## One-Line Verdict

Anonymous daily check-ins for 12-step sponsors should be tested as a narrow first-win workflow for AA or NA sponsor supporting several sponsees. This is not a green light to build the full product. It is a structured prompt to test the buyer, the workflow, and the willingness to pay before committing engineering time.

## Problem

Sponsors track daily check-ins, sobriety dates, and step progress for multiple sponsees through texts and calls, with no private place to see who has gone quiet, while anonymity tradition forbids exposing identities. The painful part is not merely information overload; it is the repeated translation from raw activity into an artifact someone can trust and act on. The first product should therefore focus on the artifact, not on becoming a broad research platform.

The initial hypothesis is that AA or NA sponsor supporting several sponsees already has enough recurring friction to justify a narrow tool if it saves time, reduces risk, or improves communication in a visible way.

## Who Pays

AA or NA sponsor supporting several sponsees is the target buyer. The strongest early customer is the person who owns the consequence when this workflow is late, unclear, or inconsistent. They might pay when the product turns a recurring manual task into a dependable output with source links and a review path.

## Evidence Signals

- Twelve-step sponsorship relies on regular sponsor-sponsee contact and step work between meetings.
- Anonymity is a core tradition, so sponsors avoid tools that expose real names or phone numbers.

These signals are directional, not proof. The report should move to build only after live buyer conversations confirm that the workflow repeats and that the buyer can describe a concrete cost.



## Scorecard

- **Opportunity: 5/10 (Promising)** - Anonymous daily check-ins for 12-step sponsors has an editorial confidence score of 50/100 before live buyer validation.
- **Problem: 4/10 (Needs proof)** - Sponsors track daily check-ins, sobriety dates, and step progress for multiple sponsees through texts and calls, with no private place to see who has gone quiet, while anonymity tradition forbids exposing identities.
- **Feasibility: 6/10 (Promising)** - A moderate build can work if the MVP stays limited to the first repeated workflow.
- **Why now: 9/10 (Exceptional)** - Recovery support is shifting onto phones, yet mainstream messaging and habit apps leak real names and contacts, conflicting with the bedrock anonymity tradition of twelve-step programs.

## Validation Score

**55/100 - Research.** Research is the current validation verdict: competitive saturation is the strongest signal, while demand signal is the main evidence gap to close before scaling the build.

Rubric version: INAV-VALIDATION-2026-06-04

- **Demand signal: 4.8/10, weight 24%.** Demand looks weak because the report has 2 source-backed signal(s), an editorial confidence of 50/100, and a defined buyer in Addiction recovery support tools.
- **Problem severity: 5.3/10, weight 22%.** Problem severity is thin when the buyer pain, customer value, and dream-outcome scores are combined.
- **Willingness to pay: 5.5/10, weight 20%.** Willingness to pay is weak; the model has a monetization hypothesis, but it must still be proven through paid pilots or explicit pricing objections.
- **Competitive saturation: 6.3/10, weight 18%.** No source-backed direct match is recorded yet, so saturation risk is treated as unknown rather than proof of novelty.
- **Feasibility: 6.2/10, weight 16%.** Feasibility is thin for a moderate build if the MVP is limited to the first measurable workflow.

Next validation step: Recruit eight active sponsors, run pseudonymous code-based daily check-ins with their sponsees for two weeks, and measure retention plus whether anonymity expectations held.

## Business Fit

- **Revenue potential:** $250K-$2M ARR potential if the wedge proves budget urgency and becomes a recurring workflow.
- **Execution difficulty:** Execution is moderate; the main constraint is staying narrow enough for a first proof loop.
- **Go-to-market:** Start with manual concierge output, direct outreach, and community proof before paid acquisition.
- **Founder fit:** Best for an AI-assisted solo founder who can interview the buyer and ship a focused first version quickly.

