Where we help

The problem usually shows up before the category does — a business running slower than it should, leads falling through cracks, quoting that takes all day, operations that depend on one person knowing everything. That's where this work begins.

Operations

Most businesses have operational friction they've learned to live with. The workarounds become invisible. Until something breaks — a manager leaves, volume spikes, a key person is out — and the cracks that were always there suddenly become the whole problem. Sometimes the answer is a fractional operations leader who can see the full picture and fix it — without the overhead of a full-time hire.

The whole business lives in one person's head

Knowledge extraction and systems documentation before it becomes a crisis. The work maps what's actually happening, gets it out of people's heads, and builds something that runs without depending on any one person.

We keep finding errors and nobody owns the fix

Workflow audit and process cleanup that surfaces what's been hiding. Billing discrepancies, dropped handoffs, inconsistent execution — often the problem has been there for years and just needed someone to look.

Onboarding new people takes too long

Systems that get people productive in days, not weeks. When the knowledge is documented and the processes are clear, onboarding stops being a months-long gamble.

Something broke and we need to stabilize fast

Rapid triage and rebuild when a sudden change — departure, fast growth, restructure — exposes how fragile the operation actually was. Get it stable, then get it better.

Growth

Most growth problems aren't marketing problems. They're follow-up problems. Response time problems. Pipeline discipline problems. Leads come in and then nothing happens — not because the business isn't capable, but because no system exists to catch them.

Leads come in and then nothing

Lead follow-up systems that respond in minutes, not hours or days. Industry research shows the average small business takes 47 hours to respond to a new lead — most of those leads are gone long before then. Speed is the fix more often than message.

We quote a lot of work but close rate is low

Conversion and pipeline improvement so more of the right work turns into revenue. Sometimes it's follow-up discipline. Sometimes it's how the offer is framed. Usually both.

Pipeline is messy and we're not sure what's real

CRM and pipeline cleanup so opportunities stop falling through cracks. Leads scored, stages clarified, follow-up sequences built — so the pipeline reflects reality and people work it consistently.

We're not great at communicating with customers

Customer communication workflows from first contact through close and beyond. Consistent, timely, professional — without it consuming the team's time to maintain.

Workflows

Some of the biggest drains in a business are the invisible ones. Quoting that takes two hours when it should take twenty minutes. Onboarding that takes three days. Admin that eats the first half of every morning before real work starts. These aren't small problems — they compound every week.

We quote jobs differently every time

Quoting and estimation tools built from the way your business actually thinks about a job. Extract the knowledge that lives in one person's head, structure it, and turn it into something consistent anyone can run.

New client onboarding is a mess

Automated workflows that move a new client from inquiry to active without falling through cracks. Intake, folders, tasks, CRM entry — handled in seconds instead of hours.

Admin is eating hours every day

Administrative systems that eliminate the daily pile of forms, scheduling, reminders, and follow-ups. The goal is hours returned, not slightly faster manual work.

Nobody can ever find the right document or answer

Internal knowledge systems so the answer to any question is one search away. SOPs, pricing logic, process notes — searchable, current, and actually used.

Technology, AI & Automation

The question is never "should we use AI?" It's "where does it actually help?" Most businesses have three or four places where AI creates real leverage — and a dozen where it creates noise. The work is finding the three, not chasing the dozen.

We handle a lot of documents and it takes forever

Agents that process, route, and act on high volumes of PDFs, emails, and forms — without a person in the loop for every one. Businesses routinely discover they're losing 20, 30, even 35 hours a week to manual document handling. That time comes back when the right pieces are automated.

We're still doing manually what should run itself

Automation that connects the pieces that never talk to each other: inbox to quote to calendar to invoice to payment. Off-the-shelf tools, properly stitched, often solve what looks like a technology problem.

Reporting takes two days and nobody reads it

Dashboards and AI briefing notes that make reporting useful instead of burdensome. Pull from the systems that already have the data, surface what actually matters, cut the manual work to near zero.

I want to know if AI can help us — but I don't know where to start

An honest assessment of where AI creates real leverage in your specific business, followed by building what makes sense. No hype, no pressure toward solutions you don't need.

Something harder to categorize

Complex problem solving · Business crisis management · Cross-functional challenges

Some problems don't fit a bucket. They're cross-functional, persistent, and have resisted previous attempts. The issue is real — the business knows it — but it's hard to describe and harder to fix. That kind of problem is exactly what this business was built for.

We know something is wrong but can't pinpoint it

Diagnostic work that starts with the business — not a predetermined framework. Understand what's actually happening, identify where the real drag is, and build a path that makes sense for this situation specifically.

It's complicated, involves multiple parts of the business, and nothing has worked

High-friction problems that require both business judgment and practical execution — not just a recommendation. The work is cross-functional by design and stays with the problem until it's resolved.

Not sure where the problem fits?

That's normal. Most real problems don't fit neatly into a category. Start with the business issue — the friction, the drag, the missed opportunity — and the path becomes clear from there.