Compiled by: Sebastian 🦀 (Kaizen Chief of Staff) from our 04-23 and 04-24 strategy sessions, plus Vision's research handoff. For: Don, Carson, and Brandwyn — the three people building this thing.
Revisions: v1.0 (initial draft) · v1.1 (added ADA/WCAG remediation as bundled feature + standalone wedge) · v1.2 (refreshed for the working session — softened internal-only framing) · v1.3 (engagement compensation specifics removed — to be discussed live).
Table of Contents
0. Scope of This Brief
This brief is about Kaizen AI Lab (CVDH LLC) — the entity Don and Carson own. It's intentionally separate from Platform Media Group and the JV work; we'll handle those in their own conversations.
Brandwyn's incoming CMO role and the vertical selection are treated together throughout — they're the same conversation, and splitting them would produce a weaker plan.
1. The Diagnosis: Pick a Lane
Brandwyn nailed the central GTM diagnosis on 04-23:
"You've been over-marketing the magnum but the actual product is a tank behind it."
— Brandwyn, 2026-04-23
Translated: Kaizen has built more capability than it can credibly sell because the marketing is trying to communicate everything at once. The "Everyone's Got an AI Guy. We're His." tagline is a strong anchor — but the underlying product menu is a sprawl of AI implementation, compliance, local LLMs, data aggregation, marketing automation, SEO, paid search, podcast editing, IT services, and corporate knowledge bases.
Brandwyn's framework (04-23):
"Need to compartmentalize vs. 'does everything' messaging. Proposed focus areas: (1) Marketing solutions (2) IT solutions (3) Admin/Ops (4) Corporate knowledge base / data aggregator (5) Finance. Land and expand approach — start with one service, grow into others."
By 04-24 the enthusiasm had narrowed to SEO/website work + data aggregator + marketing automation, with podcast editing as a fun side bet.
Question to settle on the call: Which lanes do we lead with publicly, and which do we deliver quietly for existing clients without putting on the website? This brief is the working draft of that answer.
2. Vertical Menu Considered
The 13 verticals discussed across the two meetings:
#
Vertical
Signal Strength
Notes
1
Website Management Replacement (kill the WP-Site-Plan plug-in farms)
Very High (04-24)
"We could replace this industry in a blink"
2
SEO / GEO Audits + Rebuilds
Very High (04-24, 04-23)
"10-minute audit with golden market" — already validated
3
Paid Search / Google Ads Management
High (04-24)
"Kaizen could outdo parallel in 5 min"
4
Data Aggregator / Corporate Brain
Very High (04-23)
Brandwyn: "Aggregator is sexy" — 3-week dev for Stratus version
5
Compliance / Air-gapped Local LLMs
Medium (reframed)
"compliance hasn't proven successful" — wait for trigger
6
IT Partnership Channel (Brandwyn's husband, Tampa)
Low (channel, not vertical)
EDC conference networking
7
Marketing Solutions / "Kaizen marketing agency"
Medium (Brandwyn-led)
Coordinates with Parallel — see §7
8
Admin / Ops / Productivity
Low–Medium
Don/Carson dogfooding; less differentiated
9
Corporate Knowledge Base
(overlap with #4)
Same offering, different framing
10
Finance
Lowest
Listed but no detail
11
Podcast Editing / Production
Low
"$750/episode podcast consultant using Riverside ($20/mo)"
Bundled into Service #1 + standalone wedge; Don's attorney credibility on ADA Title III litigation = sharp hook
3. Recommended Top 5 (in priority order)
🥇 #1 — Top priority
SEO/GEO Audit-Led Service + Website Management Replacement
Merging verticals 1 + 2 — they share the same wedge, ICP, and delivery system.
Why this leads
Live warm lead in hand. Foresight Intelligence / Fleet Intelligence (Dale's heavy-machinery telematics SaaS, John Deere partner) is ready to engage — currently paying Jump Fly $1,000/month for paid search alone. Brandwyn's relationship makes this our first close.