## Offer Ladder

- **Lead magnet:** Anonymous Daily Check-ins For 12-step Sponsors checklist (Free) - Helps AA or NA sponsor supporting several sponsees audit the painful workflow before buying software. Goal: Capture qualified leads and learn the buyer's exact language.
- **Frontend offer:** Concierge review or paid template ($19-$99) - Delivers the first useful output manually before automation is trusted. Goal: Validate urgency, workflow fit, and willingness to pay.
- **Core offer:** Anonymous daily check-ins for 12-step sponsors focused SaaS ($49-$499/month) - Turns the recurring manual workflow into a repeatable product loop. Goal: Create the recurring revenue product after the narrow wedge survives tests.
- **Continuity:** Monitoring, benchmarks, and monthly reporting ($99-$1,000/year add-on) - Keeps the buyer engaged with ongoing proof, saved time, or reduced risk. Goal: Increase retention and make the product part of a routine.
- **Backend offer:** Done-with-you setup, agency, or team rollout (Custom) - Adds implementation help, integrations, and workflow migration. Goal: Capture higher-value accounts once the productized wedge is proven.

## Economics

Derived from this report's "Core offer" offer-ladder stage ($49-$499/month). These are price-anchored scenarios, not market-size claims.

- **Proof (10 customers):** $490-$4,990 MRR. Ten paying customers proves willingness to pay and funds continued validation.
- **Wedge (50 customers):** $2,450-$24,950 MRR. Fifty customers in one niche makes the workflow the default in that circle and feeds referrals.
- **Vertical leader (250 customers):** $12,250-$124,750 MRR. A few hundred accounts in one vertical is a real business before any horizontal expansion.

- **Break-even:** At $49-$499/month, 1 customers cover the stated Local-first MVP budget: $0-$10K before paid acquisition. budget within a month; fewer if they land at the top of the range.
- **Sizing:** Size the buyer universe in one day: count aa or na sponsor supporting several sponsees reachable through the report's channels (directories, associations, communities) until the list stops growing — the test only needs the first 100 names, not a TAM estimate.
- **Benchmark:** No public look-alike products were recorded in this report, so price against the manual workaround's time cost, not against software.

## Why Now

- **Demand visibility: 4/10** - Twelve-step sponsorship relies on regular sponsor-sponsee contact and step work between meetings. Build only if the complaint repeats across interviews, posts, or existing workflow artifacts.
- **Tooling readiness: 6/10** - AI-assisted product work and managed infrastructure reduce the first-version cost. The first release should automate one high-friction step rather than become a broad platform.
- **Budget clarity: 4/10** - Low monthly subscription paid by the sponsor for multiple sponsee threads. Ask for money during validation before building the full workflow.
- **Competitive window: 7/10** - The wedge is specific enough to test without claiming the whole market. Position around one buyer and one measurable first-win outcome.

## Proof Signals

- **Pain: 4/10 - Repeated workflow friction.** Twelve-step sponsorship relies on regular sponsor-sponsee contact and step work between meetings.
- **Money: 4/10 - Budget hypothesis.** AA or NA sponsor supporting several sponsees is the first group to test because the monetization path is: Low monthly subscription paid by the sponsor for multiple sponsee threads.
- **Urgency: 5/10 - Switching pressure.** Urgency becomes real only if the current workaround costs time, risk, money, or reputation every week.
- **Distribution: 8/10 - Reachable buyer language.** The first channel should be whichever source lane already contains the buyer's vocabulary.

## Existing Product Check

- No source-backed product match was recorded. Treat this as unknown, not proof of novelty.

## Market Gaps

### Underserved Segments

- AA or NA sponsor supporting several sponsees who still run the workflow in spreadsheets, generic docs, email, or chat threads.
- Small teams in Addiction recovery support tools that feel the pain weekly but are too narrow for broad incumbents.
- New adopters who need guided proof before committing to a larger platform.

### Feature Gaps

- A narrow workflow that reaches value without configuration-heavy onboarding.
- A buyer-facing proof artifact that shows time saved, risk reduced, or communication improved.
- A handoff path from manual concierge service to repeatable software.

### Differentiation Levers

- Use specificity as the wedge: one buyer, one workflow, one measurable result.
- Show proof earlier than broad competitors with before-and-after examples and small pilot data.
- Keep implementation lighter than incumbent suites or generic AI assistants.

