Your full strategic brief: who you are in the Mid-Atlantic Workforce Resilience Cluster, what you have that competitors don't, your active accounts, your ERT platform, and the referral network model that scales your reach without cold outreach.
Your market position is built on three layers that most consultants in your space have only one of. Understanding how those layers stack, and what each one does, is critical for how you talk about your work, write proposals, and respond to prospects who ask "why you."
You serve organizations experiencing psychological safety crises triggered by specific events: AI deployment creating workforce stress, restructuring and layoffs eroding morale, leadership transitions signaling culture change, and mental health parity compliance creating employer accountability. These are event-driven engagements, not mandate-chasing. Your entry point is always the trigger, not the sector. Your specific position inside this cluster is the intersection of HR expertise and behavioral health integration, a combination that consultants from either discipline alone cannot replicate. You are the practitioner who speaks both languages fluently, which is why you are in rooms that neither pure HR consultants nor pure behavioral health clinicians occupy.
You delivered the first psychological safety intervention ever conducted at the International Monetary Fund. This is not a credential you share with any competitor in the DC Mid-Atlantic consulting market. The IMF is one of the most credentialing-sensitive institutions in the world. Getting into the room requires trust, cultural competence, and a track record that clears a significantly higher bar than most organizational psychology practitioners ever reach. That credential converts skeptics before the conversation starts, and it anchors every proposal you write from this point forward.
You have active or completed engagements across three distinct sectors: government (Maryland DVMF proposal active, Turks and Caicos Islands government HR implementation active and growing toward $100K), pharma (Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, $10K psychological safety workshop), and international development (IMF, Caribbean government). Most organizational psychology consultants have one sector. You have three, and they are exactly the three sectors where behavioral health mandate pressure is rising simultaneously in 2026.
You are the only consultant in the Mid-Atlantic who combines an IMF psychological safety credential + active government delivery in two jurisdictions + pharma organizational psychology experience + a dual HR and behavioral health background.
Each of those alone is table stakes in a different market. Together, they are a combination that takes a decade to assemble and is currently invisible to any prospect who has not been referred to you. The KLR Signal Radar makes it visible.
The constraint is not your position. It is that your position is only visible through referral. A CPO posting a role at a Maryland pharma company or a financial services firm announcing a restructuring will not find you unless someone introduces them. The Digital Employee fixes this by detecting the signal before the prospect starts looking, and routing your positioning into their awareness at the exact moment the need is live.
Your current account base is strong for a practice launched in January 2026. In under six months you have active or pending engagements in three sectors and three geographies. Here is the full picture: existing accounts, current value, and the open opportunity in each.
| Account | Sector | Current Value | Open Opportunity | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maryland DVMF | State Government · Veterans | $10K-$180K · Pending | 3-option proposal submitted May 5, 2026. Option 3 = 12-month cross-agency Integrated Purpose and Partnership Year with MD Health, MD Labor, MD Education. | Follow Up Now |
| Turks and Caicos Islands Government | International Government | $50K-$100K Active | 43-staff HR department, National ID Program. Three staffing models (Conservative, Automation-First, Hybrid) under evaluation. Growing engagement. Strong government past performance reference. | Active |
| Otsuka America Pharmaceutical | Pharma · Rockville, MD | $10K · Warm | Psychological safety workshop proposal (Feb 2026). Triggered by workforce reductions and structural changes. Co-facilitation with Dr. Amy Titus (former Deloitte Human Capital MD). Reactivate with ERT and DVMF social proof. | Reactivate This Week |
| ERT · Executive Roundtable Series | Owned Platform · HR Directors, CPOs | Intake Channel | Part 2 (August) on psychological safety and burnout targets CPOs and HR Directors directly. Co-hosted with Anisha Jenkins and Carla Griffin. Booking window open now for follow-on engagement conversations. | Book Part 2 Conversations |
| International Monetary Fund | International Finance Institution | Delivered · Credential | First psychological safety intervention in IMF history. Use as anchor credential in all outreach, proposals, and positioning copy. This is the opening sentence of every proposal you write going forward. | Reference · Lead Credential |
The Executive Roundtable series is KLR's proprietary platform for positioning, lead capture, and client conversion. Unlike a webinar or conference appearance, the ERT gives you a repeating intake mechanism you own, co-hosted with two established practitioners (Anisha Jenkins and Carla Griffin), targeting exactly the buyer profile your core offer serves: CPOs, HR Directors, and organizational leaders managing workforce behavioral health.