Audit-as-wedge already validated. Sebastian's 30-minute Fleet Intelligence audit is what hired Brandwyn into Kaizen on the spot. The motion exists; we just need to package it.
Pricing dislocation is enormous. WP-Site-Plan-style website management runs $300+/month for genuinely poor service. SEO agencies charge $2,500/month for 90-day engagements. Kaizen automation makes 80%+ margin viable at $2K–$3K/month.
GEO is a real unmet need. Brandwyn's read: 1–2 weeks to top results on ChatGPT/Claude/Perplexity vs. industry-standard 3 months for traditional SEO. Defensible differentiator if the claim holds, which we'll pressure-test on the first 2–3 engagements.
Productized offer
Free audit (Sebastian + Strange + Vision agentic audit, 10–30 min turnaround) — includes WCAG/ADA accessibility scan as a standard deliverable
90-day SEO/GEO engagement: $2,500/month (3-month lock) — includes ADA/WCAG remediation as a marquee feature
Then: $1,500/month maintenance (month-to-month after lock) — includes ongoing accessibility monitoring
Add-on: Website rebuild $5K–$15K flat fee (built WCAG-conformant from day one — Rideout Law site is the proof point)
ADA/WCAG bundled feature (within Service #1):
Initial WCAG 2.1 AA audit + conformance report at engagement kickoff
Remediation included in 90-day lock scope (axe-core / Lighthouse / manual screen-reader testing)
Quarterly re-scans during maintenance phase to catch drift
Differentiator vs. Jump Fly / WP-Site-Plan tier: they don't touch accessibility. Kaizen does, and Don's attorney credibility means we can speak credibly to ADA Title III litigation risk (10K+ federal ADA web cases filed annually).
ADA/WCAG standalone wedge offer
One-time audit + remediation: $3,000–$8,000 depending on site size
Wedge logic: Land on ADA compliance (urgent legal pain — demand letter or lawsuit threat), expand to full Service #1. Tier-1 sales motion: "We just fixed your ADA risk. Want us to fix your search visibility too?"
SaaS B2B companies in $1M–$20M ARR with current SEO agency or in-house failed effort. Heavy-machinery, fintech, legal-tech, vertical SaaS especially.
ADA standalone ICP: Small-to-mid businesses in high-litigation verticals — independent law firms, hospitality, e-commerce ($1M–$25M GMV), healthcare practices, education/coaching. Lead trigger = demand letter received or lawsuit filed.
First 5 named accounts to target
Foresight Intelligence / Fleet Intelligence (warm via Brandwyn — close in week 1)
The 8–10 Brandwyn beta clients she's bringing in
Outreach Ring 1: Get Victor, Toggle, Cosmolex (the AI-ad antipattern cohort)
Stratus Financial subsidiary work (low conflict — Geraci universe)
SINC Legal proper — eat your own dog food on Don's law firm site
🥈 #2 — High differentiation
Data Aggregator / Corporate Brain
"Sexy" demand · 3-week build · differentiates from generic AI consulting.
Why second
Brandwyn explicit: "Aggregator is sexy. High market demand, easier sell than complex AI systems."
The 3-week Stratus dev timeline suggests Carson can productize this fast — Stratus is the dogfooding ground.
Memory-system tech makes this viable now (matches the RLM paper from the 04-24 brief — recursive language models are the right architecture).
Differentiates from anyone else's "AI consulting" — most consultants are doing prompt engineering and ChatGPT enterprise rollouts. A real corporate-brain product with cross-source search + OCR is a distinct category.
Product spec (from 04-23 transcript)
Aggregates Slack, email, Google Docs, SharePoint, image libraries
Searchable by content and context, not just file names
OCR for unlabeled images
Air-gapped option for compliance-sensitive industries (overlap with #5 below)
Coordination note: sits adjacent to Parallel — see §7 for the rule we'll apply.
