Your numbers tell a story—but only if someone's watching them.
Track KPIs that matter: customer health scores, delivery bottlenecks, margin erosion. Dashboards guiding planning & decisions.
Planning + forecasting data.
Gradually sunset legacy clients, decide which ones to re-price vs exit, and how to fill revenue with better-fit clients without creating a cash flow crisis.
Stop letting low margin clients stall your growth.
Your best technical people aren't always your best salespeople, and you can't be in every deal conversation.
Run a repeatable sales process that runs without you in the room. Build out your sales conversion process.
Reduce your sales cycle.
Breaking into a niche means saying no to generic MSP marketing.
Targeted campaigns built around vertical-specific pain points — industry case studies, compliance-focused content, sector LinkedIn engagement — positioning you as the specialist, not just another provider.
Linking you with your brand.
Losing any person important to your business will stall your best laid plans.
The best planning involves making it so they never want to leave and being ready if it does ever happen.
#1. Objective - knowing technology continually changes and develops, so will the COOP resources you need to make a timely pivot in a new direction.
The following situation is common.
The business had been going for around 5+ years and had got some early traction. In the early days the owner was hungry, hustling and had enough clients to go it alone. Eventually they added tech's and kept winning more clients until it kind of dried up.
Around the 5 year mark, they were hitting a wall. Revenue wasn't growing much, the tech stack was getting more and more expensive each year, clients were questioning costs and new prospects were putting them through more and more hoops to win work. Everyone was working hard and it was a pressure cooker environment at times. The owner was barely paying themselves a working wage.
Even with this going on, the owner felt that things were strong in the business - if only they could get more customers.
Current state:
The painful reality: They're not dying, but they're not growing either. Just... stuck.
Important: whether you're a start-up or reaching $3m, the journey is similar for everyone. The specific time and situation will be slightly different but getting from A to B is nothing new.
Expect to make more than $500k take home profit per year - action the Solutions (you don't need more advice).
Surface diagnosis: "We need more clients / leads"
Actual issues:
The real problem underneath it all:
You're too close to see it clearly + too busy to fix it yourself + can't afford to hire the help you need.
Knowing the 80/20 rule vs (prepared to apply the rule)
The 80/20 works. A few small changes move the needle — fast — in the right direction.
Start with clarity, then you can make informed decisions with quantifiable results.
How do you get clarity? You start to measure everything.
Benchmark your business today - see where you end up tomorrow.
Get real about where you are right now
Most owners know something's off. But they don't have clarity on what or how much.
The problem: not everything is quantifiable at first.
For this owner, they scored it like this:
Sales process: 8/10 (really good at sales) vs reality
Operations: 7/10 vs reality
The founder's gut feel: "We're around 7/10 overall"
Reality: More like 3-4/10 once you measure it.
That gap? That's why they were stuck. It's important to remember, this is good news - because every incremental improvement from here is positive.
• Average client value: $2,500/month
• 3 new clients = $7,500 MRR = $90k ARR
• CO-OP membership: $24k/year
Payback period: 3.2 months
The full year's investment is already recovered, and we haven't even touched marketing yet.
• Proposal turnaround: 2-3 days (deals stay warm)
• Win rate tracked and improving (67% on qualified opps)
• Pipeline visibility (owner knows what's coming, can plan)
• Staff utilization up to 58% (better workflow)
3 new clients closed (vs. typical 0-1 in a quarter)
From stuck at $200k to growing 40% in 12 months, with the same team size.
But more importantly, they got back what was lost:
Financial ROI:
The ripple effects:
This is the CO-OP model working: One member's transformation creates assets, knowledge, and capabilities that benefit everyone.
Answer: What's the #1. most important thing in business? (see below*)
Most small business owners, know what to do and those that don't can learn quickly. Ask yourself, if I know what to do, then what's stopping me?
The short answer; a lack of time and money.
The next step you take can change your life. Small steps before you start running.
"put the rocks in first"
The Big Rocks that build the foundations are the #1. priority. What matters to your business might be different from the person beside you but those big priorities are the same.
Sequence matters because diverting valuable cashflow to unimportant or right thing at the wrong time will hurt.
Small improvements stack up.
80:20 cleanup creates disproportionate positive returns.
Some quick research will illustrate a common thread when it comes to the #1 most important thing. I like the one below.
“revenue you can keep.”
That’s the overlap of:
Sales (create demand + close + repeat)
Delivery (build + retain + expand + repeat)
Or Happy Profitable Clients + Happy Efficient People Doing Great Work.
The COOP membership enables your business to put it's best foot forward.
Growth Blueprint:
focus on - customers
focus on - delivery
optimal outcome = balanced resources.