Pro Serv Blogs

Pro Serv Blogs

Your Invisibility Is Costing You Deals, Talent, and Your Exit

Over the past several years, I’ve worked hands-on with four investor-backed leaders across four industries. They had built real businesses with deep expertise, and every one of them was invisible online.

Then they started showing up. One sold for over $2 billion, one grew headcount 26% during a talent crisis, one IPO’d at $5.6 billion, and one built a $200 million market from scratch while the biggest retailers in the country started referencing his LinkedIn posts in sales meetings.

Pro Serv Blogs

Your AI Strategy Is Not a Strategy — Unless Your Fundamentals Are

Jim Collins introduced the concept of the Big Hairy Audacious Goal — the BHAG — in Good to Great as a clarion call for bold, long-range thinking. But Collins was careful to distinguish between a BHAG born of disciplined strategy and one born of desperation. The former is a North Star. The latter is a Hail Mary. The difference between the two, Collins argued, isn’t the size of the ambition — it’s the soundness of the foundation beneath it.

Pro Serv Blogs

When Compliance Becomes Competitive Advantage

Most professional services firms treat compliance as a burden.
More rules.
More documentation.
More audits.
The natural instinct is to do the minimum required and move on. We initially approached it the same way at ACE Consulting.
When the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC) requirements began affecting federal contractors, the first reaction was predictable. It looked like friction. It looked like overhead. It looked like something that would slow us down. Instead, it strengthened our firm.

Pro Serv Blogs

The Biggest Driver of EBITDA

As boutique professional services owners, most of us are trying multiple ways to profitably grow our business. For organic growth, this includes investing in AI, improving sales effectiveness, or cutting unnecessary costs.

Pro Serv Blogs

What a CFO Needs to Hear Before We Pay for Outcomes

If your outcome-based pricing proposal hit my inbox, it would likely get rejected. Not because the concept is wrong, but because the attribution is lazy. Here’s the good news: I’m going to tell you what folks like me need to see to accept these proposals. I’m having these conversations right now with clients.