You already know something is wrong. You just can't prove it yet.
Most CEOs contact us long after the problem has started.
At first, it looks manageable. A few delays. More meetings than before. Managers who stop deciding without checking upward first. Good people getting tired. Departments blaming each other for things nobody fully understands anymore.
Then the company adapts.
Someone starts manually fixing what the ERP was supposed to automate. A senior employee becomes the unofficial bridge between teams because nobody trusts the structure enough to work through it directly. Processes multiply. Approvals slow down. Founders stay involved in decisions the company should already know how to make without them.
The business keeps moving, so from the outside it still looks functional.
Inside, everyone feels the drag.
Seedz does not begin with assumptions, workshops, or personality tests. We begin by reading how the company actually operates day to day. Where decisions stop. Where information changes shape. Which people carry invisible authority. Which systems exist on paper but not in reality.
Sometimes the problem is operational. Sometimes political. Sometimes structural. Most of the time, it is a combination that has been building quietly for years.
We have seen companies carrying hundreds of thousands of dollars in dead inventory nobody realized was still sitting in a warehouse. Leadership teams with six managers approving the same decision because nobody wanted accountability attached to it. Entire departments built around workarounds created to compensate for systems that never fully worked.
Some companies stop there. Seeing the reality clearly is already enough to change how they operate.
Others continue into restructuring, governance, execution, leadership redesign, and operational rebuilding over the following 100 days. Those are usually the companies preparing for another stage of growth.
The Seedz organizational diagnostic is generally requested by founders and CEOs of growing companies who recognize at least some of the following:
Picture by Dany Tanguay