Headline claims
Four numbers recruiters will challenge firstH1 · SCALE50+ active campaignsAkash-confirmed peak
What the record says
Akash confirmed 50+ as the peak. The exact June 10, 2026 operating snapshot in Brain meeting #33 was 42 active campaigns: 39 managed in-house and three through a vendor.
Do not blur
Say “50+ at peak.” If asked for a dated count, use 42 on June 10. Campaigns are not the same as clients because one client could run multiple markets or services.
Interview answer
“At peak I supported an operation with more than 50 active campaigns. The dated snapshot I can point to is June 10, when we had 42 live—39 in-house and three vendor-managed. My job was making the paid media, GHL workflows, reporting, and team handoffs work as one system.”
H2 · SPEND$5M+ Meta spendCareer-wide
Scope
This is Akash’s confirmed cumulative figure across all roles and clients—not an EyeFly-only number and not spend from one calendar year.
Prepare before interview
Be ready to explain the approximate mix by employer, client type, or time period. Do not invent a split if the ledger is unavailable.
Interview answer
“The $5M+ is cumulative across my paid-media career. It includes agency, coaching, B2B, and home-service accounts. The transferable skill is not just placing spend—it is connecting creative, funnel economics, CRM signals, and sales outcomes so budget decisions reflect the business.”
H3 · RETURN10–23× client ROIResult table
Evidence
The supplied EyeFly result table lists six examples: Redeemers 15×, Vesta 15×, Thrasher 10×, Cincinnati Custom Concrete 12×, Custom Concrete Curb 23×, and TWF Construction 23×.
What it teaches
Cost per lead is an early signal. Closed revenue and return are the business result. The strongest media operators connect both.
Attribution boundary
These are client-program results generated by the company system. Describe the parts Akash owned—media, creative, funnel, CRM, data, or operations—without implying he personally closed every job.
Interview answer
“Selected programs in the portfolio produced 10× to 23× return. I use those examples to show why I optimize beyond CPL. My contribution was building and improving the acquisition and operating system; the clients’ sales teams still owned the final close.”
H4 · SYSTEMS100+ AI playbooksTiming caution
Current evidence
The source-of-truth skills folder currently contains 107 versioned playbooks. They cover campaign audits, CRM checks, content production, reporting, meetings, planning, and operations.
Claim boundary
The current count includes work that continued after EyeFly and may include playbooks assembled with AI assistance. Do not imply all 107 were live at EyeFly on the same day or hand-written line by line.
Interview answer
“I built and maintained a library of more than 100 versioned operating playbooks. I designed the workflows, inputs, safeguards, and outputs, then used AI to accelerate implementation. The important skill is converting judgment into a repeatable system the team can run.”
EyeFly Digital
Head of Operations / AI Marketing Systems · 2025–2026Performance marketing at operational scale
Home-service contractors · paid media · GHL · lead handling · reporting · AI-assisted systems
E1 · PORTFOLIO OPERATIONSLed the systems behind a home-services marketing operation supporting 50+ active campaigns at peak, connecting paid media, GoHighLevel CRM workflows, lead handling, reporting, and team execution.Akash-confirmed peakLeadership
The story
As the portfolio grew, campaign performance depended on more than media buying. Leads had to move from Meta into GHL, receive a fast and accurate response, get qualified, reach the client, and appear in reporting the team could act on.
Akash’s ownership
- Connected campaign management to CRM and lead-handling operations.
- Defined workflows, dashboards, SOPs, and escalation paths.
- Translated performance problems into work for media, ops, data, and creative roles.
Learning
A campaign portfolio breaks at the handoffs first. Reliable growth comes from making ownership, status, and exceptions visible.
Transferable skills
Portfolio management · marketing operations · CRM architecture · cross-functional leadership · process design · prioritization.
Defense note
Use 50+ only as the peak Akash confirmed. Use the dated 42-campaign snapshot when an interviewer asks for independently recorded proof.
Interview answer
“My role was to make the whole acquisition machine work, not just the ad account. At peak that meant 50+ campaigns. I connected media, GHL, lead handling, reporting, and team ownership so failures became visible and fixable instead of living in someone’s inbox.”
E2 · CLIENT OUTCOMESHighlighted EyeFly client programs generated $45,885–$717,302 in added revenue and 10–23× ROI.Attached result tableTeam outcome
Named examples
- Vesta Foundation Solutions: $717,302 · 15× · 12 months.
- Redeemers Group: $676,931 · 15× · 12 months.
