I help technology led and technology enabled businesses choose the right problem, validate the path with the highest chance of success, and support execution at the moments that matter most, avoiding unnecessary spend. Right now, that usually means AI.
I do this by bringing cross domain fluency across delivery, operations, technology, and commercial work, and by applying the same discipline investors use when deciding where to place capital.
I’m best placed to help departments, business units, and service SMEs that are too complex to run on intuition, but not so large that leadership choices get diluted. The focus is outcomes, not activity.
Selected Situations
Short examples of situations I have worked on. Click to read the full version.
Testing whether an idea is worth committing to, before committing
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Testing whether an idea is worth committing to, before committing
A family consultancy was exploring an adjacent market opportunity outside its traditional referral and networking channels. The question was whether sufficient demand existed, and whether the firm’s existing reputation and expertise could successfully transfer into a new market segment.
Rather than investing heavily upfront, an AI native acquisition and qualification model was designed to test market interest at relatively low cost.
During an initial three month market testing phase, the approach combined structured assessments, intelligence products and automated workflows to create value for prospects before direct consultant involvement. This allowed the consultancy to gather market signals, identify recurring client problems, evaluate commercial viability and assess whether its existing credibility could extend into a new advisory space.
- Created a low cost mechanism for testing demand in a new market segment.
- Generated a structured path from prospect interest to advisory discussions.
- Captured market intelligence that would otherwise remain anecdotal.
- Reduced the cost of qualification and discovery activities.
- Established a foundation that could support future advisory and execution services if demand proved sufficient.
Creating stability before scaling
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Creating stability before scaling
A small software services business faced a common chicken and egg problem. Clients wanted proof before committing. Growth required investment. Investment required revenue.
The challenge was to create enough trust and recurring work to fund future growth while avoiding two common traps: competing on price and becoming overly dependent on a single client.
The business developed a market position focused on areas where agility, responsiveness and closer client engagement mattered more than size. Rather than competing head on with larger providers, it developed niche services, partnership models and low risk engagement structures that allowed clients to experience value before making larger commitments.
- Achieved approximately 50% year on year growth over a three year period.
- Established a recurring relationship with a strategic client that generated approximately 80% of company revenue during the period, creating the stability needed to invest in future capabilities while highlighting the importance of reducing long term concentration risk.
- Created a commercial platform for exploring adjacent capabilities and service offerings.
- Developed partnerships that increased credibility, reach and access to new opportunities.
- Bootstrapped growth without external investment.
Growth came from depth in one relationship, not breadth across many. A trade off that created stability now and a question to manage later.
Turning a department’s survival into a growth case
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Turning a department’s survival into a growth case
A software organisation was experiencing rapid growth in product demand at a time when skilled people were increasingly difficult and expensive to hire. At the same time, the future of the testing organisation itself was uncertain. Investment, strategic projects and leadership attention were increasingly contested across multiple sites.
The challenge was not simply to grow a department. The challenge was to demonstrate business value, secure strategic relevance and increase delivery capacity while operating under growing talent and cost pressures.
Testing was repositioned from a support function into a business capability. Instead of treating attrition purely as a loss, the organisation developed testers into software developers, automation engineers and product owners. This created an internal talent pipeline while reducing dependence on an increasingly competitive hiring market.
At the same time, the business case for testing was reframed as a fail fast mechanism. The objective was not to find more defects. The objective was to reduce the cost of learning, improve delivery confidence and create a capability that could support multiple business units.
- Project demand increased by approximately 3 to 5x over a three year period.
- Headcount increased by approximately 50% over the same period, significantly below the rate of demand growth.
- Operating costs remained within approximately 10% variance despite significant salary inflation and talent shortages.
- Delivery became faster and more predictable through fewer handoffs and closer collaboration between development and testing functions.
- The capability expanded into additional business units and secured a growing share of strategic delivery work.
The organisation evolved from a function whose future was being questioned into a capability that attracted investment, developed talent internally and provided a lower cost mechanism for validating ideas before larger commitments were made.
About me
The usual pattern I have noticed is that ambition gets disconnected from execution and the return gets diluted. Secondly, people fall in love with the tech solution and forget about the why, ending up with less impact than desired. Will do attitude, methodologies, frameworks and talent combine into something engineered beautifully, but the bottom line needle may not have moved so much.
The challenge is maintaining enough structure to perform reliably without becoming too rigid to change, and staying focused on what the work is actually meant to move, not just what gets shipped. Many of the situations I have worked on ultimately came back to that balance.
Additional support
Depending on the situation, the work may stop with a diagnosis or continue into implementation support.
Let’s have a conversation.
No pitch. No obligation. Just an honest discussion about the situation and whether I can help.