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AdvisoryExecutive advisory

Executive advisory for AI, strategy, product, and technology leadership.

I help leaders turn technical complexity into strategic clarity, practical operating models, stronger teams, and measurable business outcomes.

Executive advisory
Advisory model
01Advisory situations

Advisory situations

Advisory work is useful when leaders need a senior outside perspective that can still operate in the real constraints of the business.

01

AI strategy needs an operating model

The company needs to connect AI ambition to ownership, governance, risk, adoption, and measurable business outcomes.

02

Product and technology need sharper direction

Leaders need to clarify where to focus, what to refuse, and how technical capability turns into customer and commercial value.

03

The executive team needs a clearer point of view

A board, CEO, founder, or leadership room needs practical language for decisions that are currently too technical, vague, or fragmented.

04

Scaling is exposing operating friction

Growth is creating alignment debt, unclear interfaces, slow decisions, or weak accountability across teams.

02Advisory formats

Advisory formats

The advisory format is deliberately practical. It should create decisions, artifacts, cadence, and better executive conversations.

01

Ongoing executive advisory

Regular counsel for leaders navigating strategy, AI, product, technology, operating models, and organizational complexity.

02

Board or leadership briefing

A focused session that frames the business issue, the technology implications, the risks, and the choices leaders need to make.

03

Operating-model sprint

A structured piece of work around ownership, governance, decision rights, cadence, metrics, and team routines.

04

Workshop or offsite

A working room for alignment, strategy translation, AI adoption, product direction, or technology leadership systems.

03What makes the work different

What makes the work different

The work sits between strategy and execution. It is designed for leaders who need movement, not more abstraction.

01

Commercial and technical translation

The conversation connects AI, product, and technology choices to customer value, business model, risk, revenue, and operating discipline.

02

Operating-model bias

Advice is turned into ownership, cadence, decision rights, governance, metrics, and practical artifacts leaders can use.

03

Executive-room clarity

The output must be clear enough for boards, founders, product leaders, technology teams, and commercial teams to act on.

SituationsSelected operating situations

Selected operating situations.

Anonymized patterns from the kinds of leadership rooms where the work is most useful. No invented clients, no decorative case studies.

01

AI adoption without operating ownership

What usually breaks

Pilots multiply, governance becomes abstract, and no one owns adoption after the first demo.

What the work clarifies

Ownership, risk classes, use-case priority, review cadence, and business metrics.

Typical output

AI operating thesis, ownership map, governance cadence, and adoption priorities.

02

Product and technology work disconnected from revenue

What usually breaks

Roadmaps stay busy while customer value, positioning, pricing logic, and sales narrative remain unclear.

What the work clarifies

Where technical capability becomes customer value and which trade-offs protect commercial leverage.

Typical output

Value translation map, product-market narrative, and executive decision memo.

03

Scale-up complexity slowing decisions

What usually breaks

Interfaces blur, leadership rooms revisit the same choices, and team rhythm starts taxing speed.

What the work clarifies

Decision rights, operating cadence, accountability, escalation paths, and useful refusals.

Typical output

Operating cadence, decision map, and execution rhythm leaders can actually run.

04

Leadership gap during transition

What usually breaks

Critical product, technology, AI, or operating-model decisions wait while the permanent structure is unresolved.

What the work clarifies

Temporary ownership, first-30-day priorities, decision sequence, and stakeholder rhythm.

Typical output

Interim operating map, leadership cadence, and practical artifacts for the transition period.

05

Board or executive team needing a technology point of view

What usually breaks

Technology risk and opportunity remain too technical, too vague, or too fragmented for executive decisions.

What the work clarifies

The business implication, strategic options, risk posture, and decision path.

Typical output

Board-ready briefing, executive decision memo, or leadership session map.

06

R&D capability needing commercial translation

What usually breaks

Technical proof exists, but it has not become market language, pricing logic, or strategic leverage.

What the work clarifies

Customer problem, market frame, value narrative, proof, and roadmap trade-offs.

Typical output

Commercial translation model and one-page narrative for product, sales, and leadership.

Final CTA

Use advisory work to move a real decision.

Bring the context, the people involved, the decision that needs to move, and the timeline. The first conversation should clarify whether advisory work is the right format.