Pro Serv Blogs

Pro Serv Blogs

Your Next Sales Hire Has a 50% Chance of Failing. Here’s How to Beat the Odds

About half of sales leaders fail in their first 18–24 months. That’s according to Harvard Business Review. If you’re a founder hiring someone to sell your expertise, those aren’t great odds.
The cost of getting it wrong goes beyond money. It’s time, energy, culture, and credibility. You trusted someone to represent your firm. They didn’t deliver. Now you’re cleaning up the mess and starting over.

Pro Serv Blogs

Speed Isn’t About Execution. It’s About Decision-Making.

Artificial intelligence is changing professional services. Clients now expect work to be faster, cheaper, and better. For the purpose of this article, let’s focus on one: speed.
A few months ago, a client asked if we could complete a project in three weeks instead of eight.
In theory, yes. The work itself can now be done much faster.
But there was a catch.

Pro Serv Blogs

Luck Is What Happens When Preparation Meets Opportunity

Seneca said it first. “Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity. “Founders love that quote. They put it on LinkedIn. They cite it in keynotes. Then they run their firm the same way they always have and wonder why the exit didn’t go the way they hoped. Most founders in professional services are not prepared. Not for the opportunity in front of them right now.

Pro Serv Blogs

Why Growth Still Depends on You and How to Fix It with Systems and AI

Over the past several months, I have found myself in a familiar set of conversations with founders and leadership teams.
The business is healthy, the work is strong, and the pipeline is active. And yet, at some point in the conversation, things slow down and a founder will say something like:
“Things are moving… but it still feels like everything runs through me.”
It is not frustration or panic. It is awareness.
And it is worth paying attention to, because in most cases, this is not a time problem. It is structural.

Pro Serv Blogs

You’re Renting Your Place in the Market. It’s Time to Own It.

I just got back from a speaking trip in the New York/New Jersey area. And I had one of those moments that just stops you cold. I was standing in the middle of Times Square — surrounded by a wall-to-wall assault of color, sound, and messaging — and it hit me all at once: this is what it costs to be invisible. Every one of those brands lighting up the skyline is paying an enormous premium just to be heard. And most of them? Still not breaking through.