Pick the format you'd like to discuss, then a slot below. We'll talk for thirty minutes about what you're working on and whether one of the three engagement formats is a fit. If it isn't, I'll usually be able to point you at someone who is.
The calendar to the right is my real availability for the next 30 days. Strikethroughs are full days. Slots are shown in your local time once you confirm a date.
I read every inquiry myself before the call. If you can send a one-paragraph note in step two about what you're working on, I'll usually have a thoughtful question or two for you when we connect.
A few details so I can come prepared. None of these are required, except your email and name — but the more you tell me, the better the call.
— Form goes to my real inbox. No CRM, no autoresponder. I write back within 12 working hours.
You receive a calendar invite from hello@yourbusiness.com with the call link, the time in your timezone, and a small "if you need to reschedule" footer. That's all you'll get from the booking system itself — everything after is from me.
I write back from my real inbox with two short questions about what you sent in step two. The questions are usually obvious in retrospect, but I find they sharpen the call. Reply when you can; before the call ideally, after if you need to.
I send a one-paragraph note with what I think the right questions for the call are, given your two replies. This isn't a deck or an agenda — it's a note from me, in prose, on what I think is most worth discussing.
Thirty minutes on Zoom. No deck. We talk about what's keeping you up, what you've tried, and whether one of the three formats is a fit. By the end of the call we'll usually know whether to go further, refer you onwards, or just leave it there.
Most of my best work has come from that first conversation, regardless of what happened after. So if you're on the fence about whether to book, please book — and if it isn't a fit at the end of the call, we'll both know, and that's a useful thing too.