Case Study: Simplifying for Scale in a Services Business

Industry: Founder-led, referral-driven growth company
Project Duration: 6 months
Engagement Type: Strategic systems advisor

The Inflection Point

A founder-led company was growing slowly and carried years of clutter. Old marketing tools, scattered campaigns, and one-off fixes piled up. Every decision funneled through the founder. Every new idea added another tool. Campaigns were hand-built, slow, and draining. They weren’t ready for a full-time head of marketing, yet too busy to sort through the mess.

At the same time, they were preparing to launch a new product line aimed at a different audience. The positioning wasn’t clear. The brand connection was weak. The founder had become the bottleneck.

The Strategic Shift

We started with a conversation about fractional CMO support. What became clear was that strategy alone wouldn’t solve the problem. They needed a system reset first.

The work was about stripping away what no longer served them, rebuilding only what was essential, and creating space for the founder and team to think clearly again.

What we tackled:

  • Systems audit: Mapped tools, owners, gaps, and redundancies.
  • Messaging reset: Re-aligned brand voice and bios across digital channels.
  • Positioning work: Clarified the story for the new product line without splintering the brand.
  • Automation layering: Designed follow-up flows based on what they were already doing. Added CRM tasks and triggers to reduce manual lift.
  • Ops partner referral: Brought in a trusted operations consultant for companywide workflow optimization.
  • Founder shift: Turned informal check-ins into structured strategy sessions, recorded meetings for efficiency, and shifted coordination through staff.

The Breakthrough

The real turning point came when we turned to their prized retention efforts. In an industry dependent on social proof, the team prided themselves on staying in touch with past clients. But the process was unwieldy: thousands of calendar reminders to initiate an entirely manual outreach process. Hours were lost every week to repetitive follow-ups.

We kept their existing rhythm of 3, 6, 9, and 12 month check-ins, review requests, plus 2-year outreach, and built simple automations around it. For moments that required a personal touch, like handwritten notes, the system generated CRM reminders with context drawn from past interactions.

The realization was bigger than just retention. If we could automate this without losing the personal feel, what else could we streamline? From there, we branched out to social media posting, seasonal Facebook ads, and other repetitive campaigns. The client had been in business for over 20 years, with a customer base that skewed older and relied heavily on Facebook. Decades of “how we’ve always done it” were slowing them down. These early automation wins gave the whole team time back each week, and provided the assurance that certain systems would run in the background even when things got busy.

The Result

By the end of the first quarter, the company had a clearer path forward. The founder was less often a bottleneck. The team understood their tools and had growing confidence in their systems. Marketing efforts were more consistent and less fragile.

This success wasn’t about building something flashy. It was about focus, clarity, and giving them the ability to grow without adding unnecessary weight.

Key outcomes:

  • Brand cohesion: Profiles, bios, and voice aligned with company positioning.
  • Operational clarity: Systems map + connecting tools showed what to keep, what to fix, and what to drop.
  • Effortless follow-up: Automations cut hours of manual work while improving client experience.
  • Smarter structure: Ops handled by a specialist. Founder focused on high-value work. Marketing supported as needed.
  • Scalable foundation: Growth without premature hiring or new layers of complexity.

What’s Next

The company is now focused on operations cleanup. I continue to consult with their new ops partner, highlighting where marketing systems can tie directly to better workflows. Once the core is stable, I’ll re-engage on campaigns and positioning projects.

The foundation is in place. The next phase is about velocity, not just fixing leaks.

Lessons for Leaders

  • New campaigns don’t fix broken systems. Clean the pipes first.
  • Founder bottlenecks are solved with trust in systems, not just delegation.
  • Systems can often be templatized without losing the human touch.

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