There’s a particular kind of humility that arrives the first time you advise a company through a problem you personally got wrong somewhere else. It’s shaped almost everything about how I run my advisory practice today.
The Founder Seat Teaches You What Actually Breaks
Building 1Touch put me through the specific pain of scaling a two-sided system. What breaks first when you scale isn’t usually the technology. It’s the reporting structure – the moment when the founder is still the only person who understands why a decision was made.
Advising Requires Translating, Not Transplanting
James Deller helps companies and institutions professionalize governance and build a genuine data-driven decision culture, without pretending a one-size template exists. Context matters more than mechanism.
Governance Is Boring Until It’s the Reason You Survive
Every company that scales past its founding stage either builds governance deliberately or has it forced on them chaotically by a crisis. The companies that build reporting structure before they need it have a real advantage.
What Stays Constant Across Every Engagement
One principle hasn’t changed across a single company I’ve built or advised: organizations that develop their people – not just extract output from them – are the ones that compound advantage over time. Financial performance follows healthy culture; it rarely precedes it.