Browse by topic.
Everything in Field notes, grouped by the part of the deal it addresses. Each group ends with the next step: apply to be vetted, or read the rubric that grades the work.
Sales, pricing, and the proposal stack.
How US and EU buyers read your rate card, your portfolio, your SOW, and your discovery call. The paperwork that decides shortlists.
- Sales · Positioning
Nearshore vs offshore: what US buyers actually mean.
The nearshore-vs-offshore debate is not about latitude. It is about which risks the US buyer thinks they are buying and which ones they think they are avoiding. Offshore agencies who reframe the comparison on their own terms win deals that nearshore firms assumed were theirs.
29 Jul 20267 min - Sales · Proposals
The RFP response that gets you shortlisted.
US enterprise RFPs are read for forty-five seconds before the reviewer decides which pile to put you in. The pile is chosen on three artifacts, and offshore agencies routinely lose the pile on the first artifact. Here is how the winning response is actually structured.
29 Jul 20268 min - Sales · Proposals
MSA vs SOW: what offshore agencies get wrong.
The MSA and the SOW do different jobs, and offshore agencies routinely collapse them into a single document that satisfies neither buyer-side legal nor buyer-side procurement. Here is the division of labor, and the specific clauses that decide whether the paperwork closes on time.
29 Jul 20267 min - Sales · Portfolio
The case study that a CTO will actually finish reading.
Ninety-three percent of agency case studies are abandoned before the second scroll. The seven percent that get read to the end share a specific structure, a specific tone, and a specific set of numbers. Here is what to write instead of the case-study template every offshore agency is using.
29 Jul 20267 min - Sales · Outbound
Cold outbound that does not get you filtered.
A US mid-market director gets forty offshore agency emails a week. Thirty-eight are deleted in under three seconds. The two that survive share a pattern most agencies never reverse-engineer. Here is what the surviving message actually contains.
22 Jul 20267 min - Sales · Positioning
"Full-service" is killing your close rate.
Every offshore agency site claims full-service. Every buyer reads "full-service" as "unclear about what they are good at." Narrowing the positioning to one specific engagement type is the single fastest way to move a shortlist rate. Here is what to narrow to and how.
22 Jul 20267 min - Sales · Proposals
The SOW that survives legal in one round.
US buyer legal reviews are where offshore engagements die quietly. Most kill decisions happen not on price or scope but on three clauses the SOW either has or does not have. Here are the clauses, why they matter, and the boilerplate that gets you through in one review round instead of four.
22 Jul 20268 min - Sales · Discovery
The second-meeting agenda that closes.
First meetings sell the possibility of working together. Second meetings decide whether the buyer moves you to shortlist. Most offshore agencies waste the second meeting re-pitching. The buyer wanted something else entirely. Here is the agenda that gets you moved forward.
22 Jul 20266 min - Sales · Pricing
The rate card that loses the deal before the call.
US buyers do not read a $65/hr blended rate as a bargain. They read it as a warning. What your pricing signals about your ops, your seniority mix, and your seriousness, and how to price so the number opens the conversation instead of ending it.
20 Jul 20268 min - Sales · Positioning
The portfolio page that gets you cut in forty seconds.
A US procurement analyst opens your site with a shortlist of six vendors and forty seconds each. Here is what they look at, in what order, and what a case study needs to contain to survive that skim. Most offshore case studies fail on the first scroll.
20 Jul 20268 min - Sales · Proposals
Your proposal is a legal document. Write it that way.
The gap between a US-quality SOW and what most offshore agencies send is not writing quality. It is the specific clauses buyers' legal teams look for and cannot find. The seven things a proposal has to say clearly before it lands on legal's desk, and how to say them.
20 Jul 20269 min - Sales · References
How to run a reference call that actually helps you win.
Most agencies treat references as a formality. Buyers treat them as the primary evidence source. How to pick, prep, and brief a reference so a lukewarm call becomes a decisive one, and the three sentences a reference has to be able to say clearly.
20 Jul 20268 min - Sales · Discovery
The discovery call that separates you from the seven other shops.
Senior buyers form their read in the first fifteen minutes of a discovery call. What they listen for is the difference between a vendor who has run a business and a vendor who has delivered code. The questions that signal one, the phrases that signal the other, and a script that reliably surfaces the right one.
