The Honest Path to Leveling Up Your AI Consulting Career¶
Last month, I did something that would make most consultants cringe:
I offered to work for free on a $20-30 million company's AI strategy.
When Alex Hormozi said, "You're not good enough yet... and that's okay," it resonated deeply as I stared at a potential six-figure contract, knowing I wasn't quite ready for it.
We're constantly told to "charge what we're worth" and "never work for free."
But here's the uncomfortable truth about scaling an AI consulting practice.
Sometimes, the fastest way up is to admit you're not at the top yet.
The real challenge of enterprise AI consulting isn't just technical expertise – it's the catch-22 of needing enterprise experience to land enterprise clients.
You can't access the rooms where high-level decisions happen until you've already been in those rooms.
Here's what nobody tells you:
The path to doubling or tripling your consulting income isn't always about charging more – sometimes it's about making strategic "losses" that compound into massive gains.
In this post, I'll show you exactly how I'm using what I call the Strategic Loss Leader approach to:
- Land clients 10x larger than my usual target market
- Transform "free" work into six-figure opportunities
- Position myself for deals I currently have no right to win
It's not about underselling yourself.
It's about being strategic and honest about where you are in your journey – and then doing something about it.
The Reality of Moving Up the Value Chain¶
When I look at my growth path as an independent consultant, I've learned one fundamental truth:
You have to prove yourself at each new level, and the process never really ends.
Every time I want to level up, I'm back to being the smallest fish in a bigger pond.
The skills and network that got me here won't get me to the next level.
Rather than following common advice about "knowing my worth," I evaluate each opportunity based on how it shapes the version of myself I want to be years from now.
This mindset shift changed everything about how I approach client opportunities.
Instead of just asking "What does this pay now?" I ask "What doors will this open later?"
The Strategic Loss Leader Approach¶
Much like how grocery stores sell milk below cost to get customers in the door (a loss leader), we can apply this same concept to our consulting careers in order to strategically invest in our growth.
That's what I call the Strategic Loss Leader approach.
Instead of just looking at the dollar amount on the invoice, you evaluate opportunities based on their total value to your career trajectory.
Sometimes, that means taking a short-term hit on your rate in exchange for exponential long-term gains.
Think of it like buying a course or attending a conference, except you're getting paid (maybe less than usual) to learn, network, and build your portfolio all at once.
How to Calculate True Opportunity Value¶
My framework breaks down every opportunity into four concrete components:
-
Direct Payment
- Your actual hourly rate or project fee
- i.e. the baseline number most consultants stop at
- Your actual hourly rate or project fee
-
Learning Value
- New technical skills you'd otherwise pay thousands to learn
- For example, that enterprise project taught me about:
- Building real-world multi-agent systems
- Enterprise-grade security protocols
- Large-scale system design
- Skills that would have cost $5-10K in courses and months of self-study
-
Network Value
- Relationships that open doors to future opportunities
- Access to decision-makers you couldn't reach otherwise
- Real example: One enterprise client introduced me to their entire vendor network
-
Portfolio Value
- Case studies that attract your next tier of clients
- Concrete results you can reference in sales calls
- Logos that instantly boost your credibility
Making the Assessment¶
Let's break down my VRSEN decision:
- Direct Payment: $50/hour
- Learning Value:
- Multi-agent systems: $40/hour
- Team leadership: $50/hour
- Sales experience: $30/hour
- Network Value:
- Industry connections: $30/hour
- Referrals: $20/hour
-
Portfolio Value:
- Case studies: $20/hour
- Logo: $10/hour
-
Total: $250/hour equivalent
- This exceeded my target of $200/hour, making it a strong opportunity.
Remember
-
If your calculated total compensation falls significantly below your target (like $130/hour vs. $200/hour), it's probably not the right opportunity.
-
Save your strategic loss leaders for situations where the non-monetary value clearly justifies the investment.
Know When to Hold and When to Fold¶
A Strategic Loss Leader only works if you know exactly when to move on.
You need clear exit criteria before you start, and the self-awareness to recognize when you've hit them.
Let me share what this looked like in practice with VRSEN:
Initially, the opportunity promised exceptional growth:
- Leading development teams for the first time
- Building multi-agent systems at scale
- Direct access to key industry players
After 4 months, I hit what I call the "diminishing returns wall":
- My technical learning had plateaued into repetitive implementations
- The high client churn prevented relationship building
- The reduced rate ($50/hour vs. my standard $120/hour) no longer justified the limited growth
This experience taught me that every Strategic Loss Leader needs three non-negotiable parameters:
-
Clear Timeline
- Define concrete milestones (like "First enterprise deployment")
- Set firm checkpoints every 3 months
- Stick to your deadlines – "just a little longer" is a trap
-
Success Metrics
- List the exact skills you need to acquire
- Name the specific relationships you need to build
- Set portfolio goals with numbers (e.g., "One case study showing 50%+ improvement")
-
Exit Triggers
- Know what your next level looks like
- Start building bridges to future opportunities while in the role
- Define your "diminishing returns" indicators upfront
Remember
A Strategic Loss Leader is an investment, not a sacrifice. Once your learning curve flattens, it's time to leverage what you've gained and level up again.
The key is treating these parameters as a contract with yourself.
The moment two or more indicators show diminishing returns, start executing your exit strategy – regardless of promises about future opportunities or pressure to stay.
The Privilege of Playing the Long Game¶
There's a quote from Jason Liu that transformed how I view client relationships:
"In every room where there are two people, it's a privilege for one to be speaking to the other. It may as well be the privilege for the other to speak to you."
When a Fortune 500 company appears in your pipeline, it's probably a privilege to speak with them – and that's exactly why it's valuable.
Your job isn't to pretend otherwise, but to transform that privilege into your next level of growth.
After implementing the Strategic Loss Leader approach for the past year, here's what I've learned:
1. Growth Requires Uncomfortable Trade-offs - That $50/hour role teaching you enterprise architecture becomes worth $200+/hour when you factor in future opportunities, knowledge that would cost thousands to learn elsewhere, and relationships that would take years to build organically.
2. Stagnation is More Expensive Than Strategic Loss - A steady $150/hour with no skill advancement equals moving backward in today's AI landscape. Every major leap in my career started with choosing growth over immediate profit.
3. Your Future Self is Your Best Investment - Each strategic "loss" has compounded into greater opportunities. The skills gap between you and your target clients can only be bridged through real experience – sometimes the fastest way up is to temporarily step sideways.
Your Next Move: The Strategic Opportunity Audit¶
Take 30 minutes to evaluate your next potential opportunity:
- Write down your target hourly rate
- Calculate the opportunity's total value:
- Direct payment
- Learning value (skills needed for your next level)
- Network value (relationships that open new doors)
- Portfolio value (case studies that attract better clients)
- Compare the total against your target rate
You might discover that what feels like a compromise is actually your fastest path to growth.
Or you might realize you're selling yourself short without any strategic benefit.
Your next level is waiting. The only question is:
Are you willing to make a strategic investment to get there?
Want to get in touch? Drop a comment below or find me on Twitter.
I'd love to hear from you!