Fletcher Method

HOW TO BUILD YOUR
PRODUCT ROADMAP

The 3×3 system that turns your promise into a product
only YOU can deliver
The Fletcher Method™

What Is the Product Roadmap™?

Your Product Roadmap is the system that delivers on your Million Dollar Message promise. It's a 3-stage, 9-step framework that takes your client from where they are now to the outcome you promised — in a way that only YOU can deliver.

This is Step 2 of the Offer Engine. Your MDM defined WHAT you help people achieve. Your Roadmap defines HOW you get them there.

Why the Roadmap Matters

Most coaches and experts sound exactly like everyone else. "I help entrepreneurs grow their business." "I help people get healthy." "I help professionals advance their careers." Generic promises that disappear in a sea of competitors.

Your Product Roadmap changes that. It creates a unique mechanism — a proprietary system that only you can deliver. When someone sees your 9-step system with catchy names and clear outcomes, they're not comparing you to other coaches anymore. They're evaluating YOUR system against doing nothing.

✓ The Shift: Without a roadmap, you're "a coach who helps with X." With a roadmap, you're "the creator of The [Your System Name]™" — a fundamentally different position in the market.

Why Crowded Markets Are Actually Good

Here's something counterintuitive: you WANT to be in a crowded market.

A crowded market means:

The problem isn't competition. The problem is blending in with the competition. Your roadmap is the differentiator. It's what makes you the obvious choice instead of one of many options.

100%
of your marketing content will come from your roadmap

The Confidence Multiplier

Here's a benefit nobody talks about: knowing your system cold skyrockets your coaching confidence.

Without a roadmap, every coaching call feels improvised. You're winging it. You're not sure what to cover next. You second-guess yourself.

With a roadmap:

Clients sense this confidence. They trust you more. They get better results. They refer more people. The roadmap isn't just a marketing asset — it's the foundation of your entire business.

Where the Roadmap Fits

Step Tool What It Creates
1 Million Dollar Message WHO you help + WHAT outcome + HOW FAST
2 Product Roadmap (You Are Here) HOW you deliver the outcome — your unique system
3 Model Builder Pricing, path, and revenue projections

What You'll Have at the End

When you complete your Product Roadmap, you'll have:

In This Guide

  1. What Is the Product Roadmap?
  2. The 3×3 Structure
  3. Business Archetype Classification
  4. The Eight Characteristics of a Perfect Offer
  5. Stage Naming
  6. Step Naming
  7. Step Outcomes by Archetype
  8. Product Naming
  9. The Hot Step (Lead Magnet Selection)
  10. Complete Roadmap Examples
  11. The Roadmap Scoring Rubric
  12. Common Mistakes & Fixes
  13. What To Do Next

The 3×3 Structure

Every Product Roadmap follows the same structure: 3 stages, 9 steps — three steps per stage. This isn't arbitrary. It's the "rule of threes" — proven to be memorable, teachable, and easy to sell.

The 3×3 Structure

STAGE 1
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
STAGE 2
Step 4
Step 5
Step 6
STAGE 3
Step 7
Step 8
Step 9

Each Step Is a "Mini MDM"

Here's the key concept: every step has its own outcome statement — a "mini MDM" that delivers a specific, quick win.

Think of it like Marketing Inception:

This fractal structure means every piece of your system can become content. A single step can become a blog post, a lead magnet, a workshop, an email sequence. Your roadmap is the source of 100% of your marketing.

Timeline Alignment

Your roadmap must deliver your MDM promise within your MDM timeline.

If your MDM says "in 90 days," your 9 steps need to add up to 90 days (or less). Each step should be a quick win — minutes, hours, or days — not weeks.

⚠️ Check: Add up the realistic time for all 9 steps. Does it fit within your MDM timeline? If not, either tighten the steps or reconsider your MDM timeline.

Stage Progression

Stages should follow a logical progression — taking clients from where they are to where they want to be.

Common progressions:

The exact progression depends on your business type and archetype (covered in the next chapter).

Business Archetype Classification

Before building your roadmap, you need to know what TYPE of business you have. This determines how your step outcomes are structured and what language you'll use.