## Execution Plan

- **Business type:** SaaS product
- **Timeline:** 4-8 weeks
- **Budget:** Local-first MVP budget: $0-$10K before paid acquisition.
- **MVP approach:** Build only the first-win workflow for "Anonymous daily check-ins for 12-step sponsors" and keep research, setup, and exceptions manual until the wedge is proven.
- **Initial offer:** Concierge review or paid template

### Acquisition Channels

- **Community pain posts:** Problem teardown, interview ask, and short demo clip. Cadence: Weekly. Metric: 5 qualified calls or 10 detailed replies in 7 days
- **Direct outreach:** Concierge pilot offer with a manually prepared sample. Cadence: Daily during validation. Metric: 3 paid pilots, LOIs, or budget-owner follow-ups
- **Searchable comparison content:** Before-and-after page or alternatives memo for the exact workflow. Cadence: Bi-weekly. Metric: Organic clicks, booked demos, or waitlist joins from comparison intent
- **Launch directory:** Single-purpose demo and first-win story. Cadence: Once MVP is clickable. Metric: 25% demo completion or 10 waitlist joins

### Milestones

1. Interview 10 people who match the buyer persona.
2. Ship a clickable demo or concierge workflow that produces the first useful artifact.
3. Run one paid pilot or collect explicit pricing objections before automating the rest.
4. Promote to a deeper build plan only after the wedge survives validation.

### Success Metrics

- Problem resonance: 5+ calls or 10+ detailed replies.
- Activation: 25% of demo visitors complete the first-win path.
- Commercial pull: 3 paid pilots, LOIs, or concrete procurement next steps.

## Framework Fit

- **Value equation:** dream outcome 7/10, perceived likelihood 6/10, time delay 6/10, effort and sacrifice 7/10.
- **Market matrix:** Novel but unproven. High value plus high uniqueness deserves deeper research; lower uniqueness requires a clear distribution advantage.
- **Audience-community-product:** audience 4/10, community 7/10, product 6/10.
- **Category:** SaaS product for AA or NA sponsor supporting several sponsees; likely alternative is Manual status quo and broad generic AI tools.

## Community Signals

- **Reddit / forums:** Research lane. Look for complaints, workarounds, and repeated questions. First move: Post a problem teardown for Addiction recovery support tools and ask how people solve it today.
- **Launch communities:** Validation lane. Launch traction shows whether the promise is legible. First move: Ship a narrow demo and watch which promise gets clicks.
- **Review and alternative pages:** Objection lane. Pricing and alternatives expose buyer objections. First move: Write an alternatives page that owns one narrow use case.

## Keyword Intelligence

Keyword signals should be treated as directional. The strongest terms combine Addiction recovery support tools, the buyer workflow, and the first output the product creates.

- **anonymous workflow:** directional medium; rising with AI adoption; medium competition
- **daily validation:** directional low; steady niche demand; low competition

## MVP Scope

### MVP

A pseudonymous check-in thread where a sponsor invites a sponsee by one-time code and sees a simple daily green or red check plus an optional note, with no real names or phone numbers stored.

The first version should produce one trusted output, preserve source links, and make human review explicit. Everything else can stay manual: onboarding, unusual edge cases, integrations, templates, and account management.

## Risks

- Recovery status is highly sensitive health-adjacent data and any breach or de-anonymization could cause real harm.
- Anonymity-by-design limits identity verification, which can be abused, and the app must avoid offering clinical or treatment advice.
- Trying to build a broad platform before the narrow workflow has proof.

## Validation Experiments

### First Validation Test

Recruit eight active sponsors, run pseudonymous code-based daily check-ins with their sponsees for two weeks, and measure retention plus whether anonymity expectations held.

### Additional Tests

- Write the one-sentence promise and test it in the strongest channel.
- Create the lead magnet and use it to recruit interviews.
- Build the smallest demo that proves the first win.

## Kill Criteria

- Fewer than five qualified buyers agree to discuss the workflow after targeted outreach.
- No buyer can name a current cost in time, money, risk, or reputation.
- The first demo does not produce a clear next step, paid pilot, or specific objection.

## Founder Fit

Score: 8/10. A solo or AI-assisted founder with direct access to AA or NA sponsor supporting several sponsees.

### Advantages

- Can talk to the buyer before writing much code.
- Can ship a narrow first-win demo quickly.
- Can use local-first research artifacts to keep validation moving without a large team.