Productized offer
Audit + first month: $500 (loss-leader to displace incumbent)
Monthly management: $1,500/month + 10% of ad spend
Tied package: Bundle with #1 (SEO/GEO) at $3,000/month total
ICP
Same as Vertical #1 — SaaS B2B $1M–$20M ARR. The audit overlap means one Sebastian audit serves both verticals.
#4 — Brandwyn-owned
Marketing Solutions / Marketing-as-a-Service
Warm client list · needs Lesley boundary first.
Why fourth (not higher)
Clear product-market fit already. Brandwyn's existing client book validates the demand for fractional CMO + execution support — no market education needed.
Coordination matters here. We need the Parallel rule from §7 nailed before this goes public, so everybody wins.
This is a CMO-as-revenue-engine play — Brandwyn runs marketing for Kaizen and productizes the role for our clients. One engine, two outputs.
Strategy intensive: $3,500 one-time, 2-week engagement (leads into retainer)
ICP
$5M–$50M ARR companies that don't have a CMO and aren't ready to hire one full-time. Especially: legal tech, fintech, healthcare admin.
Coordination with Parallel (see §7): We'll align with Lesley on the ICP rule before this vertical goes public — recommended starting point is the $5M ARR split.
#5 — Reserve play (wait-for-trigger)
Compliance / Air-Gapped Local LLMs
Why fifth, not higher
Brandwyn's diagnosis is correct: "compliance hasn't proven successful as a wedge." The market isn't paying yet.
The trigger event will come — first major hack of an enterprise ChatGPT/Claude deployment leaks proprietary data, lawsuit follows, news cycle ignites compliance demand. Brandwyn estimates 2 years; could be 6 months.
Don should keep the capability warm — the local LLM tech, the air-gapped deployment scripts, the compliance documentation — but stop leading marketing with it.
Strategic posture
Build the capability, document it, but don't market it as a primary vertical. Position as a feature of Vertical #2.
Maintain content production on compliance topics for SEO/GEO authority (so when the trigger hits, Kaizen owns search results).
Pre-position with 2–3 enterprise prospects in regulated industries.
On trigger event, activation playbook
Within 48 hours: blast email to compliance contact list, social campaign, paid search on "AI compliance hack" terms
Within 2 weeks: 5 enterprise discovery calls
Within 60 days: first signed deal at $100K+ deployment fee + recurring license
4. The Five Excluded (and Why)
Vision recommended NOT including: Podcast Editing, Finance, IT Partnership, Legal-AI, Admin/Ops. Here's the reasoning:
Excluded Vertical
Why Excluded
Podcast Editing
Small TAM. High margin per client but you'd need 50+ to move the needle. Easier to bundle as a feature of Vertical #4. $750/episode displacement is real but isn't a vertical, it's a single-product upsell.
Finance
No detail in either meeting. Zero signal. Not a vertical, just an item on Brandwyn's list.
IT Partnership
This is a channel, not a vertical. Brandwyn's husband's Tampa IT firm = referral source for #1–4, not a productized offering. EDC conference next month is the moment to formalize partnership terms.
Legal-AI / Contract Review
Don has the deepest credibility, but it carries conflict-of-interest baggage (Don is an active attorney, his clients shouldn't see Kaizen as a competing legal service). Reserve for a separate sister-brand if pursued — not under Kaizen.
Admin / Ops / Productivity
Don and Carson dogfood this. Generic productivity software is over-saturated. No defensible niche unless paired with a vertical (e.g., legal admin, M&A admin).
Out-of-scope: Platform AI editorial (handled in the JV's own engagement); Lesley/Parallel client work (Parallel's domain)
Conflict policy: Mutual disclosure on overlapping prospects — first-mover wins, second-mover backs off cleanly
Termination: 30-day notice either side after the first 90 days
Equity: Open question — happy to revisit at the 6-month mark once we see how the engagement is running
Open items for the call:
Engagement structure and terms — to be discussed and agreed live
Start date and first month of work
Carson aligned (co-founder)
7. Coordinating with Parallel (Lesley)
The most important coordination question to settle before Vertical #4 goes public.
