Start with Pain
You may know exactly what services you offer.
But that isn’t what your clients buy.
Businesses don’t grow because they are clear on what they do.
They grow because they are clear on the problems they solve.
If you skip this step — or rush it — everything else becomes harder:
- Your messaging feels vague or generic
- You attract the wrong types of clients
- Selling feels heavy, awkward, or pressured
- You build services people don’t really need
- Referrals dry up because people don’t know how to describe you
This module exists to prevent all of that.
People don’t buy services. They buy relief.
Clients don’t wake up wanting:
- A consultant
- A programme
- A platform
- A framework
They wake up wanting:
- The anxiety to stop
- The confusion to clear
- The pressure to lift
- The situation to move forward
They buy clarity, momentum, confidence, safety, and progress.
They buy emotionally first — and justify logically later.
If you don’t understand the emotional pain behind a buying decision, you cannot:
- Explain your value clearly
- Target the right people consistently
- Sell without pressure (on you or the client)
Common pain symptoms you may already be seeing
If you’re honest, you may recognise some of these — either in your clients, prospects, or even yourself.
Emotional symptoms
- Frustration that nothing quite works properly
- Anxiety about things slipping, breaking, or being exposed
- A constant sense of firefighting
- Loss of confidence or momentum
- Feeling stuck, overwhelmed, or behind
Behavioural symptoms
- Working evenings and weekends “just to keep up”
- Avoiding certain conversations or decisions
- Over-explaining, rambling, or defaulting to jargon
- Jumping between solutions without resolution
- Relying on price or discounts to close deals
Business or organisational symptoms
- Slow progress despite effort
- Projects stalling or failing to land
- Poor handovers or unclear ownership
- Missed opportunities and delayed growth
- Pressure from leadership, boards, or clients
These are not random issues.
They are signals of unresolved pain.
The real impact of unaddressed pain
Pain is rarely isolated to one person.
In most organisations, the same problem is experienced very differently depending on role:
- Doers and users Losing evenings and weekends. Carrying stress home. Feeling blamed for problems they didn’t create.
- Managers Missing targets. Watching teams burn out. Worrying about credibility, promotion, or job security.
- Founders and business owners Losing confidence in the business. Questioning return on time and money invested. Worrying about reputation, future value, or legacy.
The problem may be logical.
The experience of it is deeply personal.
That’s why price alone is never the real reason someone buys — or doesn’t.
£30,000 to solve a £3,000 problem feels wrong.
£30,000 to solve a £3 million problem feels obvious.
Why most people struggle to articulate pain
Most professionals default to:
- Features
- Services
- Capabilities
- Price
Because pain feels:
- Messy
- Emotional
- Harder to pin down
But when you can’t clearly articulate the pain:
- Your message doesn’t land
- Your targeting stays fuzzy
- Your services drift
- Selling feels forced
You end up pushing explanations instead of pulling interest.
Introducing a structured way to capture pain: ASEIF
To make this practical, repeatable, and safe, we use a simple structure called ASEIF.
It gives you a way to understand pain without guessing or projecting.
A — Awake:
What keeps them awake at night?
S — Solutions:
What have they already tried?
E — Effectiveness:
Did those solutions work — fully, partially, or not at all?
I — Impact:
What impact is this having on them personally and professionally?
F — Feelings:
How do they feel about it?
This structure works whether you are:
- Talking to existing clients
- Speaking to prospects
- Reflecting on your own positioning
It helps you move beyond symptoms and into real drivers of decision-making.
Why this matters before anything else
We start with pain before:
- Ideal client profiles
- Messaging and positioning
- Market selection
- Service or product design
Because once pain is clear:
- Messaging becomes simpler
- Referrals become easier
- Sales becomes calmer
- Decisions become cleaner
You stop being known for lots of things — and become known for one meaningful thing.
Pain categories, not job titles
You are not your job title.
You are not your service list.
You are known for the pain you remove.
People don’t remember:
- Technical jargon
- Service names
- Feature lists
They remember:
“They helped us stop feeling stuck.”
“They brought clarity when everything felt messy.”
“They helped us regain control.”
That’s what travels in conversations.
That’s what creates referrals.
Your first assignment: Pain Mapping
This is where the work starts.
Set aside around 45 minutes and complete the Pain Mapping template.
For each role affected by the problem you solve:
- List three frustrations, worries, or fears
- Answer the ASEIF questions from their perspective
- Turn this into simple, human sentences
The goal is not perfection.
The goal is clarity.
By the end, you should be able to complete sentences like:
- I help business owners who feel stuck to build predictable sales.
- I help experts who avoid selling feel confident and in control.
- I help founders explain their value clearly without rambling.
That sentence becomes the foundation for everything that follows.
What happens next
Once pain is clearly mapped:
- We cluster related pains
- We simplify messaging
- We create positioning that makes sense to non-experts
And most importantly – selling stops feeling like persuasion and starts feeling like help.
When you’re ready, move on to the Pain Mapping template and begin.