

Good products do not guarantee growth. Many teams fall short because their sales process is unclear or inconsistent. We help you change that. We close the gap between your current results and your goals with:
Hiring a high six-figure sales director isn’t an option for most businesses. We give you access to proven sales leadership, setting the right strategy, optimising execution, and ensuring you stay on track to hit revenue goals, without the overhead.
You should be focused on running your business, not chasing leads or managing cold outreach. Our Sales Co-Pilot team handles lead generation, outreach, and follow-ups, so you only spend time on high-value conversations that close deals.
If your sales pipeline isn’t structured, you’re leaving money on the table. We implement proven systems, automation, and data-driven processes that ensure you have a steady flow of qualified leads, booked calls, and closed deals every month.
60-80%
25+ Years of Sales Leadership, Proven Results, and Predictable Revenue Growth
With a proven track record leading high-performing sales teams across global markets, including @ IBM, Oracle, and Lucent. Keith Flanagan gives your business the exact strategy, systems, and leadership you need to scale. If you’re tired of unpredictable sales results, Keith’s experience helps you build a sales engine designed for consistent, measurable growth.




Keith helped us get clear on our message, our target customers, and our product name, Content Scout. He also helped us explain our value in a simple and direct way.


"Unlike most sales consultants, Keith stays engaged beyond the deal, ensuring long-term success and repeat business."


"His ability to simplify complex sales processes made it easier for our team to close more deals, faster."


We don’t work with everyone. This isn’t for businesses looking for a quick fix or “just more leads.” It’s for founders and leaders who are serious about scaling their sales the right way, with structured systems, expert leadership, and a proven process.
You have a proven product or service but need a repeatable, scalable sales system to drive consistent revenue growth.
You’re done with chasing unqualified leads and inconsistent results and want a structured approach that delivers real sales.
You know a full-time sales director is too costly and risky right now, but you still need expert leadership to guide your team.
You’re ready to take action, implement a system, and commit to building a high-performance sales engine.
❌ Pre-revenue startups that don’t yet have a proven product or a clear market fit.
❌ Businesses looking for a one-time fix instead of a sustainable, long-term growth system.
❌ Founders unwilling to follow a structured sales process and take action on proven strategies.
If that sounds like you, let’s take the next step.
Are your sales processes built for predictable, repeatable growth?
Most founders guess at what’s holding them back. The Sales Growth Assessment gives you clarity.