### Gaps

- Needs real buyer access, not only desk research.
- Needs proof of budget or repeated urgency.
- Needs a crisp wedge before broad product work starts.

### Avoid If

- You cannot reach the buyer directly.
- The idea only sounds interesting but does not save time, money, risk, or reputation.
- You want to build the full platform before validating the first workflow.

## Roast

Interesting hypothesis, but it needs sharper demand evidence before build time.

### Blind Spots

- Recovery status is highly sensitive health-adjacent data and any breach or de-anonymization could cause real harm.
- A broad AI assistant can flatten differentiation unless the wedge is painfully specific.
- The first release can become a generic dashboard if the job is not named tightly.

### Hard Questions

- Who wakes up already trying to solve this?
- What do they stop paying for or stop doing when this works?
- What proof would make a skeptical buyer trust it in one screen?
- What is the smallest paid version of this idea?

### De-Risking Moves

- Sell a manual pilot before building automation.
- Record five exact phrases buyers use to describe the pain.
- Cut any feature that does not support the first measurable win.

## Build Handoff

### Build Prompt

Build a narrow MVP for "Anonymous daily check-ins for 12-step sponsors" for AA or NA sponsor supporting several sponsees. Preserve the evidence, build only the first-win workflow, include source links, and treat Recruit eight active sponsors, run pseudonymous code-based daily check-ins with their sponsees for two weeks, and measure retention plus whether anonymity expectations held. as the first acceptance gate.

### Review Prompt

Review the "Anonymous daily check-ins for 12-step sponsors" MVP for over-breadth, unsupported claims, weak buyer proof, privacy risk, and missing validation instrumentation. Do not approve expansion until the kill criteria and success metrics are measurable.

### Build Actions

- Delete any report section that feels generic before building.
- Run the lead magnet and first-win demo tests.
- Promote to deeper implementation only once the wedge survives interviews or paid-pilot outreach.

## Sources

- [Alcoholics Anonymous](https://www.aa.org/) - The official AA site documents the sponsorship relationship and the anonymity tradition that any sponsor-sponsee check-in tool must preserve, defining the privacy constraints of this product.
- [Narcotics Anonymous](https://www.na.org/) - NA's official site describes its twelve-step sponsorship and anonymity principles, confirming the buyer base and the privacy-first design requirements for between-meeting check-ins.

---

# Derived deliverables (computed from this report's own data)

Vertical: [Healthcare & Life Sciences](https://ideanavigatorai.com/verticals/healthcare/) · Full report: https://ideanavigatorai.com/ideas/anonymous-check-in-app-for-aa-na-sponsors-and-sponsees/

## Economics (price-anchored scenarios)

Derived from this report's "Core offer" offer-ladder stage ($49-$499/month). These are price-anchored scenarios, not market-size claims.

- **Proof (10 customers):** $490-$4,990 MRR. Ten paying customers proves willingness to pay and funds continued validation.
- **Wedge (50 customers):** $2,450-$24,950 MRR. Fifty customers in one niche makes the workflow the default in that circle and feeds referrals.
- **Vertical leader (250 customers):** $12,250-$124,750 MRR. A few hundred accounts in one vertical is a real business before any horizontal expansion.
- **Break-even:** At $49-$499/month, 1 customers cover the stated Local-first MVP budget: $0-$10K before paid acquisition. budget within a month; fewer if they land at the top of the range.
- **Sizing:** Size the buyer universe in one day: count aa or na sponsor supporting several sponsees reachable through the report's channels (directories, associations, communities) until the list stops growing — the test only needs the first 100 names, not a TAM estimate.
- **Benchmark:** No public look-alike products were recorded in this report, so price against the manual workaround's time cost, not against software.

