The Monthly Strategy Review (Retainer Pulse Check)

Section 1: Strategic Alignment & Sentiment

This section gauges the "health" of the partnership and ensures the consultant is still solving the right problems.


Overall Satisfaction Score: On a scale of 1–10 (1 = Poor value, 10 = Exceptional value), how would you rate the value provided over the last 30 days?

Priorities Verification: Based on our current roadmap, are the top 3 focus areas still the most critical for your business?

Advisory Role: On a scale of 1–5 (1 = Reactive Executor, 5 = Proactive Partner, do you feel the consulting team is acting as a proactive partner (leading the strategy) vs. a reactive executor (waiting for instructions)?

Section 2: Performance & ROI

This section tethers your work to the client's bottom line or key objectives.


The "Big Win": What do you consider the most significant achievement or milestone reached in the last month?

KPI Tracking Table

Metric

Previous Month

Current Month

Target

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Obstacles & Blockers: Are there any internal bottlenecks (budget, personnel, tech) preventing us from hitting our targets next month?

Section 3: The "Pulse Check" (Qualitative Feedback)

This is where you identify hidden risks or opportunities for expansion.


How would you rate the current Communication Flow?

Too Brief

Just Right

Too Dense

Slack Updates

Email Reports

Scheduled Calls

The "What If" Question: If you could change one thing about our current workflow or strategy, what would it be?

Market Shifts: Have there been any significant shifts in your industry or internal organization this month that we haven't discussed yet?

Section 4: Looking Forward (The Next 30 Days)

This reinforces your long-term value and secures the upcoming month's focus.


Top 3 Objectives: [Consultant to pre-fill, Client to approve/edit]

Resource Needs: Do we need any additional sign-offs or access to data to proceed with next month's initiatives?


Form Template Insights

Please remove this form template insight sections before publishing.

Form Insight: The Monthly Strategy Review Form

1. The Power of "Binary Alignment"

In the section regarding Priorities Verification, the form uses a "Yes/No" toggle before asking for text input.

  • The Insight: This forces the client to make a definitive choice. In long-term consulting, "scope creep" happens when priorities become blurry. By forcing an explicit "Yes" every 30 days, you are essentially getting a monthly re-confirmation of your value proposition. If they click "No," it triggers an immediate pivot, preventing you from wasting weeks on irrelevant tasks.

2. Quantitative vs. Qualitative Balance

The form is designed to capture two different types of data: Hard ROI (KPIs) and Soft Sentiment (Satisfaction scores).

  • The Insight: Data alone is cold. You could be hitting every target, but if the client feels the communication is poor, the relationship is at risk. Conversely, if the client loves you but the numbers are down, the relationship is also at risk.
  • The Strategy: By placing these side-by-side, you can identify "Value Gaps." For example, if the KPI table is green (performing well) but the Satisfaction score is low, you know the issue is with the experience of working with you, not the results.

3. Shifting the Burden of Momentum

The Obstacles & Blockers section is arguably the most critical part of the template.

  • The Insight: In many consulting setups, the consultant is blamed for slow progress. This section of the form flips the script. It highlights that success is a two-way street.
  • The Strategy: When the client identifies an internal bottleneck (like a slow approval process), it empowers you to act as a partner who helps them optimize their internal operations, rather than just a vendor waiting for an email.

4. The "Big Win" Anchor

Asking the client to name the Most Significant Achievement is a deliberate anchoring technique.

  • The Insight: Humans have a "recency bias." If the last 48 hours were stressful, the client might forget the amazing work you did three weeks ago.
  • The Strategy: By making the client type out the win in their own words, they are reinforcing the value of your services to themselves. This section becomes a library of testimonials and proof-of-work that you can use during annual contract renewals.

Mandatory Questions Recommendation

Please remove this mandatory questions recommendation before publishing.

Mandatory questions & core rationale:

1. The Value Rating (Satisfaction Score)

Question: "On a scale of 1–10, how would you rate the value provided over the last 30 days?"

  • Why it’s mandatory: This is your early-warning system. In consulting, clients often "quietly quit" or grow frustrated without voicing it until the contract renewal date.
  • The Logic: A score of 9 or 10 is your green light to ask for referrals or expansion. A 7 or 8 is "dangerously comfortable"—the client sees you as a utility, not a partner. Anything below 7 is an immediate "Code Red" that requires a face-to-face meeting to save the account.

2. Priority Verification

Question: "Are the current top 3 focus areas still the most critical for your business? If no, please specify."

  • Why it’s mandatory: It prevents Strategic Drift. Business goals change rapidly; if you are still working on a goal from 60 days ago that is no longer a priority for the CEO, your work will be perceived as "low value" regardless of how well you execute it.
  • The Logic: This forces the client to "re-sign" the contract's focus every month, ensuring you are always tethered to their current highest-value problem.

3. The "Blocker" Identification

Question: "Are there any internal bottlenecks (budget, personnel, tech) preventing us from hitting our targets?"

  • Why it’s mandatory: This shifts the responsibility of success back to a shared model. If a project fails because the client’s internal IT team didn't provide access, this question documents that the delay was not the consultant's fault.
  • The Logic: It allows you to troubleshoot the client's organization. By identifying these blockers, you move from "worker" to "problem solver," helping them fix their internal inefficiencies.

4. The "What If" (Innovation Question)

Question: "If you could change one thing about our current workflow or strategy, what would it be?"

  • Why it’s mandatory: This is the "Safety Valve." Clients often have small annoyances (e.g., "I wish the reports were shorter" or "I'd prefer a phone call over Slack") that they feel are too petty to bring up in a meeting.
  • The Logic: If these small frictions aren't surfaced, they accumulate into "Retainer Fatigue." Asking this question gives them a formal, safe space to provide constructive criticism that improves the relationship.
Hey there, form-fancying friend! 👋 This template’s cool and all, but it’ll be way cooler once you put your spin on it. Wanna edit? Let’s gooo! Edit this The Monthly Strategy Review Form
Want surveys that adapt on the fly? Zapof uses branching logic to keep questions relevant, so users never see what doesn’t apply. 📊➡️🎯
This form is protected by Google reCAPTCHA. Privacy - Terms.
 
Built using Zapof