What Service Am I Actually Providing?

Good Morning!
Itâs almost here⊠a few more days and itâll be live⊠Iâm super excited to share the news of the release of the long-awaited âThe Ultimate Guide to Starting a Consulting & Services Businessâ video. Itâs a comprehensive guide, with tools and templates (and formulas đ) to guide you on your journey of starting and growing your business. Be on the lookout, weâll share the link in next weekâs newsletter and on our social media channels.
On the Mat
- Where Most Consulting Dreams Die (And How to Start the Right Way)
- How to Spot a Sales Hack Before Itâs Too Late
- Insurance for When Things Go Very Wrong
- The $30,000 âYesâ That Changed Everything
Let's Train
Where Most Consulting Dreams Die (And How to Start the Right Way)
âWhat do I actually sell?â
Itâs a simple question, but the moment you ask it, everything gets slippery:
- You have real skills, yet canât define them as a concrete service.
- You believe consulting is a viable path, but donât know where or whom to start.
- Youâre not desperate, just thinking, but the fog of uncertainty is loud enough to stop you from planning your first move.
Data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics indicates that nearly 50% of new businesses will fail within 5 years.
Other sources put the 5-year failure rate at 80% or even 90%. (If the stats took into account businesses that formed but never became operational at all, the success rate would likely appear even lower.)
A lack of clarity around offers and positioning is thought to be one of the most common reasons for failure.
Thatâs exactly why, in a few days, Iâm dropping a free 50-minute YouTube video packed with templates, examples, and starter maps, the same ones Iâve used to help new consultants land their first paying clients.
It isnât that youâre not capable; itâs that most guidance skips this foundation.
So if youâve been circling the idea of launching your consulting business or already tinkering but stuck in planning mode, this is where clarity begins.
What youâre about to read is not theory. Itâs the first map I use with consultants to help them go from vague idea â clear offer â first traction.
Map 1: The Offer Formula
Skill + Pain + Willing Wallet = Offer
This is the backbone of consulting. Youâre not selling yourself, youâre not selling a list of credentials.
Youâre selling a valuable resolution to a painful, costly problem for someone with the budget and urgency to pay.
This formula forces clarity on three levels:
- Skill â What do you know how to do? Not just what youâve studied, but what youâve solved.
- Pain â Whoâs losing time, money, or peace of mind right now because of a problem you can solve?
- Wallet â Who has both the need and the budget to get it fixed?
Think of it this way: Youâre good at streamlining systems.
Youâve helped friends automate workflows in Airtable or Notion. Youâve set up zaps, dashboards, or templates that save hours.
But youâve never quite figured out how to package that into a real consulting offer.
So you sit there asking yourself: âDo I just sell âautomationâ? Is that even a thing? Would anyone pay me for that?â
Now picture this: A creative agency founder reaches out, her team is drowning in admin, and client onboarding is manual. Project delivery as well is chaotic.
Sheâs losing time, losing revenue, and her top employee is quietly considering quitting.
She doesnât need âautomation.â She needs a fix.
And thatâs where your offer lives.
đ§ Skill: Workflow automation
đ Pain: âWeâre losing 20+ hours a week just chasing docs, emails, and project files.â
đ° Wallet: Creative agency scaling past 10 employees
đŻ Offer: âI help creative agencies automate their backend ops so they reclaim time, reduce errors, and scale delivery without burning out their team.â
Thatâs not theory, thatâs a real consulting business anchored in pain, built around your skill, and directed toward a wallet with urgency and budget.
This is what the Offer Formula helps you uncover, and once youâve framed this clearly, everything else â pricing, positioning, and marketing â becomes 10x easier.
In consulting, you donât need a flashy niche; you need relevance, clarity, and a painful problem to solve.
And this formula gives you a way to craft that, even if youâve never sold before.
đ Mini exercise: List 3 things people have asked you to help with (professionally or informally).
For each one, write down:
- What did they ask for?
- What pain did it solve?
- Who else has that pain?
Thatâs raw consulting material. Thatâs how your offer begins.
Hey! What you just read is only one piece.
Like I mentioned earlier, in the next few days, Iâm releasing a full video walkthrough, something Iâve never shared publicly before.
Itâs a detailed, 50-minute breakdown of everything I wish someone had handed me when I was first thinking about consulting.
Youâll get:
- All the starter maps, not just this one
- Real examples, templates, and positioning breakdowns
- The exact steps to go from âI think I can do thisâ to real traction
And if consulting has been on your mind even quietly, I think this will mean a lot to you.
Ask Feras Recaps
How to Spot a Sales Hack Before Itâs Too Late
Someone on Reddit recently asked me, âSoâŠ. how do you spot a hack before itâs too late?â
đ„ The Challenge
I once hired a âseniorâ salesperson who looked perfect on paper. Three months later, we had zero sales and a lot of regret.
đĄ What I Learned the Hard Way
Bad hires often come from inexperience. If you donât know what good looks like, you canât test for it, and smooth talkers slip through.
đ ïž What I Told Them
Bring in someone experienced to help interview. Write a role that matches your stage. Test if they can build from scratch, set 30/60/90-day goals, and verify domain fit. A small upfront investment saves months of lost revenue.
You Might Like These
Insurance is not the first thing that comes to mind when you're starting a business, but remember that when you're providing consulting and services, you are opening yourself up to a degree of liability, especially when you're working directly with the clients' finances and internal systems.
Insureon provides a good breakdown of the types of coverage to consider. Check with your own insurance agent. If they don't have experience in this kind of insurance, ask for a referral. (Otherwise, ask me - I'm always happy to point you in the right direction.)
Sharpen Your Blade
In 2010, a $500M company asked us for mobile analytics.
Weâd never done this type of work, and for such large clients.
My co-founder said, âDonât sell what we donât know.â
I said, âGive me the weekend.â
I studied, tested, and by Monday, I said yes.
We delivered, earned $30,000, and built a service line that brought clients for years.
Lesson? Youâll never feel âready.â
The key isnât faking it; itâs stretching smart.
In this 10-minute video, I share how to assess risky projects, buy time, and fill gaps without overpromising.
đ Watch here
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