You grew the team, added the tools, brought in help — and the company got harder to run, not easier. Everything still routes through you. I find the execution breakdowns underneath it and fix them, so the company finally runs without you in the middle of every decision.
There was a point where you could hold the whole company in your head — everyone knew everything, and you touched every decision. Then you grew, and the way the company runs never grew with it. Nobody rebuilt it. So it keeps doing what it was built to do at 15, while you’re trying to run it at 115. That’s what’s underneath the chaos: the company outgrew its own operation.
You hired great people and the bottlenecks just moved. You brought in leaders to take things off your plate — and you’re still in the middle of their decisions. You added tools and process, and the same problems came back in new clothes. None of it touched the real issue: the operation was never redesigned for the company you’ve become.
That gap has a name: the Theory Reality Gap — the distance between where you’re taking the company and what it’s actually built to do.
You spend the day reacting — putting out fires you thought you hired people to handle. Things slip through cracks that didn’t exist when you were smaller, and your customers are starting to feel it.
Underneath all of it, you’re exhausted — the company you built to give you freedom has become the thing you can’t step away from.
A company produces what it’s built to produce — regardless of where you’re trying to take it. The wider that gap, the more the work slips, duplicates, and lands back on you. Drag to see it widen.
The vision, the growth you’re building toward, what the company needs to become.
The people, decisions, systems, and workflow actually in place today.
I go inside the operation, find the execution breakdowns, and rebuild how the work runs through the team you already have. I don’t hand you a report and leave — I stay until the company runs on its own, so the capability lives in your business, not in my retainer.
The first step stands on its own. If there’s no fixable gap worth the investment, I’ll tell you before the build starts — you find out what’s really going on either way.
The company stops routing every decision through you. Your leaders own their areas, growth creates momentum instead of chaos, and you can finally step back without it falling apart. You get your company back.
You scaled past the stage where everyone knew everything and you could keep your hands on all of it. The vision is clear and your people are capable — the way the company runs between them isn’t built for where you’re headed. If this sounds like you, we should talk.
Not a report. Not a reorg. A company that runs.
Most people study the problem, deliver a deck, and leave before anything changes. I own the execution and stay until it holds — fixing the root instead of the symptom, and building your team so the capability stays in your business, not in my retainer. And it starts low-risk: the first look tells us the truth before you commit.
Tell me what’s going on and where you’re trying to take it. I’ll help you see what’s actually driving the problems — and whether it’s something I can fix. Worst case, you leave understanding your own operation better than you did an hour ago.