Stop Waiting—Start Consulting And Build Scale
I’m often asked how to start a company without outside funding, a huge team, or a perfect plan. My answer is simple: start by selling your skills, prove value fast, and scale from there. You don’t need permission to build something real—you need a paying customer and the courage to keep going.
From One Client To A Company
At 26, I didn’t have a detailed roadmap. I had time, energy, and one client who paid me well enough to cover my bills. That gave me room to act. I took on more consulting clients, refined what worked, and focused on results. Momentum is built by stacking wins, not waiting for lightning to strike.
“I had enough money to pay my bills and then some with my first client, and then I signed another one, another one… making four times as much money as a consultant.”
When my income jumped and the demand kept coming, the next move became obvious: hire people who were better than me at specific pieces of the work. That’s when the idea grew from a solo hustle into a business with structure, standards, and real scale.
“That was the birth of Hawke.”
It wasn’t a straight line. But it was clear: cash flow from service work is the most underrated launchpad for entrepreneurs. It gives you proof, feedback, and options—fast.
Know Your Value, Then Price For Outcomes
People talk a lot about “knowing your worth.” In business, that means charging for outcomes, not hours. Companies don’t buy time. They buy growth, clarity, and results. When I focused on the result, I stopped playing defense on pricing and started building leverage.
“That’s when I started hiring people and going, oh, there’s something bigger here.”
If the work drives revenue or saves real cost, price it like it matters. That shift doesn’t just improve your margins—it forces you to deliver.
What Actually Works
Here’s the simple path I followed—and still recommend—to anyone with marketable skills and the drive to build:
- Start with one paying client and deliver a clear outcome.
- Productize what works into a repeatable offer with set pricing.
- Add the next client before you overbuild the team.
- Hire specialists to cover what you can’t scale alone.
- Track results and use them as proof to win better clients.
This isn’t theory. It works because it forces focus. Each step funds the next. Each win earns the right to grow.
The Pushback—and Why It Falls Apart
I hear the same objections. “I don’t have a network.” Build one by solving a real problem for one person and asking for a referral. “I’m not ready.” Neither was I. You get ready by doing the work. “Consulting isn’t scalable.” It is if you define a repeatable offer, standardize delivery, and hire talent to own the details.
The truth: discipline and delivery scale. Excuses don’t.
What I’d Tell My 26-Year-Old Self
Say yes to the first real opportunity. Ship faster. Measure outcomes, not effort. Keep overhead light until the demand proves itself. And when it does, don’t hesitate to hire great people. That’s how side income turns into a company with staying power.
If you have a marketable skill, you have a business model. The gap is action. The first client is out there. Go get the win, then stack it.
Final Thought
Stop waiting for the perfect idea—start solving a paid problem now. Price for outcomes, protect your time, and build simple systems that let others help you scale. The path is there. Take the first step today, and make your results loud enough that the next step becomes obvious.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How do I find my first consulting client?
Start with people who already trust you—former colleagues, classmates, or founders in your circle. Offer a clear outcome, a defined timeline, and ask for a referral after delivery.
Q: What should I charge in the beginning?
Price the result, not the hours. Tie your fee to a meaningful business outcome—revenue lift, cost savings, or specific milestones you can measure and prove.
Q: When is the right time to hire help?
Hire when demand is steady and a specialist can do a part of the work faster or better than you. Use cash flow to fund the role, not guesses.
Q: How do I make services scalable?
Turn repeated work into a standard offer with clear scope, pricing, and templates. Document steps, automate handoffs, and train people to deliver the same result every time.
Q: What if I’m afraid of failing publicly?
Keep the first project tight, deliver fast, and learn quickly. Small, real wins beat big, quiet plans. Use results as your safety net and your signal to grow.