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Description

You said yes again. To the client. To the new service line. To the second business you swore you could run alongside the first. It felt like ambition at the time. Six months later, the P&L tells a different story.

In this episode, Jeff Pelliccio and Erin MacKenzie sit down with Scott Gellerย of Path Predict to dig into one of the hardest moves a leader can make: narrowing down on purpose. Scott spent his early years as a fractional CFO saying yes to everyone, from software companies to ghost kitchens to pre-made meal businesses. Then he made the deliberate choice to specialize in staffing. He walks through what changed on the other side of that decision, why "saying no is sometimes more important than saying yes," and what most leaders get wrong about fractional expertise.

You'll hear how an industrial staffing client said "we know a lot of nurses" while trying to pivot into healthcare, why Scott applies a five-pillar pressure test before recommending an adjacent expansion, and how to tell when a fractional resource is the right fit versus when a full-time hire is the smarter play. Plus, Erin's "TRY" sticker reframe on what early-stage leaders need to unlearn.

If you've been carrying every yes you've ever said and wondering why it feels heavier instead of bigger, this conversation is your blueprint for going narrow to go far.


Key Takeaways

๐ŸŽฏ Going wide is often avoidance, not ambition: The hardest question isn't "what else can I sell?" It's "what am I actually the best at?" Saying yes to everything keeps you from answering it.

๐Ÿšซ Saying no is a growth lever, not a loss: Scott walks away from manufacturing and inventory clients on purpose. Every "yes" you make on autopilot is a "no" to the work you actually do best.

๐Ÿงฉ Run the 5-pillar pressure test before any expansion: Strategy, process, people, tech, and capacity. If you can't honestly stress-test a new direction against all five, you're not expanding. You're guessing in public.

๐Ÿช Specialization is a hook, not a cage: When Scott introduced himself as "a fractional CFO," nobody knew what to do with him. "A fractional CFO for staffing companies" started pulling referrals. The narrowing didn't shrink the opportunity. It changed who was looking for him.

๐Ÿ’ผ Fractional fits stages, not budgets: For firms in the growth zone trying to reach the next tier, renting the right slice of executive expertise often beats hiring the full seat. The signals to watch for are inside.

๐Ÿช‘ Vet fractional partners for the chair, not the title: Accountants calling themselves CFOs is the trap. Sat-in-the-chair, ran-the-strategy, navigated-the-crisis experience is the test.

๐Ÿ“Š Match what you're good at with what you actually enjoy: Competence without enjoyment is a slow burnout. Focus where both overlap, and outsource (or fractionalize) the rest.


Sponsors

๐Ÿผ Allied Insight: Going narrow only works if the marketing engine behind it actually fits the industry. Allied Insight is the Preferred Marketing Partner of Staffing and Consulting businesses.

๐Ÿ™ All Things Staffing: Where staffing leaders go for the resources that match the specifics of the work. Expert Resources for the Staffing Community.