20 Jul 20268 min
Six ways offshore deals die.
Named, numbered, and taken apart. Each pattern maps to a rubric pillar and to a specific fix you can carry into the next cycle.
- Loss patterns · L-06
You win the deal. Then you lose the renewal.
The first engagement went well. On time, on budget, no drama. At renewal the buyer switches to a US vendor at 2 to 3x the price. What happened is that internally, the win got re-narrated as "we got lucky." Luck is not renewable.
13 Jul 20266 min - Loss patterns · L-05
The champion leaves. The deal evaporates.
One person on the buyer's side got it. They ran interference internally and defended the offshore call in rooms you never saw. Then they take a new job. Their replacement inherits a half-signed SOW with an offshore vendor they have never met, and the safe move is to pause.
13 Jul 20266 min - Loss patterns · L-04
A visibly weaker shop wins on "easier to work with."
You see the winner's portfolio. Their case studies are thinner. Their stack is older. Their pricing was higher. They won because the buyer priced in the cost of every hallway conversation they would have had to defend picking you, and the number came out negative.
13 Jul 20267 min - Loss patterns · L-01
The second call goes well. Then silence.
The most common way offshore deals die has nothing to do with your work. Discovery lands, pricing is in range, the technical lead nods through the architecture walk-through, and the thread dies a week later. Here is what actually happened in the room you were not in.
6 Jul 20266 min - Loss patterns · L-02
Procurement invents a rule you can't clear on paper.
You are through technical. Legal is drafting. Then procurement circulates a new requirement. A US entity, a domestic MSA, SOC 2, a $2M E&O policy. It looks like a shakedown. It is actually a risk officer building the memo they would have to write if this failed.
6 Jul 20266 min - Loss patterns · L-03
Reference calls that were never really reference calls.
Your references took the calls. They said the right things. The deal still did not move. Reference checks late in a cycle are rarely diligence. They are a decision looking for permission. If the signal was not there before the shortlist, no reference call will save you.
6 Jul 20265 min
What the buyer is actually deciding.
The room you never sit in. Procurement, risk review, and the memo your champion writes about you when the door closes.
The five pillars, one post at a time.
How each pillar of the verification rubric is scored, what evidence moves it, and what a passing paper trail looks like.
- Rubric deep-dive · Pillar 01
Rubric deep-dive: craft and judgment (Pillar 01).
25% of the composite. Two senior practitioners read your real shipped work against a calibrated reference set. Not tool familiarity. Judgment. What we look for and how to prepare.
15 Jul 20266 min - Rubric deep-dive · Pillar 02
Rubric deep-dive: past-work review (Pillar 02).
20% of the composite. Screenshots and slides are not evidence. We grade shipped work you can open, outcomes the team can prove they caused, and how long clients stay. What we look for per discipline.
15 Jul 20267 min - Rubric deep-dive · Pillar 03
Rubric deep-dive: reference checks (Pillar 03).
20% of the composite. Signal comes from the questions the agency does not want us to ask and the answers references do not want to give. Candor beats enthusiasm. What we ask, and how we score.
15 Jul 20266 min - Rubric deep-dive · Pillar 04
Rubric deep-dive: communications assessment (Pillar 04).
20% of the composite. Most offshore engagements break down on written communication before they break down on code. A writing sample, a call recording, a one-week responsiveness window, a bad-news roleplay. How we score each.
15 Jul 20266 min - Rubric deep-dive · Pillar 05
Rubric deep-dive: operating baseline (Pillar 05).
15% of the composite, and the pillar most likely to end a vetting cycle. Not SOC 2. A check that the team handles data, access, change control, incidents, and contracts at a level a serious buyer can defend to their own security team.
15 Jul 20267 min
Delivery, trust, and the first ninety days.
Time zones, standups, handoffs, and the operating discipline that closes the trust gap before it becomes a renewal problem.
Apply to be vetted.
The intake takes about twelve minutes. You will hear back inside three business days with a scoping call or a written pass.
Start the applicationThe rubric.
Five pillars, published weights, and the evidence that moves each score. Read it before you apply so nothing on the assessment is a surprise.
Open the rubric