Too Many Kinds Of Help.
Too many kinds of help is the moment when the buyer is not under-informed. The buyer is standing in a market that forgot to label the doors.
Definition
Too many kinds of help is the pattern where the buyer sees multiple plausible support options and cannot tell which layer each one actually serves.
The problem is not that the buyer is careless. The market uses overlapping language, inflated titles, flexible scopes, and cheerful websites that all promise clarity. Apparently everyone sells clarity now. Very convenient.
The symptom is simple: the buyer can explain the pain, but not the category of help.
Where it fits
This sits at the symptom layer of Hub 1. It names the confusion before role definitions begin.
It connects to Hub 2 because confusion often turns into role bias. The first confident room the buyer enters starts shaping the diagnosis. It connects to Hub 7 when the real question is not which helper to hire, but which decision has not been named.
When it works
This diagnostic works when the buyer is genuinely between categories. Coaching could help the leader. Consulting could clarify the function. A fractional leader could stabilize execution. AI could accelerate analysis. Each could be useful.
It works when the buyer has enough experience to distrust simplistic answers but not enough structure to sort the market. That is a sophisticated problem, not a beginner problem.
It also works when a team keeps adding options because every option has a defender. The marketing lead wants an agency. The COO wants operating support. The founder wants someone who can think with them privately. Everyone brought a brochure. Adorable. Expensive.
When it does not work
This diagnostic does not apply when the need is already narrow. If the issue is bookkeeping, legal drafting, recruitment, or implementation inside a known function, choose the known role.
It also does not apply when the buyer is using market complexity to avoid commitment. Sometimes the buyer knows the room and simply dislikes the consequence of entering it.
It fails when the buyer treats all outside help as interchangeable capacity. Roles are not plug adapters. They carry different authority, risk, proximity, and accountability.
Common misuse
The first misuse is collecting discovery calls to outsource the sorting work. Discovery calls can help, but each seller is still inside their own business model. The buyer is asking the furniture store whether the house needs a chair.
The second misuse is creating a spreadsheet with every role scored against the same criteria. A coach, agency, and board advisor should not be scored like three laptops.
The third misuse is choosing the option that feels least threatening. Low-friction help can be useful. It can also become a polite way to leave the real decision untouched.
Related roles
Outside Help Market Map gives the full role-and-layer frame.
Business Help Hierarchy shows how help moves from learning to judgment.
Three Advisors, Three Diagnoses explains what happens once different rooms start naming the problem.
Decision test
- Can you name the pain but not the category of help?
- Do several roles sound plausible for different reasons?
- Are you comparing proposals that solve different problems?
- Does the team disagree about the role because it disagrees about the decision?
- Would a neutral role map remove at least half the options?
Next route
Go to Outside Help Market Map for the full taxonomy. If the problem has already produced conflicting proposals, read Three Proposals, Three Different Problems.