One screen. What people search for, the five unmet wants, the broken edge, the nine business blocks, and the value loop with the leak points marked. The value-flow strip shows where value gets made and where it slips away before ScreenTalk can keep it. The numbers run along the bottom, the evidence behind every claim. These views read how strong ScreenTalk's intended position is, not how many users it will get.
In what people say about watching together (top-left), almost everything points at watch, the tool, while match, the person, sits off to the side, barely connected. Five wants (top-right) stay unserved, two of them critical: the pace-match nobody answers, and the proof no one has measured. The Structural Brand Power Index (mid-left) lands at 31.0, last on the board, with one score (owning the slot, 65) carrying the whole case and the Match-Liquidity-and-Retention broken edge holding it down. The value-flow strip shows the trap: the moment that makes the most value, when two strangers finally watch together, is also the moment ScreenTalk most easily loses them, because the two now have each other's contact and the cheapest way to schedule episode two is a group chat. The business blocks below show Revenue, Resources, and Partnerships effectively empty, which is honest for a pre-launch app. The numbers across the bottom are the evidence: the feeling is documented, the slot is real, and the proof behavior is untested.