AI and new tools changed how your people work. The work shape shifted. But your processes, your roles, and your org haven’t caught up — and that gap is where the real upside sits. Closing it is the work.
Throwing AI, automation, or another platform at a broken process just breaks it faster. The constraint isn’t a tools problem — it’s sitting somewhere upstream, in the process, the role boundary, or the way the system was set up two years ago when the business was a different shape.
The first thing we do is find that constraint. The work after that becomes obvious.
A short, focused engagement to find what’s actually holding the business back. Not a glossy audit deck — a ranked picture of constraints and opportunities, in plain language, with the highest-leverage starting point named. The cheapest, lowest-risk way to start.
Cutting friction out of how the day-to-day actually runs. Mapping the current state honestly, then redesigning the parts where the cost of doing it the old way exceeds the cost of changing. Includes the hand-offs, the approvals, and the “but we’ve always done it this way” conversations.
The systems your business runs on — CRM, operations, finance, marketing — redesigned so they fit the work, not the other way around. Where data flows, where it stops, where roles change at handovers. Includes the integrations that take handovers off the team’s plate (see Automations).
The reason most transformations fail isn’t the design — it’s that the team didn’t adopt it. We work with you on the rollout, the training, the post-go-live support, and the retros. Software that sits unused isn’t a transformation, it’s a write-off.
Big-bang transformations almost always fail. We don’t propose them. We pick the workflow that’s costing you the most right now, redesign and ship that one piece end-to-end, then move to the next.
Each piece works in isolation. Each piece earns its keep before we expand. The business keeps running while the change happens around it — and you can stop after any piece if the value isn’t there.
A first conversation is honest, no pitch. Together we figure out the real constraint — before anyone proposes a solution.