- Thrasher: $360,000 · 10× · six months.
- Cincinnati Custom Concrete: $226,996 · 12× · five months.
- Custom Concrete Curb: $95,200 · 23× · 60 days.
- TWF Construction: $45,885 · 23× · 30 days.
What it demonstrates
The same acquisition system could work across different markets, tickets, and time horizons. The core discipline was measuring revenue instead of stopping at leads.
Transferable skills
Revenue attribution · case-study communication · portfolio analysis · full-funnel optimization · executive reporting.
Do not claim
Do not say Akash personally generated or closed every dollar. Say the programs or system produced the result and identify his contribution.
Interview answer
“The portfolio had documented examples from roughly $46K to $717K in added client revenue, with 10× to 23× returns. My takeaway is that marketing reporting has to end at revenue. I owned the systems and performance work that helped create those outcomes, while the client’s sales team owned the final close.”
E3 · META LEARNING SYSTEMConsolidated cross-market campaign learning on a shared Meta pixel, cutting lead costs by about 50% and doubling volume; standout launches reached $5–$13 CPL and roughly 50–60% lead-to-book rates.Meeting #33Performance
The story
Separate markets lacked enough conversion volume to learn quickly. Akash consolidated campaigns onto a shared pixel so Meta could learn from qualified outcomes across markets instead of treating each account as an island.
Dated operating proof
- Vista: 56 leads at about $5 CPL.
- Arizona Foundation Solutions: 146 leads in under three weeks, about 50% lead-to-book.
- Pflugerville: 17 leads in under a week at about $13 CPL.
- Blackburn: 18 leads with 60%+ booking rates.
Learning
Machine-learning platforms need consistent event definitions and enough signal volume. Fragmented data creates slow learning and unstable costs.
Transferable skills
Meta optimization · conversion architecture · experimentation · event design · performance diagnosis.
Defense note
The “cut cost in half / doubled volume” wording comes from Akash’s June 10 account of the system. Keep “about” unless a clean before-and-after export is available.
Interview answer
“The constraint was fragmented learning. I moved the portfolio toward a shared pixel and consistent qualified-event logic. That increased the signal Meta could use; in the operating review we saw roughly half the lead cost and double the volume, with launches at $5 to $13 CPL and several 50%+ booking rates.”
E4 · SEVEN-PART AI SYSTEMArchitected a seven-part AI marketing system spanning demand strategy, content, booking, data, operations, AI customer service, and the AI operating layer; completed production validation with 29 checks and zero failures.Post-exit packagingArchitecture
The real chronology
The seven-part system was built from operating lessons learned through EyeFly. The final public installation library and its 29-check validation were completed July 14, 2026—after the June 15 EyeFly exit.
The seven parts
Backlog math · content engine · booking engine · data engine · operations engine · AI customer service · AI operating system.
Learning
AI becomes useful when it sits inside a complete business workflow. A content generator without booking, data, ownership, or exception handling is a demo—not an operating system.
Transferable skills
Productization · systems architecture · technical writing · QA design · customer education · operating-model design.
Integrity rule
Do not say the finished seven-guide library was deployed at EyeFly. The defensible wording is that the architecture grew from EyeFly work and was later packaged and production-tested.
Interview answer
“At EyeFly I learned that isolated automations do not create leverage. I designed a seven-part model covering demand through operations. After EyeFly, I packaged that operating model into a production-tested install library. The transferable skill is turning messy experience into a coherent system someone else can implement.”
E5 · VENDOR-AGNOSTIC OPERATING LAYERBuilt a vendor-agnostic operating layer connecting Claude/Codex, n8n, GoHighLevel, Postgres/pgvector, Meta, Typeform, and Cloudflare so research, tasks, creative briefs, reporting, and recommendations shared one evidence base.Mixed live statesAI systems
The architecture
Postgres held structured operating memory. Claude/Codex performed reasoning and execution. GHL handled customer journeys. Meta supplied acquisition data. n8n connected recurring flows. Cloudflare presented dashboards and pages. Typeform captured structured intake.
Dated source
In the June 10 leadership meeting, Akash described the target as: Postgres = brain, Victor = front end, Claude = operating system. At that moment, the Victor-to-Postgres and n8n connectors were still planned rather than complete.
Learning
Keep the workflow stable and the vendors swappable. Data ownership and clear interfaces matter more than loyalty to one AI model or SaaS tool.
Transferable skills
AI architecture · data modeling · API thinking · tool selection · integration design · technical leadership.
