Your client hired you so they wouldn't have to think about this stuff. The second they have to figure something out on their own, you've already started losing them. And most agency owners do this on day one of onboarding. And it's not just one agency making this mistake. Everyone does this and it's killing their results. I call it the complexity transfer problem. Every service decision comes down to one question. Who's carrying the hard part? Either you absorb it or your client does. There's no third door. And it shows up in three specific moments. First is onboarding. You close the deal and then you send a checklist. Set up a subdomain. give us ad account access. Create a new email alias, fill out this intake form. Every item on that list is complexity you've left on their side of the table. So, go through your onboarding checklist right now and ask which items exist because you haven't built the template or the process that would make them unnecessary. Cut those and absorb the work yourself. Second is what I call the instruction dump. You deliver a campaign or a lead list and instead of handing over something plug-and-play, you send a 12-step explanation of how to use the thing you built. But if your deliverable needs a manual, the deliverable isn't done. So build the usage layer into the asset or send a loom walkthrough that removes every decision point so the client clicks one button because you've already made every other choice for them. Third is the altitude trap. This right here is what's costing you the most. Handing someone the strategy and walking away from execution. You need to run outbound. You should be sending cold email. That's all true, but it's useless without the execution layer. So don't say run cold email. Instead, say here's the exact subject line format. Here's the sender name setup. Then walk them through the first follow-up and what to do when someone replies asking for a deck. Take it down to the button click. I learned this running my own agency. We used to send clients a CSV and a copy framework and say, "Let us know how the campaign goes." But that's handing them raw materials and making them figure out the sending tool, the schedule, the follow-up timing, and the reply handling. So, we flipped it. We built the campaign inside their sending tool, wrote all five touches, built a reply handling dock with three scenarios: interested, not now, and wrong person, and told them exactly what to say. Then, we sent one message. The campaign is live. You'll get a weekly report every Monday. Forward anything weird to me. Same deliverable on the surface, but a completely different experience. And retention changed overnight. We went from losing two or three clients a quarter to losing maybe one a year. This changed everything for me. Here's the weekly habit. Look at everything you're sending clients and ask one question. What did my client have to figure out that I could have figured out for them? If you find three things, those are your three projects for next week. Build the template, write the dock, preddecide the decision, and after that, the item never crosses the table again. And by the way, this applies to your cold email, too. Because a cold email that makes the prospect work hard to understand what you do is complexity transfer at the top of the funnel. So you decide everything for them. This is what I do. This is who I do it for. And I need one thing from you right now. One job for the prospect. Say yes or no. If you need leads, check out Scraper City. For cold email coaching, check out Galladon Gold. And if you want to see my favorite tools to grow your business, go to alex berman.com/tools. The next video is coming up