignment (Questions 15, 16, 17)
QUESTION 15
How well do the technology tools your organization uses work together to produce a single, consistent picture of your operation?
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How well do the technology tools your organization uses work together to produce a single, consistent picture of your operation?
A
Our tools are integrated and produce consistent data across the whole organization.
B
Most tools share data but there are some gaps that require manual reconciliation.
C
Our tools are largely disconnected and pulling a complete picture requires significant manual effort.
D
Our systems do not communicate with each other and we manage most things separately.
QUESTION 16
If asked to list every technology platform and tool your organization currently uses, how confident are you in that list?
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If asked to list every technology platform and tool your organization currently uses, how confident are you in that list?
A
Fully confident. We have a documented technology inventory that is current and complete
B
Fairly confident. We know most of what we use but there may be tools individual team members rely on that are not formally tracked.
C
Somewhat confident. We know the major platforms but shadow tools and workarounds likely exist that leadership is not fully aware of.
D
Not confident. We do not have a complete inventory and tools have been added without a formal review process.
QUESTION 17
How were the technology tools your organization currently uses selected and implemented?
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How were the technology tools your organization currently uses selected and implemented?
A
Tools were selected through a defined evaluation process tied to documented operational needs.
B
Most tools were selected thoughtfully but some were adopted reactively to solve immediate problems.
C
Tools were added over time as needs arose without a formal selection or integration process.
D
Tools were adopted informally and many are used inconsistently or without proper training.
Pillar Five: Financial Resilience (Questions 18, 19, 20)
QUESTION 18
If an investor or regulator asked you to explain your organization's operational costs by department or function today, how prepared would you be?
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If an investor or regulator asked you to explain your organization's operational costs by department or function today, how prepared would you be?
A
Fully prepared. We track costs by operational area and can produce a clear breakdown on demand.
B
Mostly prepared. We have the information but it would take some time to organize and present it clearly.
C
Partially prepared. We track overall costs but breaking them down by function would require significant effort.
D
Not prepared. Our financial records do not connect clearly to operational performance.
QUESTION 19
How does your organization currently identify and address financial risks before they become significant problems?
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How does your organization currently identify and address financial risks before they become significant problems?
A
We have a proactive process for identifying financial exposure and addressing it before it escalates.
B
We review finances regularly but risk identification is mostly reactive rather than proactive.
C
We address financial problems when they surface but do not have a formal early warning system.
D
Financial risks are typically discovered during a crisis or external review, not before.
QUESTION 20
How connected is your financial reporting to your operational performance data?
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How connected is your financial reporting to your operational performance data?
A
Financial and operational data are integrated. We can see how operational decisions affect financial outcomes in real time.
B
There is some connection but it requires manual effort to link operational activity to financial results.
C
Financial reporting and operational reporting are largely separate and rarely reviewed together.
D
We do not currently connect operational performance to financial outcomes in any formal way.
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