Defense note
“Connecting” compresses work completed at different times. If pressed, separate what was live at EyeFly, what was prototyped, and what matured later.
Interview answer
“I designed the system so the company’s knowledge lived in Postgres, the AI layer could reason over it, GHL ran customer journeys, and n8n connected recurring work. Not every connector went live simultaneously. My principle was vendor independence: own the data and make the tools replaceable.”
E6 · AI CONTENT ENGINEDesigned an AI-assisted content engine that turned recordings, customer research, and performance data into Reels, YouTube videos, static ads, carousels, and email with repeatable briefs, review gates, and distribution tracking.Later maturationContent operations
The problem
Content production was fragmented by format. The engine separated the source idea from its outputs: one recording or research insight could become multiple assets without recreating strategy each time.
The workflow
Source material → transcript/research → hooks and briefs → human review → video/static/carousel/email variants → distribution queue → performance feedback.
Learning
AI is strongest at transformation and variation. Humans should retain voice, positioning, context, and final approval.
Transferable skills
Content strategy · generative-AI workflows · creative operations · editorial QA · repurposing · lifecycle distribution.
Timeline
EyeFly had the underlying creative system and modular ad process. The broad multi-format content engine matured later. Defend it as design plus later implementation, not necessarily one fully automated EyeFly pipeline.
Interview answer
“I treated content as a system, not a pile of posts. We started with one strong source—recording, research, or performance insight—then used AI to produce format-specific drafts. Humans controlled voice and final QA. That cut repeated strategy work and made learning reusable across formats.”
E7 · CUSTOMER JOURNEYProductized the customer journey from content or ad through qualification and booked inspection, including AI CSR prompts, speed-to-lead follow-up, screening, routing, human rescue, and closed-job attribution.Partial deploymentLifecycle
What was live
Meta ads generated inbound conversations. GHL bots asked qualifying questions, collected location and phone details, applied tags, and transferred qualified leads. Humans handled exceptions and incorrect disqualifications.
Example of human rescue
In the June 10 meeting, an unknown connected subaccount was wrongly disqualifying crawl-space leads. The team manually reactivated conversations while tracing the source—proof that automation needs exception ownership.
Learning
Speed matters, but constrained automation matters more. The right design handles repetition automatically and routes ambiguity to a person.
Transferable skills
Lifecycle marketing · conversational design · CRM routing · service recovery · QA · attribution planning.
Defense note
Qualification and transfer were live. Booking and closed-job feedback varied by client because status data was incomplete. Separate the designed end-state from fleet-wide deployment.
Interview answer
“I designed the journey around fast response and constrained automation. The bot handled repeatable qualification and routing; humans rescued edge cases. The biggest lesson came from a bad connected workflow that kept disqualifying valid leads: every automation needs an owner, a visible exception path, and a way to reverse mistakes.”
E8 · OPERATING BRAIN + PLAYBOOKSCreated a Postgres/pgvector operating brain, 100+ reusable AI playbooks, seven-plus live KPI dashboards, and a 43-SOP library spanning campaign QA, creative production, lead handling, client health, attribution, and reporting.Count timingOperations
Current scale
The brain currently contains 1,623 session handoffs, 2,083 video notes, 26 meeting records, and 7,386 tasks. The live source skills folder contains 107 playbooks.
What the system solved
Parallel work stopped living only in chat history. Decisions, meeting evidence, tasks, reusable workflows, and dashboards had durable homes that later sessions and teammates could query.
Learning
AI memory is a data-governance problem. Durable structure, source references, retrieval, and ownership matter more than a clever prompt.
Transferable skills
Knowledge management · semantic search · SOP authoring · analytics design · institutional memory · operating cadence.
Count boundary
These are current counts. The library continued growing after EyeFly. Use the counts to describe the system’s scale today, not to imply every record existed by June 2026.
Interview answer
“I built the operating brain because AI without durable context repeats mistakes. We stored meetings, handoffs, tasks, and documents in Postgres, added semantic retrieval, then wrapped recurring work in versioned playbooks and dashboards. The result was continuity across people, tools, and sessions.”
E9 · LEAD-TO-REVENUE FEEDBACKConnected Meta conversion signals, GoHighLevel lead status, booked appointments, and closed-job revenue to improve attribution and optimize for business outcomes instead of cheap leads.Design vs. fleet adoptionAttribution
The intended loop
Meta spend → lead/conversation → qualified status → booked appointment → sold job → revenue value → reporting and future optimization.
