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Conversations that mattered

What we said when it counted.

Every managed-services contract promises to pick up the phone. The less-obvious promise is to tell you the truth when it matters. Four anonymised accounts of where saying the hard thing earlier changed the outcome. The client is the protagonist in each. Our job was to make sure the right conversation happened in time.

Story 01 of 04 Finance client · April 2026

We didn't buy the ten Copilot licences.

The internal point of contact came to us wanting to buy ten Microsoft 365 Copilot licences. The request was being driven by the client’s most important department, where one person had trialled Copilot and was pushing hard for the rest of the team to have it. The point of contact was under real pressure to just buy the licences and be done. Our team flagged the ticket. We pushed back before it was actioned.

We didn’t buy. Instead we ran a working session to understand what the department was actually trying to achieve. There are genuine AI opportunities in that vertical, but ten unmanaged licences would not have captured them. We activated our supplier and Microsoft partnerships, negotiated pricing on bulk licences, and arranged two ninety-minute training sessions for the team. The critical piece: we gave the internal point of contact enough ammunition to go back to the pressuring department and reframe the request. Copilot is a fundamental shift in how people work, it is a powerful tool, and it runs three risks if it is rolled out casually. A waste if nobody knows how to use it. A data-leak exposure. And a liability multiplier for a threat actor who gets in.

With that framing, the client moved from “buy ten licences” to “roll out Copilot across the organisation with training, policy, and governance.” A fundamentally larger and healthier programme, and one the client is now running with confidence instead of anxiety.

Conversation type Vendor timing · right tool, wrong structure, wrong sequence
Story 02 of 04 Long-standing client · April 2026

The client paused before the trial, not after.

A client came to us asking about Claude Cowork. They already respected our judgment enough that they weren’t going to trial it unilaterally without a conversation. We didn’t have to refuse. The relationship already carried the pause.

We jumped on a call, walked through what Cowork actually does, and had essentially the same conversation as the Copilot one. Opportunity on one side, risk and governance on the other. The client is now planning an internal trial with controls in place rather than a free-for-all rollout. That conversation surfaced a broader principle we’ve since threaded through other client conversations about AI generally: AI tooling on endpoints needs to be contained at the operating-system level, using application allowlisting and ringfencing, so the tool cannot break boundaries even if a user or an attacker tries to make it.

The refusal isn’t always a hard no. Sometimes it’s the absence of a yes. A client calling before they act, because they know the conversation is coming anyway, is the strongest evidence that the stance is working.

Conversation type Proactive governance · the relationship carries the pause
Story 03 of 04 Legal client · Q2 2026

The vendor they brought us was probably right. We confirmed instead of rubber-stamping.

A legal client preparing for AUSTRAC Tranche 2 came to us with an AML/CTF tooling vendor already picked. They didn’t go and buy it. They came to us first, asking for our blessing. We didn’t give it on the spot. Our answer was “the solution you’ve brought is probably right, but our job is to make sure. Let’s check it against two or three other vendors in the market before you commit.”

We ran a side-by-side review of the major Tranche 2 options. The vendor the client originally proposed won the review on its own merits. They ended up with the same tool they’d first suggested, but with confidence they had the right one and a written record of the due diligence behind the choice. CCP added insurance, not obstruction. If anything had gone sideways with the vendor later, the decision would be defensible because it was evidenced, not assumed.

A rubber stamp is faster. A rubber stamp also doesn’t hold when the regulator, the board, or the insurer asks “how did you decide?”

Conversation type Due diligence · we confirm, we don't rubber-stamp
Story 04 of 04 Hospitality client · Sydney, multi-property

Every other trade on site stayed silent. We didn't.

A multi-property hotel and motel owner engaged us for site-wide network and wifi deployment. We flew to Sydney for the build. We were the most expensive quote on the table. They chose us because they wanted rock-solid reliability. Their hotels can’t afford guest wifi complaints.

Onsite, the builders had cut corners. The install-as-built deviated materially from the agreed design. Walls, runs, penetrations, all off plan. We adapted onsite where we could, but had to come back a second time to properly finish the job. The part that stayed with us: we were not the only trade on site. The Foxtel installers saw the corner-cutting. The security installers saw it. The TV installers saw it. Every one of them focused on their own deliverable and said nothing. Until we flagged it, the owner did not know.

We didn’t stay quiet. We brought the deviations to the owner directly, helped liaise with the builder in the moment, and when the builder refused to remedy, we supported the client’s subsequent legal action against the building industry board with our documentation and evidence. That dispute ran into the multi-million-dollar range.

The network we installed has been running untouched since deployment. Rock-solid, as specified. The client now has a relationship with an IT provider built on the knowledge that we will tell them what they need to hear even when it is not our deliverable to fix. Commodity suppliers are cheaper partly because silence is free. We charge more partly because we don’t take the discount.

Conversation type Integrity disclosure · we refuse the silence that makes commodity suppliers cheaper

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