## 7-day validation sprint

- **Day 1 — Build the buyer list.** List 50-100 named aa or na sponsor supporting several sponsees prospects from Community pain posts and Direct outreach — names, not categories. _Threshold: 50+ named, reachable buyers on the list._
- **Day 2 — Join the watering holes.** Join and observe Reddit / forums, Launch communities, Review and alternative pages. Collect the exact words buyers use for this pain. _Threshold: 10+ verbatim pain quotes captured._
- **Day 3 — Send first outreach.** Send the cold outreach template (below) to 15 buyers from the day-1 list, personalized with one detail each. _Threshold: 15 sent; 3+ replies of any kind._
- **Day 4 — Run buyer interviews.** Hold 15-minute calls using the interview script (below). Listen for current workarounds and what they cost. _Threshold: 3+ completed interviews._
- **Day 5 — Run the report's validation test.** Recruit eight active sponsors, run pseudonymous code-based daily check-ins with their sponsees for two weeks, and measure retention plus whether anonymity expe... _Threshold: Problem resonance: 5+ calls or 10+ detailed replies._
- **Day 6 — Make the smoke offer.** Offer "Concierge review or paid template" at $19-$99 to every interviewed buyer. Manual delivery is fine — payment is the signal. _Threshold: 1+ pre-commitment (payment, signed LOI, or scheduled paid pilot)._
- **Day 7 — Decide against the kill criteria.** Score the week against this report's kill criteria, then take the stated next validation step: Recruit eight active sponsors, run pseudonymous code-based daily check-ins with their sponsees for two weeks, and measure retention plus whether anonymity expe... _Threshold: A written build / keep-testing / kill decision._
- Pass: thresholds on days 3, 4, and 6 are met — proceed to the next validation step with real buyer language in hand.
- Kill or rethink if the week confirms: Fewer than five qualified buyers agree to discuss the workflow after targeted outreach.

## First-contact kit

Subject lines: Question about anonymous workflow · How are you handling sponsors track daily check-ins, sobriety dates, and step pr... · 15 minutes on a addiction recovery support tools workflow?

```
Hi {{firstName}},

I'm researching how aa or na sponsor supporting several sponsees handle this today: Sponsors track daily check-ins, sobriety dates, and step progress for multiple sponsees through texts and calls, with no private place to s...

I'm not selling anything yet — I'm testing whether "Anonymous daily check-ins for 12-step sponsors" is worth building, and I'd rather learn from people living the workflow than guess.

Would you trade 15 minutes for first access (and a say in what gets built) if it goes ahead?

{{yourName}}
```

Interview script:
1. Walk me through the last time this happened: Sponsors track daily check-ins, sobriety dates, and step progress for multiple sponsees through texts and calls, with n... What did you actually do?
2. What does that workaround cost you — in hours, money, or risk — in a normal month?
3. What have you already tried or bought to fix it, and why didn't it stick?
4. If "A pseudonymous check-in thread where a sponsor invites a sponsee by one-time code and sees a simple..." existed, what would have to be true for you to switch in the first week?
5. Who else feels this worse than you do — and would you introduce me?

Where to send it:
- Community pain posts — Problem teardown, interview ask, and short demo clip
- Direct outreach — Concierge pilot offer with a manually prepared sample
- Searchable comparison content — Before-and-after page or alternatives memo for the exact workflow
- Reddit / forums — Post a problem teardown for Addiction recovery support tools and ask how people solve it today.
- Launch communities — Ship a narrow demo and watch which promise gets clicks.

## Pivot map

### Same problem, different buyer: Budget owner who feels the operational cost of the broken workflow.

The workflow pain in this report is not exclusive to aa or na sponsor supporting several sponsees. Budget owner who feels the operational cost of the broken workflow. faces the same friction with their own budget and urgency.

First test: Re-run day 3 of the sprint (15 outreach messages) against this buyer only, and compare reply rates before changing anything else.

### Same workflow, adjacent vertical: Legal, Risk & Compliance

This report's language already overlaps Legal, Risk & Compliance (law practices). The same first-win workflow usually transfers with new vocabulary and one changed integration.

First test: Rewrite the one-line promise for a Legal & Risk buyer and test it in that vertical's channels before building anything new.

### Same wedge, alternate model: a productized service (fixed-price, done-for-you delivery)

This report monetizes via "Low monthly subscription paid by the sponsor for multiple sponsee threads.". Concierge delivery validates willingness to pay before any software exists and earns the workflow knowledge the product needs.

First test: Offer both versions on day 6 of the sprint and let the first pre-commitment choose the model.

