Every idea starts as nothing. Every invention that ever mattered started as nothing. Not a plan, not a strategy. Just a flicker on a screen and a simple question, asked quietly
Building revenue systems
The distance between an idea and a working product has collapsed. The barrier is no longer capital or access. It is clarity of thinking and the will to build.
I call this The Threshold Era
I have always been more interested in the architecture than the announcement. At Phaidon International I learned to see what others were not looking at and to design the architecture to capture it. Four years owning the full commercial cycle — prospecting, discovery, closing, retention, account development — from consultant to VP. Not a handed-over portfolio. A partnership function built from zero: cold outreach, Sales Navigator, multi-channel prospecting running alongside consultative account development. The two approaches compounded from the start.
What that built in me was the ability to look at what a client already has and see what they have not yet built. A $150k client that became $225k through commercial restructuring, without changing the product once. A new $25k project that became a $120k annual partnership by identifying what the client could not see in their own market and building the case that changed what was commercially possible for them.
That instinct travels. I work now with founders, startups and businesses, still owning the full commercial cycle, from first outreach to long-term partnership, while designing the prompt architectures, multi-agent workflows and operational systems that make everything compound beyond the individual. The commercial work and the AI architecture do not coexist. They multiply each other. Most people carry one. The evidence I carry both is not a claim. It is in the work.
I am also someone who builds for myself and makes it available for others. When I see a gap, I do not wait. That impulse — the curiosity that finds it, the effort that closes it, the ownership that stays — is what every engagement with me eventually becomes about. The question I ask before any of it: what do you see?
The client was already spending $150k a year with Phaidon through a bespoke talent workforce planning solution. By most measures, a relationship to protect and maintain. The instinct was different.
The account was a single point of contact inside a larger structure. Mapped carefully, that structure was eight locations across Germany and four distinct sub-brands operating within the same group — each with its own budget, its own decision-maker, its own ceiling. The $150k wasn't the account. It was one room in a much larger building.
The work that followed wasn't a new pitch. It was a rebuild of the strategic commercial architecture: identifying the right stakeholders across each sub-brand, understanding how decisions moved through the group, and designing a set of engagements — a tier system across every brand within the group, a revenue share-back structure for reaching targets together, retained mandates priced for commitment, that spoke to each one's specific needs while maintaining a coherent relationship at the centre.
We closed $225k that year. The product didn't change. The conversation changed, because the map changed. Most of the value in that account had always been there.
What this proves: the most significant commercial opportunities are rarely new clients. They are existing relationships seen with a different quality of attention.
I signed a new client on a $25k retained project. Clear scope, defined deliverable. Working closely with them through the engagement, I identified something beyond the immediate brief: the struggles they were facing in their operating market, the ceiling they had hit, the gap between where they were and where they could be.
I built the case while still inside the project. A commercial argument, taken to the C-suite, that reframed what the relationship could be: not a project vendor, but a strategic partner embedded across multiple departments, working on the structural problem underneath the one they'd originally hired us to solve.
The $25k project became a $120k annual partnership. Once again, the core product of our offering stayed intact. It was the clarity about what the client was trying to build and the architecture that made it possible.
What this proves: the question beneath the question is always worth asking. The clients who become long-term partnerships are the ones where someone was curious enough to find it.
Every invention that ever mattered started with a flicker, not a plan, not a strategy. A simple question, asked quietly, in a room where no one else was looking.
What do you see?
This is where everything begins. Before the system. Before the commercial architecture and the AI layer. Before the compound returns. There is a moment where someone looks at what does not yet exist and decides to see it anyway. That moment is not inspiration. It is a decision.
We live right now in the dreams of people who came before us. Everything we call infrastructure (the tools, the networks, the language of modern work) was once nothing more than a question held long enough to become an answer. Everything we take for granted was once called unrealistic, until the people who saw it clearly decided to stop waiting and started building. Tomorrow will be assembled from what we imagine today.
I call this The Threshold Era.
The most significant opportunities are rarely new. They are existing situations seen with a different quality of attention.
Fantasy dreams without constraints. Imagination builds the bridge between what you can sense and what you can make real. That bridge is where the work begins.
The commercial engine, the GTM strategy, the AI layer — none of it starts with a framework. It starts with a clear view of what is being left on the table. Everything else is built on that.
The Threshold Era does not reward the best ideas. The distance between vision and execution has collapsed. What remains is the will to build — and the ownership to stay in it.
The distance between an idea and a working product has genuinely collapsed. The barriers that once separated vision from execution, capital, access, technical knowledge, are no longer what they were. What remains is simpler and harder than all of them: clarity of thinking and the will to build.
