Most consultants unknowingly undermine their authority by adapting too much, quoting day rates, or submitting CVs. In this episode, we unpack how these well-meaning habits position you as a functional temp โ not a strategic advisor. Discover how to shift from time-based pricing to outcome-based value, lead with a proven system, and become the only option โ not one of many. If you're serious about leading transformative engagements and commanding respect in your field, this episode is essential listening.
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[1. Opening: The Hidden Risk Consultants Donโt Talk About]
Let me ask you something.
Have you ever submitted a CV or rรฉsumรฉ, quoted a day rate, or adjusted your approach just to fit into a clientโs existing way of working?
Most consultants have. Itโs the standard behaviour in the industry โ but hereโs the thing: itโs also the reason many never break past a certain level of respect or revenue.
Because every time you do those things, youโre not positioning yourself as a strategic advisor. Youโre quietly being positioned as flexible capacity.
[2. From Consultant to Commodity: How It Happens Without You Noticing]
Now, this isnโt about capability โ you could be the most experienced consultant in the room. But the moment you compete on price, or submit your credentials to be compared alongside others, or agree to follow their processโฆ
Youโre not being assessed on your strategic value. Youโre being evaluated like a vendor. And when that happens, youโre not leading the engagement โ youโre hoping to be picked.
[3. Why Most Consultants End Up in the Line-Up]
And itโs easy to see how this happens. Procurement teams are set up to compare suppliers. Internal stakeholders are used to shopping around. Theyโre working off legacy assumptions about what โconsultingโ should look like.
So you get slotted in alongside three, maybe five others. Youโre asked to pitch, to scope, to quote. And if you comply โ because thatโs โhow it worksโ โ youโre reinforcing the very dynamic that devalues your expertise. Itโs not malicious. But itโs misaligned with what strategic consulting actually is.
[4. The Difference Between Strategic Consultant and Functional Temp]
This is where we need to make a clear distinction. strategic consultant shows up to change the system. A functional temp shows up to support it. One brings a framework. The other waits for direction. One defines value. The other gets asked for a CV.
And the hard truth is this: if your offer can be compared on price, availability, or a rรฉsumรฉ โ youโre not operating as a strategic consultant. Youโre functioning like a contractor.
[5. How Good Intentions Lead to Undermined Authority]
And hereโs the twist: most of the time, this isnโt intentional. It comes from a good place. You want to be easy to work with. You want to build trust. You want to win the work. So you say, โIโm flexible. I can adapt. Let me know what works best for you.โ
But every time you say that, you give the frame away. You give away control of how the engagement is defined. And once thatโs gone, your value is at the mercy of someone elseโs context โ not your method.
[6. What Changes When You Lead with a System]
Now letโs flip it. Imagine walking into a conversation not with a pitch โ but with a process. A clear system. A defined methodology. You say, โThis is how I work. This is the outcome the system delivers. If that matches your needs, letโs talk.โ
Suddenly, youโre not one of many. Youโre the only one who delivers it this way. Youโve taken the lead. Youโve removed the variables. Youโve framed the engagement in terms of outcomes, not inputs. And clients notice. They respect it. Because structure is persuasive
[7. Moving from Time-Based Pricing to Outcome-Based Value]
Once youโve shifted your positioning, the pricing follows naturally. Youโre no longer quoting โ10 days at ยฃ1,200 per day.โ Youโre saying, โThis system solves this problem. Hereโs what it costs.โ And that moves the conversation from hours and effort to results and return.
Clients arenโt paying for your time. Theyโre paying for the confidence that something important will get solved โ using your system, not theirs. And when that happens, price becomes a secondary consideration.
[8. When Adaptation is Strategic โ and When It Isnโt]
Now, just to be clear โ thereโs absolutely a place for adaptation. Every organisation has context. Every engagement has nuance. But adaptation should support your system โ not replace it.
The moment you abandon your methodology to suit theirs, you lose the strategic advantage. Itโs not about being rigid. Itโs about being rooted. Adapt where it helps. But donโt dissolve the structure that sets you apart.
[9. Reframing How You Position Yourself from Day One]
So where do you start? It begins with how you position yourself โ before the first meeting even takes place. Donโt send a CV. Donโt offer to scope for free. Donโt ask, โHow would you like me to help?โ
Send a positioning document. Outline your system. Describe the outcomes it delivers. Explain the structure, the logic, and the impact. And then invite them to enter your process โ not ask you to bend into theirs. Because the moment you lead with clarity, you shift the power dynamic. Not with bravado โ but with certainty.
[10. Closing: From One of Many to the Only One]
So hereโs the final thought I want to leave you with. Are you still competing to be the best option โ in a crowd of options? Or are you ready to become the only optionโฆ the one with a system, a structure, and a clear outcome?
Consultants who make this shift donโt chase work. They attract alignment. They donโt bid. They lead. And theyโre not hired for capacity. Theyโre trusted for impact.