The setup
Lesley runs Parallel Marketing Company (her own venture)
Brandwyn co-owns Platform Media Group with Lesley (the JV)
Brandwyn is joining Kaizen as Fractional CMO
Vertical #4 (Marketing Solutions) sits in adjacent territory to Parallel — we want a clean rule that lets both sides win and keeps Brandwyn's two roles uncomplicated
Three options — pick the one that works for everyone:
Option A — Hard lane separation
Kaizen sits out Vertical #4. We refer all marketing-services prospects to Parallel; Parallel refers SEO/GEO/data prospects to us. Cleanest possible setup; leaves meaningful ARR on the table on the Kaizen side.
Option B — ICP split Suggested starting point
Kaizen's #4 serves $5M+ ARR with full-stack agentic infrastructure. Parallel serves under $5M with traditional services. Brandwyn's role is clear by ICP: large accounts at Kaizen; small accounts at Parallel. No either/or for Brandwyn; both businesses grow.
Option C — Parallel as front-end
Parallel becomes the client-facing brand for Vertical #4 — Lesley sells, Kaizen delivers. Suggested split: 60% Kaizen / 40% Parallel. Most operationally rich; most combined revenue if we want to invest in the integration.
Why Option B is the suggested starting point: it doesn't leave revenue on the table, doesn't require revenue-share infrastructure, and gives Brandwyn a clean two-sentence answer for any client that asks: "I'm Parallel's co-owner for sub-$5M, I'm Kaizen's CMO for $5M+." Lesley keeps her business unchanged; Kaizen takes the larger accounts; nobody has to choose. Open to discussion if A or C lands better.
Recommend a three-way call with Lesley this week to align on the rule and put Vertical #4 on the public website with everyone comfortable.
8. Tagline / Positioning
Brandwyn discovered the framework live during the 04-24 call (transcript lines 543–593):
"What can [blank] do for you today?"
She and Don traced it to Microsoft (1994–2002 "Where do you want to go today?" → mid-2000s "What can Microsoft do for you today?"), the IBM "What can IBM do for you?" campaign, and UPS's "What can Brown do for you?" None still actively used.
Brandwyn's reframe:"What can Kaizen solve?" — name the negative, not the positive.
Recommendation: Adopt this framework with two specific deployments
Use
Tagline
Why
Top-of-funnel hook (homepage hero, social ads)
"What can Kaizen solve?"
Names the problem; invites engagement; Apple-late-90s curiosity-building
Brand anchor (header, business cards, footer)
"Everyone's Got an AI Guy. We're His."
Already established; differentiates from generic AI consultants
Visual direction (Brandwyn's call, 04-23)
Apple late-90s: black screen, white text, curiosity-building
Edgy, not fear-based (compliance-fear has not worked)
Real video, real demos — NOT "auto-generated Canva template dogshit"
Specifically NOT the Get Victor / Toggle / Cosmolex / Harbor TLG / Cleo aesthetic
9. Operational Handoff
Brandwyn flagged this on 04-23: Don/Carson are 1,000+ hours in over 8 weeks. That's 60+ hours/week each. Not sustainable.
The plan to fix it
Hire Filipino team from Stratus to handle manual SEO/content/paid-search execution
Goal: 75% automated by EOY 2026, 100% in 2027
Pricing must reflect future automation cost-curve — charge market price now, ride the margin expansion
Recommended hire ladder
Hire
Timing
Role
Source
SEO Ops Coordinator
May 2026
Manual SEO execution, content QA, link audits
Stratus Filipino team
Paid Search Specialist
June 2026
Google Ads execution, ad copy, landing-page QA
Stratus Filipino team or Brandwyn's network
Content Producer
July 2026
Video + article production, Envato library curation
Stratus Filipino team or Upwork
Account Manager
August 2026
Client comms, monthly reports, upsell tracking
Stratus or US hire
Note on Stratus departure: Don's EOY 2026 Stratus departure means the Filipino-team transition needs to be clean. Recommend formal MSAs between Kaizen and Stratus for any shared resources before departure date — otherwise this becomes a messy unwinding.