Why Sales Teams Struggle, And Why It Is Often Not the Salesperson’s Fault
When a sales team is underperforming, the first place most people look is the salesperson.
They are not making enough calls. They are not closing enough deals. They are not following up. They are not using the CRM properly. They do not have enough product knowledge. They lack motivation.
Sometimes that is true.
But in many small and growing businesses, poor sales performance is rarely caused by one person. It is usually a sign that the sales function itself is not working as well as it should.
That is an important distinction.
If you see underperformance as a people problem, you will try to fix it with pressure, training, or replacement. You will push harder, run more meetings, review more activity, and look for a better hire.
But if the real issue is structure, those actions will only help for a short time.
A good salesperson can still struggle inside a poor sales system. A motivated salesperson can still lose deals if the process is unclear. A capable salesperson can still waste time if leads are not managed properly. A junior salesperson can look worse than they are if no one has shown them what good looks like.
That is why sales leadership matters so much.
In many founder-led businesses, sales starts with the founder. The founder knows the product, understands the customer, carries the story, handles objections, and knows which opportunities matter.
That works well early on.
The problem starts when the business grows and the founder tries to pass sales to someone else.
The founder often assumes the new salesperson will “just get it.” But the salesperson does not have years of customer conversations stored in their head. They do not know why some leads are worth chasing and others are not. They do not know how the founder handles price pressure, buyer hesitation, or unclear decision-making.
So the salesperson is expected to perform, but the system around them is thin.
This creates frustration on both sides.
The founder thinks, “Why can’t they just sell?”
The salesperson thinks, “What exactly am I meant to do?”
That gap is where a lot of sales problems begin.
The issue is not always a lack of effort. It is often a lack of transfer. The founder’s sales knowledge has not been turned into a process the team can follow.
This is where coaching becomes important.
Good coaching is not just a weekly check-in. It is not a casual chat about what is in the pipeline. It is not telling someone to make more calls or close harder.
Good coaching helps the salesperson improve the quality of their work.
It looks at real opportunities. It tests whether the customer’s problem is clear. It checks whether the next step is real. It helps the salesperson understand where a deal is stuck and what needs to happen next.
But coaching only works well when it is linked to a clear process.
Without a process, coaching becomes opinion. One week the focus is activity. The next week it is closing. Then it is CRM hygiene. Then it is proposal quality. The salesperson hears a lot of advice, but does not get a clear path.
A better approach is to coach against the sales journey.
What should happen when a lead comes in? What makes a lead worth pursuing? What should be known before a proposal is sent? What needs to happen after the first meeting? What does a real next step look like? What should be in the CRM, and why does it matter?
When those things are clear, coaching becomes much more useful.
Motivation also changes when there is clarity.
Sales leaders often assume motivation is mainly about money. Of course money matters. But most salespeople also want to feel they are making progress. They want to know where they stand. They want recognition when they do good work. They want to feel capable.
When a salesperson feels lost, they often slow down.
They may avoid difficult calls. They may spend too much time on safe tasks. They may stay busy without doing the work that moves deals forward. They may stop following up because they are not sure what to say next.
From the outside, that can look like laziness or poor motivation.
But often it is uncertainty.
People perform better when they know what good looks like. That means clear targets, clear activity expectations, clear deal stages, clear feedback, and a clear rhythm of review.
This does not mean turning sales into a rigid script.
Sales still needs judgement. It still needs skill. It still needs personality and trust.
But good process gives salespeople support. It helps them act with more confidence. It gives them a way to handle the normal uncertainty that comes with selling.
This is also why process should not be seen as admin.
Bad process is admin. It slows people down. It adds forms, fields, and meetings that do not help anyone sell.
Good process does the opposite.
It makes selling easier.
It helps leads get followed up. It keeps opportunities moving. It gives managers a clear view of what is happening. It helps the business spot problems before the end of the month or quarter.
In a small team, this matters even more.
If you only have one or two salespeople, you cannot afford for leads to sit in inboxes. You cannot afford vague follow-up. You cannot afford a pipeline full of hope instead of real opportunities.
Small teams need simple systems because they do not have the spare capacity to cover poor process.
That is why underperformance should be treated as a leadership signal, not just a salesperson issue.
This does not remove responsibility from the salesperson. Salespeople still need to do the work. They need to prospect, follow up, ask good questions, qualify properly, and own their number.
But leaders create the conditions.
If the team does not know what matters, that is a leadership issue.
If the CRM does not show the truth, that is a leadership issue.
If follow-up is random, that is a leadership issue.
If pipeline meetings are just status updates, that is a leadership issue.
If coaching has no rhythm, that is a leadership issue.
Strong sales leadership is not about chasing people harder. It is about building the structure that helps people perform.
That structure does not need to be complex.
Most small teams need a few simple things done well.
They need a clear way to capture and manage leads. They need a simple definition of a qualified opportunity. They need sales stages that mean something. They need follow-up rules. They need weekly pipeline review. They need coaching that improves skill, not just activity.
When those basics are missing, performance becomes uneven.
One salesperson follows up well. Another does not. One deal is managed properly. Another gets forgotten. One customer gets a strong experience. Another gets silence.
That is not a people problem alone.
That is a system problem.
The real shift is moving from memory to rhythm.
Many businesses run sales through memory. The founder remembers who needs a call. The salesperson remembers which quote needs chasing. The manager remembers which deals were discussed last week.
That works until the business gets busy.
Then things slip.
A better sales function runs on rhythm. Leads are reviewed. Deals have next steps. Follow-up is tracked. The pipeline is checked. Coaching happens. The numbers are visible. Everyone knows what needs attention.
That is how sales becomes easier to lead.
Not perfect. Not effortless. But clearer.
And clarity is often what small teams need most.
So before blaming the salesperson, it may be worth asking a better question.
Has the business given this person a clear enough system to succeed?
If the answer is no, then the next step is not more pressure.
It is better structure.


If you have a proven product or service but struggle with inconsistent sales, unqualified leads, or lack of a scalable system, then yes—this is for you. We help businesses ready to scale without the cost or risk of hiring full-time.
Most clients see measurable improvements in lead quality, sales efficiency, and revenue growth within 60-90 days—but long-term success comes from consistent execution and process refinement.
No—it’s better. A full-time sales director costs $200K+ per year, plus commissions and bonuses. We give you expert sales leadership, a trained support team, and a proven system—at a fraction of the cost and without the hiring risk.

Most leaders wait too long to fix their sales problems—only to realise they’ve wasted time, missed opportunities, and fallen behind their competitors.
You don’t need to figure this out alone. When we work together, you get access to proven sales leadership, a dedicated support team, and a structured system designed to drive predictable growth.
But here’s the thing,this isn’t for everyone. We only work with founders who are serious about scaling and ready to take action.
If that’s you, let’s map out a plan to accelerate your revenue, without the full-time cost or risk.