What the meeting record reveals
The June 10 team explicitly lacked consistent booking and closed-job updates from many clients. Akash advocated cost per appointment and cost per sold job over close rate alone and proposed feeding scheduled/closed events back to Meta.
Learning
The hard part of attribution is operational compliance. A technically correct pipeline fails if humans do not mark outcomes consistently.
Transferable skills
Attribution strategy · CAPI/event design · revenue analytics · data-quality operations · stakeholder enablement.
Safer wording
In an interview, say “designed and partially implemented” unless discussing a specific client where the full loop was verified. The fleet-wide closed-revenue loop was not complete.
Interview answer
“I designed the feedback loop to optimize for sold jobs rather than cheap leads. The technical path was Meta to GHL to booked and closed outcomes. The real constraint was data discipline—many clients did not mark results consistently. That taught me attribution projects need process ownership and adoption, not just APIs.”
E10 · PERFORMANCE CREATIVEDirected strategy and production for 300+ performance ads across eight-plus home-service niches, combining ad-library research, customer pain mining, modular copy, human review, spend-first analysis, and winning-creative reuse.Prior résuméCreative strategy
Scope
The prior résumé identifies 300+ ads across niches including foundation, crawl space, concrete/flatwork, drainage, tree removal, epoxy, HVAC, and septic.
The method
Research live ads and customer pain → separate hooks, bodies, proof, and calls to action → create modular variants → review for clarity and claim safety → launch → rank by spend first → reuse winning components.
Learning
Creative volume only matters when each variation tests a clear idea. Spend is the leading signal of what the platform can deliver; downstream lead and sales data explains whether it is profitable.
Transferable skills
Direct-response creative · research synthesis · modular production · testing design · creative analytics · team QA.
Prepare proof
The count is self-reported in prior résumé material. Before an interview, have two or three concrete creative examples ready—brief, hypothesis, variant, spend signal, downstream result.
Interview answer
“I directed more than 300 performance ads across at least eight home-service niches. The scale came from a modular system: research the pain, isolate the hook and proof, produce controlled variations, then use spend and downstream performance to decide what to clone. I can walk you through specific examples rather than asking you to trust the count.”
ScaleClients.io
Account Manager · 2024Full-funnel client growth
15-client portfolio · Meta sales-call funnels · daily communication · weekly constraint planning
S1 · CLIENT PORTFOLIOOwned the experience and results of a 15-client portfolio, leading each account through daily Slack communication, weekly one-on-one strategy calls, and proactive performance planning.Akash-confirmed role
The role
Each account was an established seven- or eight-figure agency or coach. The account manager/media buyer owned both results and the client experience, not a narrow channel task.
Operating cadence
Daily Slack communication for active issues and momentum; weekly one-on-one calls to review constraints, decisions, and the next seven-day plan.
Learning
Proactive communication is part of performance. Clients trust a clear diagnosis and next step more than a reactive explanation after results decline.
Transferable skills
Account leadership · executive communication · portfolio prioritization · expectation management · retention.
Source boundary
The role description specifies the 15-client portfolio and cadence; Akash confirmed this described his work. Prepare one real client-turnaround story to make the claim concrete.
Interview answer
“I owned 15 established clients at a time. My job was to lead, not wait for requests. Daily Slack kept execution moving; weekly calls focused on the biggest business constraint and the next seven-day plan. That taught me account management and media buying are inseparable at high ticket.”
S2 · DAY-ONE CASH TARGETCreated, launched, optimized, and scaled Meta sales-call funnels toward a 2×+ day-one cash-collected target, excluding accounts receivable and contracted revenue.Role targetEconomics
Why this metric
Day-one cash collected protects cash flow. It excludes future contracted revenue and unpaid receivables, forcing the team to judge acquisition by money actually collected.
What Akash managed
Offer and angle inputs, creative, campaign build, landing/VSL flow, tracking, launch QA, daily monitoring, and scaling decisions.
Learning
ROAS can mislead when it counts future contract value. Cash timing matters when scaling spend.
Transferable skills
Unit economics · cash-flow-aware media buying · funnel launches · scaling · measurement discipline.
Claim precision
The 2× figure was the role’s target. The résumé correctly says “toward.” Do not imply every client consistently achieved it unless Akash has account-level proof.
Interview answer
“Our target was 2× day-one cash collected—not contracted revenue. That changed how I judged campaigns because the company needed cash to fund the next dollar of spend. I owned the sales-call funnel from launch through optimization and scaled only when the cash economics supported it.”