AI adoption, adaptability, and increasing employee stress levels. Delivered. Creates the foundation of trust and subject matter authority with the attendee base. Part 1 attendees are warm contacts for Part 2 follow-on conversations.
CPO and HR Director audience specifically named in the agenda. This is the highest-conversion ERT event in the series because the topic is directly tied to KLR's core offer. Every attendee is a qualified prospect. Booking window for follow-on conversations is open now.
October delivery. Agenda not yet set. Opportunity to design Part 3 around a live organizational trigger (AI adoption outcomes, post-restructuring culture recovery, leadership capability gaps) to pull in cluster-specific buyers from Pharma, Financial Services, and IT.
Part 2 in August is not a thought leadership event. It is your primary intake mechanism for full-engagement clients. Every CPO who attends Part 2 is a qualified buyer for KLR's psychological safety workshop, organizational assessment, or annual engagement. The next 4 weeks are the optimal window: attendees are aware of the series, the topic directly addresses their role, and August timing gives enough runway for organizational buy-in before the event. Book follow-on conversations before the next ERT cycle opens.
The ERT platform also creates a positioning asset that no competitor can easily replicate: you have two co-hosts with their own networks (Anisha Jenkins, Carla Griffin) who give the ERT credibility and reach beyond your own network. This is the equivalent of Tiffany Lymon's PADA tool: a proprietary platform that competitors cannot copy quickly and that creates a repeating signal in your market. Package it accordingly.
Your current engagements were built through direct relationship and word-of-mouth referral. That is a strong foundation: it means your delivery quality is high enough that clients return and introduce others. The constraint is that referral networks are not scalable without a system. Here is the three-layer model of how your referral network currently works and what makes each layer produce, or stall.
Anisha Jenkins and Carla Griffin are your highest-leverage referral nodes. They bring their own professional networks into the ERT, which means every Part 2 attendee who comes through their channels is a warm lead who arrived with a trusted introduction already in place. This is a compounding asset: each ERT event expands the pool of people who have been in the same room with you, heard you speak, and associated you with psychological safety authority.
How to activate: Before Part 2, ask each co-host for 3-5 specific attendee introductions from their networks. Target CPOs at pharma, government, and behavioral health organizations. A personal co-host introduction converts at a significantly higher rate than any other outreach type.
Your Caribbean (TCI) and Otsuka engagements are the most likely sources of near-term referrals because they are active or warm, meaning the client relationship is current and your work is top of mind. Government clients refer to other government clients. Pharma contacts refer within their HR networks. These are not cold asks. They are relationship-extension conversations with people who already trust your delivery.
How to activate: After each milestone delivery in the TCI engagement, explicitly ask: "Is there a colleague in another department or a peer agency you think could benefit from what we've built here?" Government clients are particularly generous with warm introductions to peer agencies and other jurisdictions. The DVMF, if it closes, becomes the same referral node for the entire Maryland state agency ecosystem.
Your exported LinkedIn list contains 393 HR Director and CPO contacts with confirmed email addresses. This is not a referral network yet. It is a lead pool that requires segmentation and activation before it behaves like one. The full list is geographically misaligned for your current Mid-Atlantic focus, with fewer than 6 contacts in DC-Baltimore. However, the 25-40 priority contacts who are in your geography and match your buyer profile (HR Directors, CPOs, Chief Behavioral Health Officers) are a high-value cold outreach list that converts to a warm relationship through the ERT funnel.
How to activate: Segment the list to the 25-40 DC-Baltimore-Richmond contacts. Build a 3-email sequence anchored to the ERT series and your IMF credential. The ERT invitation converts a cold email into a warm room experience. After Part 2, those contacts become Tier 2 referral nodes. This is how you systematize the referral network: cold list becomes warm attendee, warm attendee becomes active referral source.
The Brief is the companion document to your Capital Event Score hub. If the Score hub is your operations dashboard, the Brief is your strategic context. Use it as a reference, not a one-time read.
Your IMF credential is your most underutilized asset. It should appear in the first paragraph of every proposal, the first sentence of your LinkedIn summary, and the opening line of every outreach email. Right now it is buried. The next action that costs you nothing and unlocks the most value is moving that credential to the front of every external communication you write.