Manchester based
Working across the UK
Independent business diagnostics

You are not necessarily short of work.
You might be short of stability.

Many service businesses are not facing a shortage of customers.
Enquiries still arrive.
Projects continue.
Revenue may even look healthy.
Yet the business feels more difficult to run than it did two or three years ago.

Forecasting is less reliable.
Margins feel tighter.
Clients behave differently.
More effort produces less certainty.
The instinctive response is usually to generate more leads.
Quite often that is not where the problem begins.

What is a business diagnostic?

A business diagnostic examines how commercial performance actually works inside a service business. Rather than looking only at revenue or lead generation, it follows the path from first enquiry through quotation, delivery and repeat business to identify where commercial momentum is being lost.

Sometimes the problem is demand. Sometimes pricing. Sometimes operational friction. Sometimes customers still buy, but buy differently than they did only a few years ago. Without understanding where stability breaks down, businesses often invest in marketing, hiring or technology while the real constraint remains untouched.

When a business becomes harder to run

The first explanation is usually simple.
Sales must have slowed.
Marketing needs fixing.
We need more enquiries.
Sometimes that is true.
Quite often it is not.

Many service businesses continue winning work while becoming less predictable. The same turnover requires more effort. Margins quietly narrow. Forecasting becomes unreliable. Small disruptions create disproportionately large problems. The business has not stopped growing. It has stopped converting activity into stability.

Revenue still arrives, but cash feels tighter.
Projects finish, but too few clients return.
The pipeline looks healthy, yet confidence in next quarter keeps falling.
The business depends on constant intervention from the owner.

Questions worth answering before spending more on growth

  • Has demand actually fallen, or has customer behaviour changed?
  • Are more enquiries producing proportionally more profitable work?
  • Where do potential customers hesitate before buying?
  • Which clients become repeat customers, and which quietly disappear?
  • Is pricing protecting margins or pushing buyers away?
  • Does operational capacity match commercial ambition?
  • What happens when the founder steps away for a week?
  • Which part of the business creates the greatest uncertainty?

Who this diagnostic is designed for

This review is intended for established service businesses rather than early-stage startups. It is most useful where revenue already exists but commercial performance has become inconsistent or increasingly difficult to explain.

Professional services
Engineering and technical businesses
IT and software services
Marketing and creative agencies
Construction and specialist trades
B2B service companies with growing teams

What the diagnostic examines

Rather than reviewing departments separately, the diagnostic follows the commercial journey through the business to identify where stability is being lost.

Demand
How enquiries have changed and whether the market behaves differently today.
Sales process
Where opportunities slow, disappear or become harder to convert.
Pricing
Whether pricing supports profitable decisions or creates hesitation.
Delivery
Where operational friction reduces commercial performance.
Customer retention
Why completed projects fail to generate predictable repeat work.
Founder dependency
Which activities rely on the owner's attention to keep moving.

The outcome

The purpose is not another report. It is to separate symptoms from causes.

By the end of the review you should understand whether the business is primarily constrained by changing demand, pricing, customer retention, operational bottlenecks, delivery capacity or founder dependency. Only then does it make sense to decide whether the next investment belongs in sales, marketing, hiring, systems or somewhere else entirely.

Two ways to start

Every engagement starts with understanding what is actually happening inside the business. Some situations need only a short review. Others require a deeper commercial diagnostic.

Step 1
Revenue Stability Check £150

A focused review designed to establish whether the business is experiencing temporary noise or a recurring commercial pattern.

  • Where commercial pressure first appears
  • Whether problems are isolated or systemic
  • The strongest source of commercial friction
  • Whether a full diagnostic is likely to add value

Suitable when something feels wrong but the cause is still unclear.

Request a Review
Step 2
Revenue Stability Diagnostic £1,000 – £2,500

A detailed commercial assessment explaining where stability has been lost and which constraints deserve attention first.

  • Commercial flow from enquiry to repeat work
  • Sales process and conversion performance
  • Pricing and customer behaviour
  • Operational bottlenecks
  • Customer retention
  • Founder dependency
  • Prioritised recommendations

Designed for businesses where several symptoms appear connected and decisions require evidence rather than assumptions.

Request a Diagnostic

Frequently asked questions

Is this a financial audit?

No. The diagnostic examines commercial performance rather than statutory accounts. It looks at how enquiries become customers, how customers become repeat business and where commercial momentum is being lost.

Do you only work with businesses in Manchester?

No. The diagnostic is delivered remotely across the UK, with in-person workshops available throughout Greater Manchester.

How long does the diagnostic take?

The initial review is typically completed within one week. A full diagnostic usually takes between three and four weeks depending on the complexity of the business.

Will I receive recommendations?

Yes. The outcome is a structured explanation of the commercial constraints affecting the business together with practical priorities rather than a generic report.