Convoco

Documents

Convoco

Convoco

Relationship command center

⌘K
ConversationsPeopleDeals
HomeTalksPeopleDeals

Something on your mind?

Share Feedback
Menu
DashboardConversationsPeopleDeals
Social
LinkedInMedium

© 2026 Everyone Needs a Copilot. All rights reserved.

Alignment

Digital Transformation Alignment

Context

This document captures the strategic forces and alignment points identified through conversations with Rachel Kim (CMO) and James Wilson (VP Digital) at Aspen Dental.

Executive Summary

Aspen Dental is pursuing a digital-first patient experience transformation while managing rising acquisition costs and franchisee resistance. The core tension is between corporate's digital ambitions and the franchise network's readiness to adopt.

Key Forces

Patient Acquisition Cost Crisis (Intensity: 8/10)

CAC has risen 40% year-over-year from $180 to $252 per patient. Digital channels are becoming more expensive as DSO competition increases. This directly threatens the economics of the 15 new market expansion.

Franchisee Digital Resistance (Intensity: 6/10)

Longer-tenured franchisees resist corporate digital mandates, citing change fatigue and unclear ROI at the practice level. The tele-dentistry pilot showed 23% improvement in conversion, but franchisee adoption of the tool is below 30%.

Alignment Points

1. Rachel and James agree that digital-first is non-negotiable

2. Both see tele-dentistry pilot results as the proof point needed

3. Franchisee communication strategy needs to lead with practice-level ROI data

Recommended Actions

1. Build franchisee ROI calculator for digital tool adoption

2. Expand tele-dentistry pilot with willing franchisees as case studies

3. Create digital marketing playbook that reduces CAC

7

Review Score

Overall quality assessment out of 10

8

Problem Alignment

Strong problem framing with clear evidence

The document connects organizational forces directly to business impact. The resource allocation tension is well-articulated with specific data points from multiple stakeholders.

  • The $5B growth target is referenced consistently but the document could strengthen the link between each force and specific revenue risks.
  • The strategy team sidelining force (9/10 intensity) is the strongest insight and is well-supported by direct quotes from Michael Torres.
  • Consider adding a quantified impact estimate for the strategy gap, similar to the $2B figure used for resource tension.
7

Scope Clarity

Clear scope with one area needing refinement

The document covers seven forces across primary and secondary tiers with clear categorization. The force relationships section adds meaningful structure.

  • The boundary between 'Primary' and 'Secondary' forces could use explicit criteria rather than just intensity scores.
  • The force relationship diagram effectively shows causality chains but does not indicate which relationships are validated vs. inferred.
  • Consider adding a 'What this document does not cover' section to set expectations with the client.
6

Actionability

Recommendations are directionally strong but lack specificity

The four recommended actions are relevant and well-prioritized. However, each recommendation would benefit from a defined first step and success metric.

  • 'Bridge the strategy gap' is the right priority but needs a concrete mechanism. What does collaboration between central strategy and Home Services actually look like?
  • The next steps include scheduling and creating analyses but do not assign ownership or timelines.
  • Consider adding a 'Quick Win' action that Judith could execute within one week to build momentum.
7

Client Readiness

Ready for internal use with minor polish

The document is well-structured for Judith to use internally with leadership. The tone balances analytical rigor with strategic narrative.

  • The executive summary effectively frames the tension without being accusatory toward leadership, which is important given the audience.
  • Consider softening the 'Strategy Team Sidelining' heading for the version Judith shares upward. The candor is appropriate for our working document but may trigger defensiveness in the C-suite.
  • Adding a 'What We Heard' section with attributed quotes (with permission) would strengthen the document's credibility.

Recommended Improvements

Quantify the strategy gap impact

The strategy team sidelining force is rated highest intensity (9/10) but lacks a dollar figure for business impact.

Add an estimate of the cross-divisional data and analysis value that Home Services is missing. Reference the competitive intelligence that Michael Torres brought to the workshop as a proof point.

Add first-step specificity to recommendations

Each recommendation is directionally correct but reads more like a strategy theme than an actionable next step.

For each recommendation, add a 'First Move' that can happen within 7 days. For example, 'Bridge the strategy gap' could start with 'Schedule a 30-minute coffee chat between Judith and Michael's director.'

Create a stakeholder-specific version

The document is written for our working relationship with Judith, but she needs to share it upward.

Create a 'Leadership Brief' variant that softens internal criticism and emphasizes the opportunity framing. The current version is excellent as a working document.

Strongest Passages

Leadership publicly champions Home Services growth but continues to allocate the majority of engineering, product, and marketing resources to the Pro division.
The Home Services division faces a fundamental tension: leadership has identified it as the primary growth engine ($5B target by 2027), but organizational resource allocation, political dynamics, and market conditions create significant headwinds.
Flat market growth causes resource tension. Competitor pressure blocks resource reallocation. Strategy team sidelining enables key person dependency.
This disconnect between stated priority and actual investment creates frustration, slows execution, and undermines confidence in the growth target.
210 words
Saved just nowReview

Source Conversations

Conversations and key moments that inform this document.

Rachel Kim Q4 Review

Dec 15, 2025

Questions

1/3

What is the most urgent problem this alignment document should address?

Answered

How should the tele-dentistry pilot results be positioned in the document?

Pending

Should the document cover all 15 planned new markets or focus on a subset?

Pending

Review Report

7

Overall Score

out of 10

8

Problem Alignment

Strong problem framing with clear evidence

7

Scope Clarity

Clear scope with one area needing refinement

6

Actionability

Recommendations are directionally strong but lack specificity

7

Client Readiness

Ready for internal use with minor polish

3 improvements suggested

Conversation Search

I have access to 3 conversations related to this document. Ask me anything about what was discussed — specific quotes, who said what, timelines mentioned, or commitments made.

What did Judith say about the CEO's position on resource allocation?

In the Discovery Call (Jan 28), Judith mentioned that the CEO requested "more proof points" before committing additional headcount to Home Services. She described it as a disconnect — leadership publicly champions the growth target but won't back it with resources until they see evidence of traction.

In the Strategy Workshop (Feb 3), she elaborated that the CEO's hesitation is partly political — committing resources to Home Services means visibly deprioritizing Pro, which has stronger short-term numbers.

Did anyone mention specific dollar figures?

Yes. The $5B revenue target for Home Services by 2027 came up in all three conversations. David Frank mentioned that 60% of PM capacity is consumed by SRS integration, and Judith referenced $2B+ at risk if targets are missed due to under-investment. No specific budget numbers for the reallocation were discussed — that appears to be what the CEO wants the "proof points" for.