Every team is building a fire. In about ten minutes, find the role you instinctively play when one has to get built, and why your contribution looks the way it does.
Performance work is the operational engine, process architecture, audit readiness, governance frameworks, and the management of cost and assets at scale. The systems beneath the work that determine whether your organization runs forward or runs in circles. IT operations is one domain we govern this way; the same disciplines apply across procurement, compliance, and shared services.
Performance gaps rarely look like one big problem. They look like recurring small problems, the same audit fire drill, the same surprised reaction to a contract renewal, the same scramble to find documentation. The signals are persistent.
Each audit triggers a multi-week scramble to assemble evidence, validate controls, and reconcile records. The same evidence gets rebuilt every cycle because the operational infrastructure isn't designed for continuous readiness.
No single source of truth for assets, licenses, contracts, or vendor commitments, whether that estate is technology, equipment, or facilities. Renewal decisions are made without complete information. Spend has expanded faster than visibility into it.
SOPs exist but are out of date. Workarounds have accumulated. New hires learn from the people who happen to be available, not from the documentation. Process risk compounds quietly across years.
Vendor decisions are made across departments without a unified governance framework. Contract terms vary widely. Total third-party spend is hard to quantify, let alone optimize.
Most clients enter through one of these four service areas and expand as the integrated work becomes visible. Our flagship government engagement, the anchor case study, entered through asset and operations governance and expanded across all four.
Catalogue the estate, classify against lifecycle and ownership, and build the governance layer that keeps it current. License and contract optimization, asset lifecycle, contract reconciliation, and vendor governance, integrated. Applies to technology portfolios, equipment, and any managed-cost estate.
Continuous audit-readiness rather than recurring fire drills. Documented controls, centralized evidence repositories, and recurring testing cycles that reduce prep time and eliminate the cyclical scramble.
Process mapping that reflects how work actually happens, then architecture that closes the gaps. SOP libraries that are owned, maintained, and used, not built once and abandoned.
A unified procurement framework that governs vendor decisions, standardizes contract terms, and creates the cost visibility that drives meaningful optimization.
Outcome ranges below reflect Stratecamp’s own conservative modeling assumptions and are deliberately illustrative. The flagship reference is a government operations transformation, delivered in an IT asset portfolio, that anchors the portfolio figure below.
Year-1 reduction across licenses, contracts, and managed spend once asset and governance infrastructure is deployed.
Per-cycle reduction in staff hours and elapsed time once continuous audit infrastructure is in place.
Documented control coverage post-deployment, with ongoing monitoring infrastructure.
Flagship government engagement: 5,500+ assets, 1,700 users, $250K+ documented Year-1 savings.
All engagements are senior-led from kickoff through transfer. Pricing reflects the market value of scoped deliverables; final pricing is set in proposal once scope is defined.
Why these numbers hold. We documented $250K+ in savings in year one for a single client engagement. An engagement that returns multiples of its fee isn’t an expense. It’s a return. Run your own numbers in the Performance ROI Calculator.
These cover the most common questions prospects ask before scheduling a Discovery Call about Performance work.
A 30-minute Discovery Call with Stratecamp is direct, senior-led, and structured around your operational gap. We diagnose what is actually slowing your organization down, identify which Stratecamp practice area applies, and outline what a real engagement could produce. No pitch deck. No proposal until you ask for one.