What Are Our Strengths
Innovating Strategy - Analysis and Imagination 
We are called upon to deploy both analytic and creative thinking skills to define and solve a wide range of business challenges in non-standard ways. Clients value our ability to think differently about their business, and help them to find creative solutions often to do with growth.
Facilitating Conversation - Listening and Speaking 
Our clients and their teams look to us as skilled listeners and responders in order to organize messy information in a way they can use to take action. From formal workshops to unstructured conversations, we ask revealing questions, listen carefully, find patterns in the responses, create conceptual categories and re-tell the story we hear in a way that makes sense and is useful to the client. When they say with satisfaction "Did we come up with that?!" we smile and know we've done our job well.
Providing Perspective - Seeing from the Inside and the Outside 
Our clients partner with us because we stay close enough to be relevant but far enough away to retain objectivity. We are "inside" enough because our experience with clients facing similar issues in other industries enables us to speak with relevance. At the same time we stand "outside" of the organizational political dynamics to name what everyone is thinking but perhaps no one will say, the classic role of the "third party".
Bridging Relationships - Bringing Together "Our Side" and "Their Side" 
A key part of the planning and executing of strategies often involves bridging relationships under strain. We have an ability to "live in the middle", seeing both sides of an issue in order to help people and teams deal with relational and ideological conflict in a productive manner.
Nurturing Vision - Living in the "Here and Now" and "Not Yet Here" 
Our clients often compromise giving the necessary time to think about the long-term view in order to meet the demands of the moment. We have the ability of helping clients see their business over a longer time horizon "the "not yet" " in order to help them make better decisions in the "now".
