Next intake: 15th of June. Limited to 20 new members.
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A project ends, and there is that moment. Not panic. Not yet. But something tightens. You open your laptop, check your inbox, scroll LinkedIn a little more intentionally than usual, and think: “I should probably reach out to a few people.” “I need to get visible again.”
So you do. Until work picks up again.
Then everything else becomes secondary. Follow-ups sit in drafts. People you meant to reply to stay unanswered. Ideas for visibility never happen. A few months later, the same thought comes back: Where is the next client coming from?
Or you’re fully booked, busy, no time for this, but nothing new is being nurtured. Different moments. Same underlying problem.
Your pipeline only moves when you push it. Which means the moment you stop… everything slows down with you.
Business development happens when you have the energy and disappears when you don’t. Your pipeline stays fragile. If all of this sounds familiar, then please keep reading. Nurture might just be the place where you'll thrive.
Most people think the problem is consistency. It is not. You have been consistent, just in bursts.
The real issue is that your business is still built in a way that collapses under pressure.
Business development becomes an emergency, not a practice. That is not a talent problem. It is a rhythm problem.
And in climate and impact work, it hits harder. Clients don’t always immediately understand the value. Budgets are tighter. Trust takes longer. Sales cycles are slower.