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Current State Assesment

A clear starting point for developing your services

Many organizations have multiple services, but lack a clear overall picture. The role of services, target groups and customer value may be unclear. Development easily becomes reactive instead of intentional and focused.

A service current state assessment creates a shared understanding of what services exist today, how they function in practice, where the greatest development potential lies and what is worth focusing on next.

The assessment often serves as a starting point for service design, service productization and continuous development.


When is this especially relevant?

A service current state assessment is particularly valuable when:

  • Your service offering has grown or evolved over time
  • Service descriptions, pricing or target groups are unclear
  • Service-related development work is ongoing but lacks direction
  • Services do not differentiate or sell as expected
  • You want to move from project-based work toward continuous services

The assessment suits both growing organizations and established service providers who want to clarify and strengthen their offering.


What we look at

Services are examined as a whole, not as isolated parts. The assessment may include:

  • The current service portfolio and service packages
  • The purpose of each service and the value it creates
  • Target groups and typical use cases
  • Key touchpoints in the service experience
  • Strengths, pain points and development barriers

We also examine the emotional and experiential dimension of services: what stays with the customer and what they remember.


How this applies across industries

Every organization's services look different, but the need for clarity is universal.

Technology and IT services: Service portfolios often grow organically over time. The assessment helps identify overlaps, clarify service boundaries and align offerings with what customers actually value.

Industrial and manufacturing companies: As services complement physical products, understanding the full service landscape becomes essential for building scalable and differentiated offerings.

Professional services and consulting: When expertise is the service, clarity about what is offered, to whom and why makes the difference between a service that sells and one that needs constant explaining.


Key benefits

Leadership and business

  • A clear overview of the service portfolio
  • A stronger foundation for prioritization and decision-making
  • Clearer direction for service development

Sales and marketing

  • Services that are easier to describe and communicate
  • A clearer understanding of customer value
  • A stronger basis for productization

Development teams and experts

  • A shared understanding of services
  • Less overlapping or fragmented work
  • A clearer path for further development

The assessment helps focus development efforts on what truly matters and avoid unnecessary initiatives.


What does the assessment include

The assessment is modular and adapted to your situation. It may include:

  • A review of the current state
  • Workshops or interviews
  • Structuring the service offering
  • Identifying insights and development opportunities
  • A summary and recommended next steps

The scope is agreed case by case. The goal is a clear and usable overview, not a heavy analysis.


What happens after the assessment

As a result, you receive:

  • A shared view of the current state of your services
  • Identified development potential
  • Clear recommendations for next steps

The assessment often serves as a starting point for service design, service productization or ongoing service development. It does not commit you to further services, but provides a strong foundation for them.


Who is this for

  • Organizations with multiple services
  • Growing companies
  • Expert and service-based businesses
  • Teams actively developing services

No predefined development plan is required.


Why Clorient

Clorient combines hands-on experience, customer- and experience-focused thinking and a future-oriented perspective in service development.

The goal is not only to describe the current state, but to help you see where your services should evolve next.


Interested

Let’s start with a conversation and see what kind of assessment fits your situation best.

Updated on Mar 18, 2026