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Saturday, Apr 20, 2024

Scale-Up Consultant

Management consultant, coach and advisor Jonathan Goldhill is a living contradiction — he’s the founder and leader of the Goldhill Group and yet he is the only person in the group. He has established himself as a specialist in helping a company scale up, yet he has zero interest in expanding his own firm. Instead of coming to an office each day in a three-piece suit, he works out of his home office in Oak Park. Yet his formula works: Across 30 years, Goldhill has grown companies from fledgling to seven figures and has coached more than 1,000 business owners and executive teams. Growth talk Goldhill does not deal with startups; he advises closely held private companies, usually family owned firms with $1 million or more in revenue. “A lot of them have been in construction,” Goldhill said. “Not retail, not franchise, but business services, property management, tech, IT.” Currently he has six client companies, helping them devise long-term strategies to achieve five- to 10-year goals. “What are the underlying advantages can we put together a brand promise?” he asked, rhetorically. “How do we get people to buy faster?” Goldhill told the Business Journal that scaling up a company involves ensuring that “they have the right seats, the right people, the right things and they’re doing those right things right.” Having the right people, he continued, means those hired share the core values of the company — a set of operating agreements or behaviors — whether that constitutes working competently and professionally or responding to emails within 24 hours. “We work on the chemistry with the team,” he said. So what happens when long-term employees become too complacent? “Then we need to move them out of the company,” Goldhill said. “We’re also setting up key performing indicators or what I call ‘metrics.’ If they’re not meeting their requirements, (then they must go).” Common mistakes companies make while scaling up is keeping on the wrong employees out of comfort, said Goldhill, who tends to stick with clients even after they’ve scaled up to self-sufficiency. “My clients are ongoing,” he said. “Everything is month-to-month, but it’s ongoing. My typical client is with me for three or four or five years.” Craig Pollack, founder or FPA Inc., an IT company in Woodland Hills, retained Goldhill for 12 years. “He probably helped me hold my partner a little more accountable,” said Pollack, who ultimately bought out his business partner’s interest. Another client is a second-generation family business in Watsonville named K&D Landscaping Inc. Chief Executive Justin White has listened to Goldhill and grown his revenues from $1 million to $8 million in four years. White attributes the expansion to Goldhill’s guidance and expertise. “We develop quarterly rocks and KPIs (key performance indicators) that each person is responsible for to ensure we stay on track with our plans and goals,” said White. He also enjoys Goldhill’s consultation style. “He listens first to you and provides feedback,” White said. “He isn’t going to push you to do something that isn’t in the best interest of the company, but he may push you to do things that make you uncomfortable.” White recalled having to take a leave of absence two months ago during the company’s busiest month after injuring himself in a motorcycle accident. “Thanks to the help of Jonathan, I knew the team would be fine because we have built a company that can run off processes and systems, not a CEO,” White said. “(Having returned to work), the team is doing great and firing on all cylinders. I can guarantee this would not have been the case five years ago.” Storied Valley past Twenty years ago, Goldhill lived in the San Fernando Valley and ran the Valley Economic Development Center, which recently declared bankruptcy. He spent 10 years at VEDC and was chagrined by the news it had run into trouble. “I was not surprised, but I was a bit disappointed to hear they filed Chapter 11,” Goldhill said. “VEDC, under (former chief executive) Roberto (Barragan)’s leadership, seemed to be strong while expanding to other states. Since his sudden departure in October 2016, I understand there have been four people assigned to the president’s role. Any sudden departure, followed by lots of turnover of the most key position, is very damaging to an organization.” Ironically, Goldhill has no interest in applying his advice about how to grow a company to his own enterprise. “I’m not looking to scale up my business,” he said. “If I add one or two new clients a quarter, I have a very nice income (and) a little bit more freedom to travel. I picked up clients in Bend, Oregon; San Diego; Tampa; Las Vegas; Phoenix — places where I want to go.” And, while he consults with clients about key hires, he doesn’t want to personally manage employees. “I outsource my accounting, my social media, some marketing,” he said. “Everything is managed by myself. I keep it simple.”

Michael Aushenker
Michael Aushenker
A graduate of Cornell University, Michael covers commercial real estate for the San Fernando Valley Business Journal. Prior to the Business Journal, Michael covered the community and entertainment beats as a staff writer for various newspapers, including the Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, The Palisadian-Post, The Argonaut and Acorn Newspapers. He has also freelanced for the Santa Barbara Independent, VC Reporter, Malibu Times and Los Feliz Ledger.

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