10. 30 / 60 / 90 with Named Owners
Window
Milestone
Owner
Days 1–14 by 2026-05-11
CMO offer to Brandwyn signed; consultant agreement executed; Vertical #4 boundary with Lesley/parallel defined
Don (with Carson sign-off)
Days 1–14
Foresight Intelligence/Fleet Intelligence first contract signed (audit → engagement)
Brandwyn + Don
Days 1–14
Tagline adoption: "What can Kaizen solve?" deployed on website + social
Brandwyn + Sebastian
Days 15–30 by 2026-05-27
Productized offer pages live for Verticals #1, #2, #3
Sebastian + Carson
Days 15–30
First Filipino-team SEO Ops Coordinator hired
Carson + Stratus team
Days 31–60 by 2026-06-26
First 3 Vertical #1 contracts signed (Foresight + 2 from Brandwyn's beta book)
Brandwyn
Days 31–60
First Vertical #2 (Data Aggregator) discovery + scope contract signed
Carson
Days 31–60
Vertical #4 (Fractional CMO) boundary with Parallel finalized; first contract signed
Brandwyn + Don
Days 61–90 by 2026-07-26
Total ARR target: $40K MRR run rate ($480K ARR) — 5 SEO/GEO clients × $2.5K + 2 Data Aggregator builds × $10K monthly amortized + 2 CMO retainers × $5K
All
Days 61–90
Vertical #5 (Compliance) marketing content production live (SEO/GEO authority building)
Sebastian + Vision
11. What We're Aligning on This Call
Five things we want to walk away with agreement on:
Top 5 verticals — confirmed, modified, or re-ranked
CMO engagement — terms locked, start date set
Parallel coordination — Option A, B, or C from §7 (and a plan to bring Lesley in)
Carson sign-off — co-founder alignment on the spend + the plan
Tagline — does "What can Kaizen solve?" ride the homepage hero?
Once we're aligned, Sebastian will roll out the executable plan — week-by-week tasks, hire reqs, contract templates, ICP sourcing lists — and stage Brandwyn's onboarding doc.
12. Three Things Worth Saying Out Loud
Honest tensions in this plan that we should name on the call so we can build for them:
1. Operational redundancy on the warm-network plays.
Verticals #1, #3, and #4 lean on Brandwyn's warm network and execution in the early months. That's a feature — it's why we move fast — but we should build redundancy in parallel: documented account playbooks, shared CRM access, and Carson + Sebastian shadow-trained inside 60 days. The goal isn't to remove Brandwyn from any of it; the goal is to make sure no single arrangement (illness, scope shift, anything) puts a vertical at risk.
2. The compliance pivot is right, but the brand equity needs recapture.
Kaizen has spent 6+ months building compliance positioning. Reframing toward GEO/SEO/data-aggregator means some of that work gets stranded. The recovery move is the Vertical #5 reserve play (§3, #5): don't burn the compliance content — reposition it as "we handle compliance as a feature, not as the lead," and keep producing on the topic for SEO/GEO authority. When the trigger event hits, we own the search results.
3. Don's Stratus departure timing is tight.
Don is stepping into Kaizen full-time at EOY 2026 at the same moment we're launching 5 verticals + onboarding a CMO + supporting Platform AI launch. That's a lot of fronts. Suggested moves: postpone Vertical #5 activation to Q1 2027 unless the trigger hits earlier; push the Platform AI events line to 2027; and bake in 5 hours/week of protected time for sleep and family. Brandwyn — your read on what's realistic here would be useful.
Synthesized from the 04-23 and 04-24 strategy sessions plus Vision's research handoff. Quoted material verified against the session transcripts.