Fractional COO Diagnostic
Is Your Agency Built to Run Without You?
18 questions across the six operating areas where online agencies doing $1M+ consistently break. Not a generic operations checklist, a diagnostic built around what actually goes wrong in this specific business model.
6
Operating Components
18
Diagnostic Questions
1
Custom Priority Report
Getting Started0% complete
Before We Begin
About Your Agency
Answer based on where the business actually is. This diagnostic is built for online agencies doing at least $1M in revenue, the failure patterns it probes are specific to that stage and that model.
Agency name Optional
What does your agency primarily sell?
How does your agency primarily structure its delivery?
Approximate annual revenue
Component 1 of 6
Direction and Clarity
The first thing I do when I start working with an agency is ask each member of the leadership team, separately, where the company is going in three years. I have never once gotten the same answer from everyone. Usually I get three or four meaningfully different answers, and the founder is the most surprised by that. They thought the direction was clear. It was clear to them. It had never actually been said out loud in a way the team could execute against independently. That gap, between what the founder knows and what the team can act on without them, is what keeps the founder trapped in the operational seat.
If you stepped away from the agency for two full weeks with no contact, what would actually happen to the business?
What actually guides what your agency says no to, a deliberate documented decision about what you are building, or whatever the funnel happens to produce?
Look at your calendar from the last two weeks. How many of those hours were things that only you could have done, decisions, relationships, or work that would have stalled or broken without your personal involvement?
Component 2 of 6
Ownership and Accountability
The tier collapse problem is the one I see most often in multi-offer agencies, and it is almost always invisible until it is expensive. The DFY clients are loud. They have direct access to the account managers. When something goes wrong for them, it gets fixed immediately. The DWY group program is quieter. The DIY customers are silent. Over six to twelve months, the team's attention drifts almost entirely to the DFY tier because that is where the urgency lives, and the other tiers slowly degrade without anyone catching it until the refund requests start. I have never seen this fixed by telling people to pay more attention. It only gets fixed when someone specific owns each tier and is held accountable for its results.
In practice, not on paper, but in practice, who is accountable when the DWY program starts losing members or the DIY course stops converting? Does someone own that, or does it surface as a surprise?
Think about the two or three people in your agency whose departure would hurt most. How much of what they do exists only in their heads?
Think about the last thing that fell through the cracks in your agency, a client deliverable that was late, an internal process that nobody owned, a problem that came back to you because nobody else caught it. What does that pattern tell you about your ownership structure?
Component 3 of 6
Visibility and Metrics
I have never walked into an agency engagement where utilization was being tracked weekly. Not once. The number exists in theory, the hours are being paid, the work is being done, but nobody is watching the ratio of billable to non-billable time across the team, and by the time the margin problem shows up in the P&L, it has been building for three or four months. The other number almost nobody tracks is per-client margin once real delivery time is counted. The client that generates the most revenue is often not the most profitable client. Sometimes it is actively losing money once you count the hours honestly. Most founders find this out the hard way.
Be honest about your utilization rate right now, what percentage of your team's paid hours are going to actual client work? Do you know that number, and is it being watched?
Pick your three highest-revenue clients. Do you know the actual margin on each one, what you are making after real delivery hours, overhead, and account management time are counted? Not what the P&L says. What the hours say.
Think about the last client who churned or significantly reduced scope. How far in advance did you see it coming, and did you see it coming because of a system, or because of a relationship?
Component 4 of 6
Issue Resolution
Scope creep in agencies almost never starts as a negotiation. It starts as a favor. A client asks for something small. The account manager does it because saying no feels risky and the request feels reasonable. Then it happens again. Nobody tracks it. Nobody escalates it. And six months later the retainer that was supposed to generate 40% margin is generating 15%, and the account manager has been quietly absorbing 30% more work than the agreement covers because they were trying to keep the client happy. I see this in almost every agency I work with. The fix is not telling account managers to push back harder. The fix is building the tracking system so the conversation is triggered by data, not by someone's courage.
Think about your account managers right now. Is there one who is absorbing out-of-scope requests without saying anything because the client relationship feels too fragile to push back on?
When did you last sit down with a retainer client and formally assess whether what they are paying for still matches what the team is actually delivering, before a problem forced the conversation?
Think about your last three leadership meetings. Name one problem that was raised in those meetings that has now been permanently resolved, not deferred, not assigned to someone to look into, but actually closed.
Component 5 of 6
Systems and Handoffs
The most reliable way I have found to audit an agency's handoff process is to pull ten recently closed deals and ask the delivery team what they knew before onboarding started. Not what they were supposed to know. What they actually knew. The answer is almost always the same: they knew the client's name, the monthly retainer amount, and whatever the salesperson remembered to mention in a Slack message. What was actually promised on the call, the specific outcomes, the timeline, the custom commitments the sales rep made to close the deal, is almost never documented. And the client arrives expecting the version they were sold, not the version the delivery team built.
Think about the last three deals that closed. What did your delivery team actually know before the client's onboarding started, and how did they find out?
Think about the last client who had a rocky first 30 days, confusion about what they were getting, frustration about timelines, or a feeling that the agency they signed was different from the one that showed up. What actually caused it?
Name a client who left or nearly left in the first 90 days. What did the investigation reveal, was it a delivery failure, a handoff failure, or an expectation that was set on the sales call and never made it to the delivery team?
Component 6 of 6
Rhythm and Execution
Two things keep agencies stuck in the $1M to $3M range more than anything else. The first is that the founder is still the best salesperson and everyone knows it. Revenue is capped at their available hours, and when they step back from sales to work on the business, close rates drop and the team quietly panics. The second is that quarterly planning produces a list of good intentions that gets abandoned by week six when something urgent comes up. I have seen founders set five priorities at the start of a quarter and be working on something completely different by the middle of it, not because the priorities were wrong, but because there was no system to protect them. Both of these are fixable. Neither one fixes itself.
If you took yourself out of the sales process for the next 60 days, no calls, no involvement in deal conversations, what would actually happen to your close rate?
Think about your last weekly leadership meeting. How many of the issues that were raised got permanently closed before the next meeting, and how many are still on a list somewhere, waiting?
At the end of last quarter, how many of the priorities your leadership team set at the start were actually complete, and for the ones that were not, do you know why? Was it scope, resource, or the founder redirecting the team to something new mid-quarter?
Building Your Diagnostic Report
Analyzing your agency against the six operating components
- Assessing founder dependency and direction
- Evaluating tier-level accountability structure
- Auditing utilization and per-client profitability
- Checking scope creep and retainer health
- Reviewing sales-to-delivery handoff and onboarding
- Measuring sales system and quarterly execution
- Generating your priority recommendations
Agency Operating System Diagnostic
Your Agency
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The Gaps Are Identified.
Installing the System Is the Next Step.
Every gap this diagnostic surfaces has a known fix. The Agency Operating System engagement installs what is missing, across all six components, in 90 days alongside your team, then hands it off so they can run it without you.
Book a 30-Minute Operating System DiagnosticFaiz YarKhan | Fractional COO and Integrator | Yar Khan Consulting
No pitch. No obligation. An honest conversation about what your operating system actually needs.
No pitch. No obligation. An honest conversation about what your operating system actually needs.
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