There are three archetypes:

Archetype What You Do Examples
Product Creator You teach/build — client implements Coaches, consultants, course creators, membership owners
Journey Professional You guide through a transition — you do with/for them Attorneys, medical practitioners, financial advisors, CPAs
Hybrid You do both — teach AND guide through transition Career coaches, test prep, health coaches for specific conditions

How to Identify Your Archetype

Ask yourself: Is my client packaging expertise into something they implement — or am I guiding them through a high-stakes transition?

Product Creator Signals

Journey Professional Signals

Hybrid Signals

Why Archetype Matters

Your archetype determines:

⚠️ Common Mistake: Forcing Product Creator rules on a Journey Professional. A divorce attorney doesn't produce "assets in a folder" for each step — they reach milestones and protect positions. Forcing the wrong framework produces fake deliverables that don't match reality.

The Eight Characteristics of a Perfect Offer

Apply these characteristics to your overall roadmap AND to each individual step. They're the quality filter that separates offers that convert from offers that flop.

# Characteristic What It Means
1 SINGULAR One measurable outcome, one currency — not a buffet of benefits
2 SEQUENTIAL Clear path from friction to outcome — each step leads to the next
3 ESSENTIAL Solves an evergreen problem they're actively seeking to fix
4 PRODUCTIZED Visual, tangible, feels real — not vague promises
5 CENTRALIZED Becomes the heart of all your content and marketing
6 FORMULATED Has a unique mechanism only YOU have — your proprietary system
7 COMPETITIVE Exists in an active market with competitors (validation, not threat)
8 POPULAR Large hungry audience — not an obscure niche of 12 people

Applying the Eight to Each Step

Each of your 9 steps should also pass these filters:

✓ The Test: If you can't clearly articulate what someone HAS or what's TRUE at the end of a step, the step isn't productized enough. Go back and sharpen it.

Stage Naming

Your three stages need names that are memorable, consistent, and hint at the progression.

The Taxonomy Rule

Stage names must follow a consistent pattern: all verbs OR all nouns. Mixing them feels disjointed.

❌ Inconsistent (Mixed)

Stage 1: Foundation

Stage 2: Build

Stage 3: Success

Noun, verb, noun — feels off.

✅ Consistent (All Nouns)

Stage 1: Foundation

Stage 2: Framework

Stage 3: Fuel

All nouns — clean and memorable.

Alliteration (Optional But Powerful)

Stages that start with the same letter are more memorable. Not required, but effective.

✅ Alliterative Stage Names

Nouns: Message, Machine, Momentum

Nouns: Foundation, Funnel, Fuel

Verbs: Design, Develop, Deploy

Verbs: Map, Build, Launch

Stage Progression by Archetype

Archetype Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3
Product Creator Foundation / Learn / Understand Build / Create / Implement Launch / Scale / Optimize
Journey Professional Assess / Discover / Clarify Execute / Act / Navigate Complete / Protect / Resolve
Hybrid Assess + Foundation Build + Navigate Deliver + Complete
✅ Journey Professional Example

Divorce Attorney: Assessment → Action → Assurance

Medical Practitioner: Discovery → Treatment → Recovery

Financial Advisor: Analysis → Protection → Growth

Step Naming

Boring step names don't sell. "Define your avatar" sounds like homework. "The Bullseye Customer" sounds like something you want.

Step Naming Rules

Good step names are:

The Transformation

❌ Generic (Boring)

"Define your customer"

"Create your outline"

"Build your funnel"

"Map your content"

"Launch your ads"

✅ Catchy (Sells)

"The Bullseye Avatar"

"The Digital Brain Dump"

"The Money Machine"

"The Content Crusher"

"The Go Live Checklist"

Journey Professional Step Names

The same rules apply, but the language shifts to match the professional context:

❌ Generic

"Initial case assessment"

"Financial discovery"

"Custody strategy"

"Settlement negotiation"

✅ Catchy

"The Full Picture Review"

"The Asset Audit"

"The Protection Plan"

"The Resolution Round"

Naming Formats That Work

💡 Test: Would someone click on this step name if it were a lead magnet title? If not, make it more intriguing.

Step Outcomes by Archetype

Every step needs an outcome statement — the specific win clients get at the end of that step. But what counts as a valid outcome depends on your archetype.

Product Creator Outcomes

The question to ask: "What does the client HAVE in a folder at the end of this step?"

