Pro Serv Blogs

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.

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.