STARTUP

B2B

WEB APP

From a 3-year stall to a shipped MVP in 4 months.

How a stuck B2B startup escaped scope creep, calmed a burned-out team, and finally launched.

From a 3-year stall to a shipped MVP in 4 months.

How a stuck B2B startup escaped scope creep, calmed a burned-out team, and finally launched.

4 mo

From feature freeze to public launch

+50%

Productive output after cutting circular meetings

1 yr+

Avg. team tenure, up from under 90 days

5 days

New onboarding, down from 2 months

THE SHORT VERSION

A startup stuck in its own loop.

A B2B platform had been in development for 3 years with no launch in sight. Seven siloed teams, zero documentation, and a founder rewriting priorities at midnight. I replaced the chaos with one source of truth, a strict prioritization filter, and real boundaries — then shipped the MVP.

THE CONTEXT

The company was building a cloud workflow tool for independent supplier networks. Angel-funded, ambitious, and certain they'd ship quickly. Six months became one year. One year became three. As the timeline stretched, anxiety scaled with it — and the team kept building an enterprise platform while operating in total daily ambiguity.

WHAT WAS FOUND

Not a tech problem. An operations collapse.

Watching how the team actually worked made the diagnosis obvious within days.

Groundhog Day onboarding

No documentation. New hires figured it out alone, spent two months ramping, and most quit inside 90 days. The cycle never stopped.

Seven teams, seven islands

Every department reinvented its own workflow with free tools and personal accounts. Files and decisions scattered everywhere.

Meetings that decided nothing

Daily meetings ate production time without producing a single action item. Designers, strategists, and developers constantly redid each other's work.

The blame game

Results were demanded by the end of each day, then features shifted the next morning. Working 24/7 with nothing to show became the norm.

"The product wasn't failing because it couldn't be built. It was failing because no one was able to finish anything."

"The product wasn't failing because it couldn't be built. It was failing because no one was able to finish anything."

THE BLUEPRINT

Three rules. Non-negotiable.

A Foundational Recovery & Launch Blueprint built on three uncompromising pillars.

01

Single Source of Truth

One central workspace. Deadlines, owners, and SOPs visible to all seven departments. Locked.

02

Feature Firewall

No feature ships unless it maps to the original core launch requirements. Data, not gut feel.

03

Communication Boundaries

No more 24/7 Slack. Focused, scheduled review windows protected the team's capacity.

EXECUTION

Freeze. Map. Rebuild.

Froze new features. Sat with the founder, mapped the platform's real state, and co-created a bare-bones MVP list.

Built a Change Management gate. Every new idea ran through a validation checklist measuring business value vs. launch delay.

Made roles visible. A transparent directory showed every person's responsibilities across all seven teams.

Rebuilt the design system. A clean, reusable component library let developers ship without constant design loops.

Compressed onboarding. Two-month guesswork became a self-guided five-day sequence with docs and videos. Maximizing volunteer time.

EXECUTION

THE OUTOMCE

They finally shipped.

Four months after we froze the feature list, the MVP went public.

Public launch in 4 months

Ending a three-year stall.

Turnover plummeted

Average tenure pushed past 90 days to over a year.

+50% productive output

From killing circular meetings and duplicate work.

Stress stabilized

24/7 Slack alerts became predictable sprint check-ins.

Public launch in 4 months

Ending a three-year stall.

Turnover plummeted

Average tenure pushed past 90 days to over a year.

+50% productive output

From killing circular meetings and duplicate work.

Stress stabilized

24/7 Slack alerts became predictable sprint check-ins.

EXECUTION

The hardest fix wasn't the workflow. It was the leadership.

There was agreement that the company needed structure — but resisted it the moment enforcement began. Fear of launching anything "imperfect" had the founder bypassing rules and assigning random tasks all at hours.


I countered with empathy, transparency, and one firm tool: a weekly visual Progress Health Report. It tied every structural decision to a real development metric.


When everyone could see, in black and white, that respecting the workflow shipped features — and that mid-week pivots cost the company momentum — acceptance was gained. The team successfully carried the product across the line.

Got a product that won't ship?

The answer is rarely more hours. It's usually fewer decisions, made clearly.

c

2026 SB - Product Design Strategist.

EMPATHETIC.

EMPATHETIC.

EMPATHETIC.

SYSTEMATIC.

SYSTEMATIC.

SYSTEMATIC.

OBSERVATIONAL.

OBSERVATIONAL.

OBSERVATIONAL.

EMPATHETIC.

SYSTEMATIC.

OBSERVATIONAL.

c

2026 SB - Product Design Strategist.

c

2026 SB - Product Design Strategist.

EMPATHETIC.

SYSTEMATIC.

OBSERVATIONAL.

c

2026 SB - Product Design Strategist.

EMPATHETIC.

SYSTEMATIC.

OBSERVATIONAL.