An academic and executive-function coaching practice had the demand, the coaches, and the reputation. What it didn’t have was a backend, so every fall enrollment got rebuilt from memory under deadline. In 90 days, that changed.
Academic & executive-function coaching practice · Bergen County · 12 weekly sessions · 7 systems built
“In the beginning I was like, no, I really don’t think so much of it relies on me. And I’m like, oh my God, everything relies on me.”
The practice had everything that should have made it stable: a full roster of coaches, families who came back year after year, and a founder who was genuinely good at the work. It ran on her ability to hold all of it together.
Scheduling happened over text, back-and-forth with every parent until a time stuck. Contracts took 90 minutes to send after each call. There was no offboarding when an engagement ended, no documented way to bring a new coach onto the roster, and no record of where leads were even coming from. Every process lived in her head. Every fall, the whole operation got rebuilt from memory under deadline.
“I remember the anxiety that I had for all of August, trying to keep up with these people.”
That’s not a coaching problem. That’s a systems problem.
Not recommended. Not handed over as a PDF. By the time the systems were live, every returning family was re-enrolled for fall with deposits paid, in June, not August.
Scheduling was the founder’s most-named pain, a chain of texts and phone tag for every inquiry. A self-serve booking link was built and connected to her calendar, ready to share with referral sources and guidance counselors. Parents pick a time that works for them. She’s out of the loop entirely.
Contracts used to take 90 minutes to assemble and send after every call. The whole intake flow was rebuilt: inquiry comes in, she talks to the parent, the contract goes out with e-signature in minutes.
“Everything’s so much more streamlined, and it was just, like, boop, boop, send it out.”
The practice runs on a seasonal enrollment cycle, and the old version meant re-selling the entire roster every Summer with nothing to hold a spot. A reservation and deposit structure, full-month, non-refundable, transfer-only, was deployed ahead of the enrollment window. The result is the centerpiece of the engagement: every returning family signed for fall with deposits paid in June.
“It’s all done. It’s all finished now. All done, buttoned up. And I can literally just enjoy my summer.”
Bringing a new coach onto the roster lived entirely in the founder’s head. A structured onboarding hub was built, a complete folder of everything a new coach needs, so the next hire follows a process instead of a conversation. Paired with a documented roster and a matching framework, so the right coach gets paired with the right student by criteria, not gut.
Previously, when an engagement ended, nothing happened, no wrap-up, no feedback, no referral ask. A four-email offboarding sequence was built and scheduled to deploy automatically, so every completed engagement closes out professionally without the founder touching it.
The founder had no idea where her leads actually came from. Referral tracking was added directly to the booking intake, so every new inquiry records its source, turning an invisible pipeline into data she can act on.
Documentation was inconsistent and personal to her. Session-note standards and a cleaned-up folder and naming structure were put in place so the practice’s records are legible to someone other than the founder, the foundation for ever handing any of it off.
| Dimension | Before | After |
|---|---|---|
| Scheduling | Manual text back-and-forth | Self-serve booking link |
| Contracts | 90 minutes per client | Minutes, with e-signature |
| Fall enrollment | Rebuilt from memory every August | Locked in June, deposits paid |
| Coach onboarding | Lived in the founder’s head | Documented hub + matching framework |
| Offboarding | Nothing happened | Automated 4-email sequence |
| Lead source | Unknown | Tracked at intake |
“I consider myself a very organized person, but I know there’s a lot of me that’s very scattered that I haven’t been able to truly harness.”
The Blueprint didn’t make her more disciplined. It built the structure her discipline had been substituting for.
Every season started from scratch, the whole operation held in her head. Scheduling was a texting chain. Contracts ate 90 minutes a client. New coaches were onboarded by conversation and memory. When a family left, nothing closed the loop. Leads arrived from somewhere she couldn’t name. And every August was a wall of anxiety, re-selling the entire roster under deadline. Everything relied on her, because nothing existed without her.
A self-serve booking link doing the scheduling. Contracts out in minutes. A reservation system that locked the entire returning roster for fall with deposits paid before Summer. A coach onboarding hub and matching framework that make the next hire repeatable. Offboarding that runs itself. Lead sources tracked. Documentation legible. Her role shifted from being the system to running on top of one.
“It’s been really nice to make progress and move forward without such resistance on my end, because you’re doing it.”
This founder didn’t lack drive, talent, or organization. She had all three. What she lacked was infrastructure, the systems that hold a seasonal, multi-coach practice together so it doesn’t have to be rebuilt by hand every year.
A professional coach herself, she recognized the model immediately:
“I very much feel like I’m in my own executive-function coaching session, but it’s different, because Holly is doing things for me so that I can focus on what I need to focus on.”
For the first time, the busiest season of the year was finished before it began.
“I was definitely surprised at how much I didn’t have together. But now everything is coming all together.”
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