Product Creator outcomes are assets built:

✅ Product Creator Outcome Examples

"Walk away with your complete one-page sales script."

"Have your 30-day content calendar mapped and ready."

"Leave with your pricing framework locked in."

"Your webinar outline — done in 15 minutes."

Journey Professional Outcomes

The question to ask: "What is TRUE about their situation that wasn't true before?"

Journey Professional outcomes are milestones reached, decisions made, or positions established:

✅ Journey Professional Outcome Examples

"Know exactly where you stand — legally, financially, and personally."

"Your complete financial discovery is documented and filed."

"We file the initial petition — your case is officially in motion."

"Walk away with a written case assessment covering your legal position, financial exposure, and custody outlook."

"We" Language Permission

For Journey Professionals, "we" language is correct and expected.

When an attorney says "We file the initial petition," that's accurate — they ARE doing it with the client. This is not a red flag. It's appropriate for the archetype.

Archetype Expected Language
Product Creator "You" language — client learns and implements. Flag "we" as doing it FOR them.
Journey Professional "We" language is correct — professional IS doing it with/for client. Do NOT flag.
Hybrid Both valid — depends on who does the work at that step.

Hybrid Outcomes

For Hybrid businesses, the outcome type shifts as the roadmap progresses:

Steps Expected Outcome Type
Steps 1-3 (Early) Milestones + assessment outcomes
Steps 4-6 (Middle) Actions + deliverable outcomes
Steps 7-9 (Late) Systems + tangible deliverable outcomes

Outcome Scoring

Score Outcome Type Example
5/5 ✅ Deliverable / Milestone "Your complete financial discovery is documented and filed."
4/5 ✅ Decision / Specific Awareness "Know exactly where you stand legally, financially, and personally."
3/5 ⚠️ Vague Awareness "Understand your options." — Push to make specific
2/5 ❌ Feeling "Feel confident about your case." — BLOCK
⚠️ Feelings Are Never Valid Outcomes: "Feel confident," "feel empowered," "feel protected" — these are blocked regardless of archetype. Outcomes must be specific enough that you could PROVE they happened.

Product Naming

Your roadmap needs a name — a branded product title that makes your system memorable and positions your unique mechanism in the market.

Avoid Commoditized Terms

For sophisticated audiences, words like "webinar," "funnel," "course," and "program" feel generic. They've seen a hundred of those. Focus on the OUTCOME instead.

❌ Commoditized

"Webinar Launch System"

"Client Funnel"

"Course Creator Academy"

"Divorce Support Program"

✅ Outcome-Focused

"The 90-Minute Sales Machine"

"The Client Engine"

"The Digital Product Factory"

"The Strategic Divorce Method"

Format Options

Pick a format that fits your style and industry:

The Subtitle

Your subtitle is your MDM converted to marketing copy.

Don't use: "I help [avatar]..." — that's for defining the offer, not marketing it.

Do use: "How [avatar] [outcome] — without [obstacles]"

✅ Product Name + Subtitle Examples

Product Creator:

The 90-Minute Sales Machine
How creators and coaches launch a high-converting webinar in 90 minutes — without blank screens or PowerPoint.

Journey Professional:

The Strategic Divorce Method
How divorcing professionals protect 70%+ of their assets in under 12 months — without scorched-earth litigation or six-figure legal fees.

The Hot Step (Lead Magnet Selection)

You don't need to build the whole roadmap to start getting customers. Pick ONE step, turn it into a lead magnet, and attract cold traffic — then drive them to your core product.

This is your "Hot Step."

The O.P.T.I.N. Criteria

Your Hot Step must pass all five criteria:

Letter Criteria Check
O One hot currency from Product Roadmap Does this step solve one specific problem?
P Paired with Authority Amplifier Video Could you teach this in a short video?
T Time friendly — 10 minutes or less to consume Can someone get value in 10 min?
I Incomplete — One clear step (creates desire for full roadmap) Does it leave them wanting more?
N Next step — Clear and specific CTA Is the next step obvious?

What Makes a Good Hot Step

What to Avoid

Where Hot Steps Usually Come From

Best Hot Steps often come from Stage 1 or early Stage 2 — foundational tools that create the "aha" moment and make clients want the rest.

