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Why we do this.

Good financial advice shouldn't be a privilege of scale. Most of the businesses that need it most are the ones least able to buy it.

To give owner-operated businesses the financial clarity that used to require being big enough to hire a CFO — at a price that makes sense before you are.

The problem we're actually solving

There's a gap in the market and most owners fall straight into it.

Below a certain size, you get a tax preparer. Once a year, transactional, focused entirely on a filing deadline. Nobody's watching the business — they're processing a return.

Above a certain size, you hire a controller or a CFO and the problem goes away. You've got someone whose whole job is understanding what the numbers are telling you.

In between — which is most businesses, for most of their life — there's nothing. You're too big for the once-a-year model to be safe, and too small for a six-figure hire to be sane. So you run on instinct, and instinct is right until suddenly it isn't.

That gap is what we exist to fill. Not cheaper tax prep. Not a bookkeeper with better software. The judgment layer — for businesses that can't yet justify buying it full-time.

What we believe

Clarity is the whole product.

Accurate books are table stakes, not an achievement. Anyone can produce a correct balance sheet. The value is in what it tells you to do next, and that only exists if someone bothers to say it out loud in language you can act on.

The billing model shapes the advice.

Hourly billing quietly punishes exactly the behavior that helps you — asking questions early. Every call has a meter on it, so you don't make the call, so the small problem becomes the big one. Flat fees aren't a pricing gimmick. They're what makes the relationship work.

Confusion is usually a choice someone made.

Financial language is not inherently impenetrable. When an explanation is impossible to follow, that's frequently a feature — it protects the person explaining. We think you should understand your own business, and that understanding it is not an advanced skill you failed to acquire.

The right answer is sometimes "you don't need us."

A firm that never says no isn't giving advice, it's taking orders. We'd rather lose an engagement and keep a relationship than sell someone a service they'll resent paying for.

Small businesses deserve the same rigor as big ones.

The books of a twelve-person company should be as defensible as those of a twelve-hundred person one. Smaller doesn't mean looser. It usually just means less margin for the error.


What this commits us to

A mission you can't be held to is decoration. Here's what ours actually obligates:

  • Quote before we work. In writing, every time. You never find out the price afterward.
  • Never bill for a conversation. If you're wondering whether a question is worth asking, we've already failed.
  • Close on schedule. A date you can plan around, not a vague promise.
  • Say it plainly. No advice you'd need us to re-explain.
  • Tell you when the answer is no. Including when it costs us the work.

Hold us to this. If we quote you after the fact, bill you for a phone call, miss a close date without telling you first, or hand you something you can't understand — say so. A mission statement nobody can enforce isn't worth the page it's printed on.

See whether we mean it.

Thirty minutes, no pitch, no invoice. The easiest way to test a claim is to make us prove it.

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