S3 · FULL-FUNNEL MANAGEMENTManaged the full funnel from campaign and creative through call booking, show rate, close rate, and offer economics, improving profitability and throughput beyond the ad account.Akash-confirmed roleGrowth
The diagnostic model
Ad delivery → click/lead → booking conversion → show rate → close rate → price, payment terms, and margin. A bad outcome could originate at any stage.
How decisions changed
Low sales did not automatically mean “change the ads.” The constraint could be offer clarity, booking friction, reminders, sales capacity, close rate, or day-one payment structure.
Learning
A media buyer who ignores sales and offer economics can optimize the wrong metric perfectly.
Transferable skills
Growth strategy · funnel analysis · CRO · sales alignment · offer economics · bottleneck diagnosis.
Interview answer
“I managed beyond the ad account. When revenue missed, I traced the entire funnel—booking, show, close, and offer economics—before deciding what to change. That prevented us from blaming ads for a sales or offer problem and focused work on the actual bottleneck.”
S4 · CONSTRAINT PLANNINGUsed daily and weekly reporting to identify each client’s biggest constraint, build a seven-day action plan, and optimize ROAS, CPA, CPL, CPM, CTR, and downstream sales performance.Akash-confirmed roleAnalytics
The cadence
Daily monitoring caught delivery or tracking issues. Weekly reviews forced prioritization: one largest constraint, one plan, one seven-day learning cycle.
Metric hierarchy
CPM and CTR explain delivery; CPL and CPA explain acquisition cost; ROAS and cash explain business outcome. Downstream performance prevents optimizing vanity metrics.
Learning
Dashboards do not improve performance by themselves. The value comes from choosing the constraint and assigning the next experiment.
Transferable skills
Performance reporting · executive synthesis · experimental planning · KPI design · prioritization.
Interview answer
“Every week I converted reporting into a constraint plan. We reviewed delivery metrics and downstream sales data, named the single biggest bottleneck, then agreed on the next seven days of work. That kept clients and internal teams aligned around action instead of dashboard commentary.”
S5 · MARKET INSIGHT + RETENTIONAnalyzed client markets, consumers, and competitors to uncover new positioning, funnel, and creative opportunities; held accountability for under 5% monthly churn and consistent reviews and referrals.Role accountability
Research contribution
Client-specific strategy required understanding the offer, market sophistication, customer pain, competitor claims, and where the funnel contradicted buyer expectations.
Why retention was a KPI
Churn and referrals were treated as objective signals of client satisfaction. Account leadership included profitability, communication, and confidence—not only campaign metrics.
Learning
Retention is a lagging indicator of results plus expectation management. Research creates the strategy; proactive leadership creates trust.
Transferable skills
Market research · positioning · voice of customer · retention · client success · strategic communication.
Claim precision
Under 5% churn and monthly reviews/referrals were role outcomes Akash was accountable for. Unless a dated scorecard is available, say “held accountable for,” not “achieved every month.”
Interview answer
“I was accountable for both performance and retention. I used market and competitor research to find better positioning and creative opportunities, then led the client proactively. The target was under 5% monthly churn with consistent reviews and referrals; those metrics kept us honest about the client experience.”
Mueller Communications
Digital Performance Manager · 2022–2023Cross-channel performance infrastructure
B2B and enterprise · reporting · content operations · retained accounts
M1 · CROSS-CHANNEL REPORTINGExpanded cross-channel reporting from two to 11+ sources and standardized KPIs across paid media, SEO, social, CRM, email, and web.Prior résuméMeasurement
The problem
Reporting was too narrow to explain the whole customer journey. Teams could see isolated channel results but not compare activity through a common measurement framework.
What changed
Akash broadened the inputs and standardized KPI definitions so paid, organic, CRM, email, and web reporting could be reviewed together.
Learning
Adding data sources without common definitions creates more disagreement. Standardization is the real leverage.
Transferable skills
Marketing analytics · KPI governance · stakeholder reporting · cross-channel strategy · data visualization.
Prepare specifics
The prior résumé supports “two to 11+.” Before an interview, list the exact sources and one decision the expanded reporting changed; do not improvise the eleven.
Interview answer
“The reporting environment started with two meaningful sources. I expanded it to more than eleven and standardized KPIs across paid, SEO, social, CRM, email, and web. The important part was not the connector count—it was giving leadership one comparable view of performance.”