The philosophical foundation underneath it comes from Bruno Munari. Imagination, as Munari understood it, is not fantasy. Fantasy dreams without constraints. Imagination gives form to the invisible. It is the precise point where what you can sense becomes what you can build. The difference between someone who sees a gap and someone who fills it is not talent or resources. It is the quality of the question they are willing to hold long enough to answer with something real.
That question is where I start with founders, with businesses, with every engagement. Because the commercial architecture, the GTM strategy, the AI layer that makes a revenue system compound beyond the individual, none of it begins with a framework. It begins with a clear view of what is being left on the table and the will to build the structure that captures it.
What do you see?
The commercial engine and the AI layer that makes it compound. I design, deploy and run for businesses that want to thrive and grow. Four entry points. One outcome: a revenue system that scales beyond the idea.
For founders and businesses who want more than a deliverable — the mind in the room, not the document in the inbox.
Defining where you compete, how you enter, and what makes the position defensible over time. A decision framework with a commercial logic behind every choice — not a slide deck, but a system that survives contact with the market.
Architecting the full commercial cycle from first outreach to long-term partnership. Revenue becomes predictable and expandable when it is built as a system rather than dependent on individual effort or circumstance.
Building the pipeline as a system: stages, qualification criteria, conversion logic and the handoffs that don’t lose deals. There is no strategy without execution. Designed to run without constant intervention.
Identifying precisely who the system is built for and why that specificity compounds. A sharp ICP is not a constraint. It is the foundation of every conversion that follows.
The argument that moves a conversation from interest to commitment. Built on evidence, structured for the decision-maker, designed to survive the room you’re not in.
Designing the logic that makes AI outputs reliable, specific and commercially useful. The difference between a prompt that sometimes works and a system that always performs.
Building systems where multiple agents connect into compound execution engines each one feeding the next, the whole greater than the sum of its parts. Designed for the specific workflow, not the general use case.
Selecting, connecting and sequencing the right tools for the specific business need. The power is never in a single tool. It is in how they connect, sequence and feed each other. That compound effect is what makes the stack perform.
Mapping the process before automating it. The intelligence layer removes friction when the underlying workflow is clear. When it isn’t, automation encodes the problem at scale.
Agents built for specific professional workflows with defined inputs, outputs and quality standards. Not a general assistant. A purpose-built system with a single job it does exceptionally well.
The full business development cycle running with an AI layer underneath it. Prospecting, sequencing, discovery and qualification — designed as a system, with the intelligence embedded at every stage rather than added as an afterthought.
Mapping what exists inside a client relationship and designing the commercial architecture to capture what hasn’t been built yet. The instinct that turned $150k into $225k systematised.
Identifying, approaching and structuring the partnerships that create compound commercial value. The commercial logic and the operational infrastructure designed together from the start.
Building the KPIs that make the system legible. What is working, where the friction is, which lever to move next. Decisions driven by signal, not assumption.
Embedding AI into the existing commercial operation so it changes how the team works — not a new tool added to a subscription folder, but a layer that runs through every stage of the revenue cycle.
The commercial function owned end to end (strategy, pipeline, partnerships, account development and AI architecture) for businesses not yet at the stage of a full-time hire. Full accountability, fractional commitment.
Ongoing strategic advisory for businesses deploying AI commercially. Not implementation support but strategic guidance on where AI creates the most leverage in the revenue system and how to sequence the build.
A structured assessment of where the business is commercially, where the AI opportunity is, and what the highest-leverage next move looks like. The starting point for founders who know something needs to change but aren’t yet certain what.
For early-stage founders building the commercial function from zero. An embedded partner who owns the BD and partnership development directly while building the AI layer that makes the system scale. The engagement that starts with what do you see? and builds from the answer.
A structured session — commercial strategy, AI workflow design or both — for founding teams and leadership. Not training. A working session that ends with a plan, a framework and a next action the team can execute without external support.
Everything I bring to a client engagement I first apply to something of my own. This is where the Threshold Era becomes personal — clarity of thinking and the willingness to build.
I am a runner, part of the running community, yet it's difficult to run with people that are like you. I identified the gap from the inside. I couldn't find the product that removed the friction, so I have started building it. That's why I have founded RunPlace. Currently in its development phase. The app will be a home for people who believe that running is so much more than a sport, matching not only your pace but your whole running philosophy. Every runner is a universe. Together, something bigger.
Designed, built and operated from zero
An AI-native startup. I came in at zero and built the commercial and conceptual foundations of the business: the product framework, the "toolbox" architecture, a suite of modular single-purpose AI tools designed to remove friction from specific professional workflows. The positioning and the copy, that tells the world what it does and why it matters.
Commercial foundations, product architecture and positioning
My continuous practice. Purpose-built agents and tools designed for specific professional workflows and for the creative mind. Removing friction, automating compound tasks, empowering what an individual can accomplish.
If something on this page made you stop, a question it raised, a gap it named, a capability you need, then let's connect.
What do you see?