Client Discovery
by @staybased
Guide discovery calls to qualify prospects, uncover real problems, assess fit, and set clear next steps before proposing solutions.
clawhub install client-discoveryπ About This Skill
Client Discovery β Qualify, Diagnose, Close
Run discovery conversations that qualify prospects, diagnose real problems, and position your solution as the obvious next step.
Sources: Consulting Success (2026), Melisa Liberman (36 questions framework), Freelance Cake, HubSpot, Highspot.
All outputs go to workspace/artifacts/.
Use when
Don't use when
Negative examples
Edge cases
The Core Truth
Peter Drucker: "My greatest strength as a consultant is to be ignorant and ask a few questions."
Discovery is not a pitch meeting. You're not there to impress β you're there to diagnose. The moment you start talking about your solution before understanding their problem, you've lost.
The 80/20 Rule (Melisa Liberman)
Why This Matters for Revenue
Freelance Cake's Austin Church: "Insightful questions testify to your competence more than your clever monologues." Asking the right questions often increases project scope β a prospect willing to pay $2,500 for a plan may happily pay $2,500/month for a retainer when you uncover the real problem.The Discovery Framework: 5 Phases
Phase 1: Context (Warm-Up)
Goal: Understand who they are and what's happening now.Questions: 1. "Tell me about your business β what do you do and who do you serve?" 2. "How did you hear about us?" (reveals channel effectiveness) 3. "What prompted you to reach out now?" (reveals urgency trigger) 4. "What does a typical day/week look like for you?" (reveals workflow)
Listen for: Scale, team size, current tools, immediate triggers.
Phase 2: Problem Diagnosis
Goal: Uncover the REAL problem (often not what they initially say).Questions: 5. "What's the biggest challenge you're facing right now?" 6. "How long has this been a problem?" (reveals severity) 7. "What have you tried so far to fix it?" (reveals what didn't work) 8. "What happens if you don't solve this?" (reveals cost of inaction) 9. "Who else is affected by this problem?" (reveals stakeholders) 10. "On a scale of 1-10, how urgent is this?" (forces prioritization)
Listen for: Pain level, failed attempts (so you don't repeat them), who owns the decision.
Key technique (Freelance Cake): Push past symptoms to root causes. "My website doesn't convert" might really be "I have no positioning" or "I'm targeting the wrong audience." Keep asking "why" until you hit bedrock.
Phase 3: Desired Outcome
Goal: Define what success looks like in their words.Questions: 11. "If we solve this perfectly, what does that look like 6 months from now?" 12. "What metrics would tell you this is working?" (quantifies success) 13. "What would change in your daily life if this was fixed?" (emotional anchor) 14. "Have you seen anyone do this well? What impressed you?" (reveals expectations)
Listen for: Specific numbers, emotional language, reference points.
Phase 4: Qualification (Fit Check)
Goal: Determine if you can actually help AND if they can actually pay.Questions: 15. "Do you have a budget range in mind for this?" (direct but necessary) 16. "Who else needs to approve this decision?" (reveals decision chain) 17. "What's your timeline for getting this done?" (reveals urgency vs. browsing) 18. "What would make you confident enough to move forward?" (reveals objections early)
Disqualification signals (walk away):
Phase 5: Bridge to Proposal
Goal: Summarize what you heard, confirm alignment, set next steps.19. "Let me make sure I have this right..." (summarize their problem, desired outcome, and constraints) 20. "Based on what you've shared, here's what I think we should do..." (brief, directional) 21. "What questions do you have for me?" (give them the floor) 22. "What's the best next step from here?" (let them tell you)
Never end a discovery call without: A clear next step with a date. "I'll send a proposal by Friday" or "Let's schedule a follow-up for Tuesday."
Red Flags & Green Flags
π’ Green Flags (good fit)
π΄ Red Flags (proceed with caution or decline)
Upwork-Specific Discovery
When evaluating Upwork jobs, run a mini-discovery on the posting itself:
Read the post and answer: 1. Is the problem clearly defined? (Green flag) 2. Is the budget realistic for the scope? (Check range) 3. How many proposals submitted? (<10 = good opportunity) 4. Is the client verified with payment history? (Green flag) 5. Can I deliver this with existing skills/tools? (Fit check) 6. Is there a follow-up opportunity beyond this project? (Revenue potential)
In your proposal, demonstrate discovery:
Post-Discovery: The Problem Statement
After every discovery call, write a 2-3 sentence problem statement:
[Client name] is a [business type] struggling with [specific problem].
This is costing them [quantified impact: money, time, customers].
They need [solution category] by [timeline] with a budget of [range].
This becomes the foundation of your proposal. If you can't write this clearly, you need another discovery conversation.
Common Mistakes (Consulting Success + Liberman)
1. Talking too much β You're not pitching, you're diagnosing. 2. Treating it like a job interview β You're a peer consultant, not an applicant. 3. Trying to prove yourself β Curiosity builds more trust than credentials. 4. Skipping the budget question β If you don't ask, you'll waste time on proposals they can't afford. 5. Writing proposals for uncommitted prospects β No proposal until you've confirmed budget, timeline, and decision-maker. 6. Not taking notes β Write everything down. Review before writing the proposal. 7. Rushing to solution mode β Sit with the problem longer. The real issue is usually 2-3 layers deeper than what they first say.