Survey Question Definitions — Frictionless Technology Physical™
Frictionless Technology Physical™

Survey Question Definitions

Each question below is explained in detail — what it measures, what to include or exclude, and what each answer option means. Reference this page while completing your diagnostic.

How to use this page: Click any question to expand its definition. Select the answer that most closely matches your organization — precision matters more than perfection. If you're unsure, choose the option that best describes your current state, not your aspirational state.
This helps tailor diagnostic recommendations to organizations operating at similar scale. Use your most recent full year of revenue as a guide.
OptionDescription
Under $3MEarly-stage or small businesses with limited staff and relatively simple technology environments.
$3M – $15MGrowing small businesses that typically operate multiple systems but may not yet have formal IT architecture.
$15M – $75MMid-sized companies with multiple departments and a larger software portfolio.
$75M+Larger organizations that often have formal IT governance, infrastructure teams, and enterprise platforms.
The number of people employed by the organization. This value is used to estimate technology density using the Portfolio Density Ratio (PDR).
Include
  • Full-time employees
  • Part-time employees
  • Contractors who regularly use company systems
These platforms typically provide email, calendars, documents, and collaboration tools. Select the one your organization primarily uses.
OptionDescription
Google WorkspaceCloud productivity platform including Gmail, Google Drive, Docs, Sheets, and Meet.
Microsoft 365Cloud productivity platform including Outlook, SharePoint, Teams, Excel, and Word.
BothYour organization actively uses both Google Workspace and Microsoft 365.
NeitherYour organization primarily uses other productivity platforms or on-premise systems.
Estimate the number of software tools used to run the business. When in doubt, count higher — shadow IT and forgotten subscriptions are common.
Include
  • SaaS tools
  • Internal systems
  • Marketing tools
  • Financial tools
  • Collaboration tools
  • AI tools
Exclude
  • Personal productivity tools not used by the company
OptionDescription
1 – 5Very small technology environment with only essential tools.
5 – 10Small but growing stack, usually covering core functions.
10 – 25Typical range for growing small and mid-sized companies.
25+Complex technology environments with multiple systems across departments.
The approximate total cost of all business software subscriptions per month. An estimate is fine — the range matters more than the exact figure.
Include
  • SaaS subscriptions
  • Automation platforms
  • Marketing software
  • CRM licenses
  • Analytics tools
Exclude
  • Employee salaries
  • Hardware purchases
  • Internet service
OptionDescription
Under $500Small technology footprint with only essential tools.
$500 – $2,000Moderate stack typical for early growth companies.
$2,000 – $10,000More sophisticated stack with multiple departments using software.
$10,000+Large technology environment often involving enterprise systems.
This question measures how connected your systems are to each other — how data moves between tools and how much of that movement is automated vs. manual.
OptionDescription
Mostly native integrationsApplications connect directly through built-in integrations provided by the vendors.
Some middleware (Zapier, Make)Some integrations rely on automation platforms to move data between systems.
Heavy integration layerMany integrations rely on automation tools, custom APIs, or integration platforms.
Manual exportsData is frequently moved between systems manually using spreadsheets or downloads.
Automation refers to workflows where systems automatically perform tasks instead of requiring manual actions — for example, automatically sending follow-up emails, creating invoices after purchases, or routing support tickets.
OptionDescription
Minimal automationMost processes require manual steps or staff coordination.
Some automationA few processes are automated, usually marketing or notifications.
Core processes automatedImportant business processes such as sales, marketing, or onboarding include automation.
Extensive automationAutomation is used widely across departments and integrated with multiple systems.
AI refers to tools that use machine learning or generative models to assist with tasks — for example, writing content, summarizing documents, analyzing data, or automating workflows.
OptionDescription
Not usedNo AI tools are used in day-to-day workflows.
Ad hoc toolsIndividual employees use AI tools occasionally, without a coordinated approach.
Embedded in workflowsAI is integrated into existing tools such as CRM or marketing systems.
Formal AI strategyThe organization actively plans and manages AI usage across systems.
This refers to where the organization's infrastructure and applications are hosted. If you're not certain, select "Unsure" — that itself is a useful diagnostic signal.
OptionDescription
AWSAmazon Web Services cloud platform.
AzureMicrosoft Azure cloud platform.
Google CloudGoogle Cloud Platform (GCP).
HybridCombination of cloud infrastructure and on-premise systems.
On-premiseSystems hosted primarily on internal company servers.
UnsureYou are not certain where systems are hosted.
A central data layer consolidates information from multiple systems into one location for reporting or analytics — for example, a data warehouse like Snowflake or BigQuery, or a centralized analytics database.
OptionDescription
Yes (data warehouse)Data from multiple systems is consolidated into a formal warehouse such as Snowflake or BigQuery.
Yes (database)Data is consolidated into a central database but not a formal warehouse.
NoData remains distributed across individual systems.
UnsureYou are not certain how data is consolidated.
Security tools help protect company systems and data — for example, identity protection, threat monitoring, and compliance management.
OptionDescription
Unified platformSecurity tools are managed through one integrated platform.
Layered toolsMultiple specialized security tools are used together.
Minimal toolsOnly basic security protections are in place.
UnsureSecurity architecture is managed by another team.
Application rationalization is the process of reviewing software systems to eliminate redundancy and reduce complexity. A formal process means this happens on a defined schedule with documented criteria — not just when something breaks.
OptionDescription
YesThe organization regularly reviews and evaluates its technology portfolio.
NoSoftware systems are adopted without a formal review process.
UnsureYou are not certain whether a formal review process exists.
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