Team run

Run it as a team.

One readiness score is an opinion. Five of them, from the people who actually run the work, is a diagnosis. A team run gives every member their own graded report, and gives you the aggregate: dimension averages, the range of answers, and the dimensions where your team disagrees most. That last part is usually the conversation worth having.

The mechanics are deliberately simple. You get two links: a join link for the team and a private link for the aggregate. Members take the normal assessment and confirm their email like everyone else. The aggregate appears once 3 or more members have confirmed, and it only ever shows aggregates. You never see individual answers, and creating a run stores no personal data at all.