ℹ️ Note: This tool RECOMMENDS a Hot Step. The actual lead magnet content is built separately. Don't try to build both at once — it makes sessions too long and unfocused.

Complete Roadmap Examples

Here are full examples showing complete roadmaps across different archetypes.

Example 1: Product Creator (Business Coach)

MDM

"I help B2B coaches hit consistent $20K months in 90 days — without cold DMs or free sales calls."

Product Name: The Client Engine™
How B2B coaches hit consistent $20K months in 90 days — without cold DMs or free sales calls.

Stage 1: Message

This is where your audience decides "this is for me" or scrolls past. Nail the message, and everything else gets easier.

Step Name Outcome
1 The Money Topic "Pick a topic people will pay for — in 15 minutes."
2 The Stand-Out Statement "Craft a message that separates you from everyone else."
3 The Conversion Blueprint "Outline a webinar that sells, not just teaches."

Stage 2: Machine

This is where you build the system that sells for you while you sleep.

Step Name Outcome
4 The Traffic Trigger "Launch your first ad set getting leads under $15."
5 The Enrollment Script "Your complete sales call script — ready to close."
6 The Follow-Up Sequence "7 emails that convert leads who didn't buy the first time."

Stage 3: Momentum

This is where you scale what's working and build recurring revenue.

Step Name Outcome
7 The Ascension Ladder "Map your offer suite from free to high-ticket."
8 The Referral Engine "Turn every client into 2 more with a simple ask."
9 The $20K Month "Lock in your first consistent $20K month."

Hot Step Recommendation: Step 2 — The Stand-Out Statement. Creates curiosity, delivers a quick win, makes them want the full system.

Example 2: Journey Professional (Divorce Attorney)

MDM

"I help high-net-worth professionals get through divorce with 70%+ of their assets intact — in under 12 months, without a scorched-earth court battle."

Product Name: The Strategic Divorce Method™
How divorcing professionals protect 70%+ of their assets in under 12 months — without scorched-earth litigation or six-figure legal fees.

Stage 1: Assessment

This is where your client stops guessing and starts knowing. They walk in scared. They walk out with facts.

Step Name Outcome
1 The Full Picture Review "Know exactly where you stand — legally, financially, and personally."
2 The Asset Audit "We document every asset, liability, and financial thread before anyone else touches it."
3 The Custody Blueprint "Map out what the law actually means for your custody situation — no guesswork."

Stage 2: Action

This is where we execute the strategy and protect what matters most.

Step Name Outcome
4 The Protection Filing "We file the initial petition — your case is officially in motion with a protective strategy."
5 The Discovery Shield "Your complete financial discovery is documented and filed — nothing hidden, nothing missed."
6 The Negotiation Round "First settlement offer delivered with your bottom lines protected."

Stage 3: Assurance

This is where we lock in the final terms and secure your future.

Step Name Outcome
7 The Final Agreement "Settlement terms finalized with 70%+ of assets protected."
8 The Court Close "Divorce decree signed — you're officially done."
9 The New Chapter "Post-divorce checklist complete — accounts, documents, and life sorted."

Hot Step Recommendation: Step 1 — The Full Picture Review. Creates immediate value, builds trust, makes them want to retain you.

The Roadmap Scoring Rubric

Your Product Roadmap is scored on 5 elements, 5 points each, for a total of 25.

Element 5/5 3/5 1/5
3×3 Structure 3 stages, 9 steps, clear progression Structure exists but progression unclear Missing stages or steps, no structure
Stage Names Consistent taxonomy, memorable, progression clear Names exist but mixed taxonomy or generic No names or completely generic
Step Names 2-4 words, catchy, brandable, curiosity-creating Names exist but generic or boring No names or homework-style labels
Step Outcomes All 9 specific, archetype-appropriate (deliverables/milestones) Outcomes exist but vague or mixed feelings Missing outcomes or all feelings
Promise/Delivery Roadmap delivers MDM promise within MDM timeline Mostly aligned, minor gaps Roadmap doesn't deliver on MDM

Score Thresholds

Score Status Action
20-25 🟢 Green Light Proceed to Model Builder
18-19 ✅ Quick Fix Minor polish, then proceed
Below 18 ⚠️ Needs Work Refine before building downstream

Common Mistakes & Fixes

Pattern 1: Feeling Outcomes Instead of Deliverables

⚠️ The Mistake: "Feel confident about your next step" / "Feel empowered to take action" / "Feel protected"

Why it fails: Feelings can't be proven, measured, or sold. Clients don't buy feelings — they buy results.