M2 · SOP + AI ENABLEMENTBuilt 30+ SOPs for campaign intake, content production, creative QA, reporting, dashboards, and optimization cycles; introduced AI workshops and practical AI-enabled content workflows.Prior résuméEnablement
The story
Recurring work depended too heavily on individual memory. SOPs made the sequence, owner, inputs, quality checks, and definition of done explicit.
AI contribution
Workshops and workflows introduced practical use cases—research, drafting, repurposing, synthesis, and QA support—rather than selling AI as a replacement for strategy.
Learning
An SOP should encode judgment, not merely document clicks. AI adoption works when attached to a real workflow and review standard.
Transferable skills
Process design · training · change management · AI enablement · creative operations · documentation.
Prepare proof
Have two SOP examples and one workshop example ready: the before-state, the operating rule introduced, and how quality or speed changed.
Interview answer
“I built more than 30 SOPs around the recurring marketing workflow, from intake through optimization. I also introduced practical AI workshops. My approach was to attach AI to a defined job and a human review standard, so adoption improved execution instead of creating more ungoverned content.”
M3 · ACCOUNT LEADERSHIPDirected $40K+ in monthly retainers across major B2B accounts and led multidisciplinary work spanning content, paid media, SEO, analytics, web, and executive reporting.Prior résuméAccount leadership
What “directed” means
Coordinated the strategy, priorities, deliverables, reporting, and client communication across several specialties rather than personally executing every channel task.
The management challenge
B2B accounts had longer feedback cycles and multiple stakeholders. Work needed to connect campaign activity to business goals while keeping specialists aligned.
Learning
Multidisciplinary leadership depends on a shared brief, clear ownership, and an executive narrative that connects specialist outputs.
Transferable skills
Account direction · resource prioritization · integrated marketing · executive communication · team leadership.
Claim boundary
$40K+ is the combined monthly retainer responsibility from prior résumé material. Do not imply personal compensation or one client’s fee.
Interview answer
“I directed more than $40K in monthly retained work across major B2B accounts. I aligned content, paid, SEO, analytics, web, and reporting around one client strategy. My role was to set priorities, coordinate specialists, and make the performance story clear to executives.”
Founder-level consulting experience
Small business and B2B · acquisition · creative · client delivery
N1 · AGENCY BUILDBuilt a six-figure agency to $12K+ monthly recurring revenue and led a five-person team across acquisition, creative, client delivery, analytics, and operations.Prior résuméEntrepreneurship
The story
Social Nomad was the environment where Akash had to sell, deliver, retain, hire, and manage cash flow. $12K+ MRR annualizes above six figures, so the two claims are consistent.
Leadership scope
A five-person team covered complementary functions. Akash’s role was setting the offer, winning clients, directing delivery, monitoring results, and building enough process to delegate.
Learning
Owning the whole business creates empathy for client economics. Marketing decisions affect delivery capacity, retention, and cash—not only lead volume.
Transferable skills
Entrepreneurship · sales · hiring · delegation · agency economics · client delivery · team leadership.
Prepare specifics
Be ready with the service mix, typical client, acquisition method, team roles, and approximate tenure at the $12K MRR level.
Interview answer
“I built Social Nomad to more than $12K in recurring monthly revenue and led a five-person team. Because I owned sales through delivery, I learned to judge marketing by its effect on cash flow, capacity, and retention. That founder perspective still shapes how I manage client accounts.”
N2 · CLIENT ROIDesigned paid and outbound acquisition systems, landing pages, content, and email sequences that produced 100–500% client ROI.Prior résuméAcquisition
The system
Channel strategy and outreach drove attention; landing pages converted interest; content built trust; email follow-up captured delayed demand. The result depended on the system, not one isolated asset.
What the range means
100–500% represents selected client outcomes across different programs. It should not be described as the guaranteed or average result for every engagement.
Learning
Small businesses often need the basics connected before advanced optimization matters. Consistent message, offer, conversion path, and follow-up create most of the gain.
Transferable skills
Demand generation · outbound · landing-page strategy · email lifecycle · copywriting · ROI communication.
Prepare proof
Have at least one client example with the spend/cost basis, attributable revenue, time window, and calculation. Otherwise keep the wording “selected programs.”
Interview answer
“Selected consulting programs produced roughly 100% to 500% ROI. I built the acquisition system across paid or outbound, landing pages, content, and email follow-up. The lesson was that most gains came from connecting the basics and measuring the whole path, not chasing one clever tactic.”
Social Nomad Consulting
Marketing Consultant · 2019–2021