You know your business better than anyone. You've sat at the desk at 2am. You know the pressures, the people, the near-misses. That's exactly why you need someone who hasn't.
Anywhere people are serving people — the one who built it deserves to find joy in it, not just survive it. That's the whole point.
— Jon Lakoduk · Brand Builder, Storyteller, OperatorThere's a version of this you know well. It's late. The numbers are open on your screen but you stopped looking at them an hour ago. You know what they say. You've known for a while. The problem isn't information — you have plenty of that. The problem is that you're so deep inside it, so close to every decision, every person, every dollar, that the thing you most need to see has become invisible.
Not because you're not smart enough. Not because you don't care enough. Because you care too much, and you've been carrying it alone long enough that the weight of it has become the wallpaper.
Here's what a decade of building things, breaking things, and watching people navigate the same walls in different rooms teaches you: the problem is almost never what you think it is.
It's not the product. It's not the market. It's not the economy or the staffing or the lease or the season. Those things are real — but they're rarely the root. The root is usually something simpler. A metric being chased that doesn't apply. The wrong thing leading when something better is sitting right behind it. A story being told to the wrong room. A cost being absorbed that was never yours to carry.
Simple things. Obvious in hindsight. Invisible from inside it.
The reason they stay invisible isn't complexity. It's proximity. When you're inside something every day — managing the pressure, the people, the decisions that never stop coming — your brain stops questioning the fundamentals. It has to. That's how you survive the day. But surviving the day and building something that works are two different things.
And sometimes the situation is different entirely. Sometimes you were chasing exactly the right thing — and then something outside your control changed everything. A pandemic. A shift in the market. A neighborhood that moved in a direction nobody predicted. The macro event didn't expose a mistake. It just made something that worked stop working.
And the hardest thing in the world is letting go of something you built with your own hands — something that was right once — because the world it was built for doesn't exist anymore.
The business isn't just a business. It never was. It's the thing you bet on when you didn't have to. The thing you stayed up building when everyone else went home. The thing that has your name on it — literally or not — and carries every decision you've made, every sacrifice you didn't talk about, every moment you chose it over something easier.
So when it's time to change it — really change it, not tweak it — the resistance you feel isn't weakness. It's not stubbornness. It's grief. Real grief. For the version of it you believed in, the version that made sense, the version you were building toward before the world shifted the goalposts without asking.
The spirit doesn't live in the concept. It lives in you. What made your idea worth building in the first place — the instinct, the care, the way you thought about the person walking through the door — that doesn't belong to the version of the business that isn't working anymore. It belongs to you. It moves with you. It shows up in whatever comes next if you let it.
Sometimes all it takes is one conversation. One outside perspective. Someone who looks at your situation without your history, without your assumptions, without your exhaustion — and says the thing that was true all along.
That's not magic. That's what this is.
I've watched businesses die. Some of them mine. Some of them people I cared about. Concepts that deserved to make it. Ideas that were right but ran out of time, or money, or the one conversation that might have changed the trajectory. And some that were simply ahead of their time — built for a world that was coming but hadn't arrived yet. Those are the hardest ones. Because the idea wasn't wrong. The timing was. And there's no comfort in being right too early when the doors are closing.
That's not a disclaimer. That's the point.
Because the things I learned watching something fail — really fail, not pivot-and-rebrand fail, but close the doors and walk away fail — taught me more than any success ever did. About timing. About the signals people ignore because they're too close to see them. About the moment when honest outside perspective could have changed everything and nobody showed up to offer it.
I'm not here because I have a perfect record. I'm here because I've seen enough — built enough, lost enough, pivoted enough — to know what the view looks like from the outside. And I know how much that view is worth when you're standing in the middle of it.
Before we meet, write two pages about your operation — what it is, how it works, what's working, what isn't. Then send up to three additional pages of supporting materials. I'll read everything before you say a word. No legal documents.
One hour of direct, experienced perspective on your situation. No pleasantries. No pitch for a bigger engagement. No comfortable answers when the honest one is harder. From someone who has been in every version of the room you're standing in.
Not a strategy deck. Not a follow-up proposal. You leave knowing what's actually possible, who you should be talking to, what story you should be telling, and where to start — this week.
When you write your two pages, use these as your guide. They're designed to surface what's already there — the things you know but haven't said out loud yet. Answer them honestly. That's where the hour begins.
What would a successful hour look like to you — and what would it mean if we got there?
This is not an operations audit. This is not legal advice. This is not a vendor pitch.
This is a conversation with someone who has built things — from zero — across nine distinct concepts, in markets that didn't hand anything to anyone, and who can see your situation clearly because they're not carrying your history.
Documents submitted for pre-review should be operational or brand-oriented. Legal documents are outside scope.
One hour. Your situation, your story, your next move.
From someone who's been in every version of the room you're standing in.
Includes pre-session write-up with guided questions + up to 3 pages of supporting materials
Video or phone · Operational & brand documents only · No legal materials
This is one conversation.
That's it.
No retainer. No monthly check-in. No follow-up proposal designed to keep you on the hook. If you've ever been curious about what a consultant could do for your business but couldn't stomach the commitment — this is the answer to that.
One meeting. One hour. Take what you hear, take it to heart, make moves.
If it's useful and you want to talk again down the road, that's a different conversation for a different day. But that's your call, not mine.