The fix: Ask "What would they HAVE or what would be TRUE that makes them feel that way?" Write that instead.

❌ Before

"Feel confident about your pricing"

✅ After

"Your pricing framework locked in — know exactly what to charge."

Pattern 2: Boring Step Names

⚠️ The Mistake: "Define Your Avatar" / "Create Your Outline" / "Build Your Offer"

Why it fails: Generic names don't create curiosity or desire. They sound like homework, not something valuable.

The fix: Make the name hint at the outcome and create curiosity. Would someone click on this as a lead magnet?

❌ Before

"Define Your Avatar"

✅ After

"The Bullseye Customer"

Pattern 3: Inconsistent Stage Taxonomy

⚠️ The Mistake: Stage 1: Foundation / Stage 2: Build / Stage 3: Success (mixing nouns and verbs)

Why it fails: Inconsistent taxonomy feels disjointed and less professional.

The fix: Pick ALL nouns or ALL verbs. "Foundation, Framework, Fuel" or "Design, Develop, Deploy."

Pattern 4: Timeline Mismatch with MDM

⚠️ The Mistake: MDM says "90 days" but the 9 steps would realistically take 6+ months.

Why it fails: You're making a promise you can't keep. Either the roadmap fails the client, or your MDM is lying.

The fix: Add up realistic time for all 9 steps. If it exceeds your MDM timeline, either tighten the steps or revise your MDM timeline.

Pattern 5: Forcing Product Creator Rules on Journey Professional

⚠️ The Mistake: Asking a divorce attorney "What asset does the client have in a folder?" for every step.

Why it fails: Journey professionals reach milestones and protect positions — they don't always produce documents. Forcing the wrong framework produces fake deliverables.

The fix: Classify archetype FIRST. Use appropriate outcome types: milestones, decisions, and positions for journey professionals.

Pattern 6: Using "We" Language for Product Creator

⚠️ The Mistake: A course creator saying "We build your funnel together" when the client is actually implementing it themselves.

Why it fails: Misrepresents the delivery model. Either you're doing it FOR them (done-for-you) or they're implementing (course/coaching).

The fix: Product Creators use "you" language. "We" is only correct for Journey Professionals who are actually doing it with/for the client.

What To Do Next

You've got your Product Roadmap. This is the backbone of your entire business — every piece of content, every sales page, every workshop will reference this roadmap.

Your Immediate Next Step

Test it: Explain your roadmap to someone.

Walk through your 3 stages and 9 steps with a friend, colleague, or potential client. Watch their reaction:

Your roadmap should be simple enough to explain in 2 minutes and compelling enough to make someone want to learn more.

What Comes Next: Model Builder™

The next step is the Model Builder™ — where you choose your pricing, business model, and revenue path.

What It Covers What You'll Decide
Pricing What to charge for your offer
Path Community QuickStart™ or Zero Selling System™
Projections Revenue model based on your pricing and conversion rates

How the Roadmap Feeds Everything Downstream

Your roadmap becomes the source of 100% of your marketing:

The Complete Offer Engine Sequence

1

Million Dollar Message ✓

WHO you help + WHAT outcome + HOW FAST

2

Product Roadmap (You Are Here) ✓

HOW you deliver — your unique 3×3 system

3

Model Builder (Next)

Pricing, path, and revenue projections

Once your Offer Engine is complete, you move to the Content Engine — where you'll build your SCRIPT™, Enrollment Amplifier™, and other sales assets that convert prospects into customers.

One Final Reminder

Your roadmap isn't just a marketing asset. It's your confidence engine. When you know your system cold, you show up differently. You speak with authority. You handle objections with clarity. You deliver results consistently.

That's the real power of the Product Roadmap.

Now go build something only you can deliver.

Ready to Build Your Product Roadmap?

Use the Product Roadmap Builder tool in Customer Engine Academy™ to build yours with AI-guided coaching.

Join Customer Engine Academy™