The Legacy Program
For home service and professional service operators at $10M and above who are building something that outlasts them.
Legacy engagements are limited to five at any time. We are currently accepting two.
This is not a marketing constraint. It is a function of what the engagement requires. Legacy clients receive direct strategic involvement from Brett Williamson, and that involvement cannot be scaled without compromising what makes it valuable.
Full channel deployment at Authority scale
Everything the Authority program delivers continues and deepens. The marketing system runs. The channels compound. The reporting connects to revenue and enterprise value. The difference is the strategic layer that sits above it.
Owner-independent brand architecture
The brand is built to operate without the owner at the center of it. Not a personal brand. An institutional one. A business whose marketing identity is documented, systematized, and transferable is worth more than one where the brand is inseparable from the person who built it.
Marketing systems built for transferability
Every process documented. Every attribution source mapped. Every channel relationship recorded. A Legacy client's marketing operation is built to hand off cleanly, whether that handoff is to a new owner, an internal leadership team, or a successor who was not part of building it.
EBITDA-connected reporting
Reporting at Legacy connects marketing investment to enterprise value. It frames the marketing operation as a business asset with a measurable contribution to EBITDA multiple, the number that matters most when the time comes to define what the business is worth.
Direct strategic involvement from Brett Williamson
Monthly strategic sessions. Quarterly positioning reviews. The kind of conversation that happens between advisors, not between agencies and clients. Brett brings the full context of financial planning, business operations, and marketing strategy to every Legacy engagement. This is not a managed service. It is a strategic partnership.
Exit and succession readiness, when relevant
Not every Legacy client is planning to exit. But every Legacy client should be positioned to exit on their own terms if life changes the plan. Legacy engagements include an assessment of marketing's role in exit or succession readiness and a deliberate strategy for building the brand independence and operational transferability that maximizes optionality.
Defined through discovery. Not through a price sheet.
Legacy engagements begin at $15,000 per month. The full scope, structure, and term are defined through a confidential discovery conversation. This is not a negotiation. It is a calibration. The engagement is built around what your business requires, not a fixed menu of deliverables.
Ad spend continues to be paid directly to the platform, managed and optimized as part of the full channel deployment.
If you are evaluating Legacy against a line item on a budget, it is likely not the right moment. If you are evaluating it against the cost of the decisions you have made without a strategic marketing partner at this level, the conversation will be straightforward.
Sources: U.S. Small Business Administration. Harvard Business Review. The CMO Survey, Duke University Fuqua School of Business.
The business stops depending on you to be valuable.
Before Legacy, the business is worth what it produces. After Legacy, it is worth what it would produce without you. That is a meaningful difference in enterprise value and it is the work that Legacy is designed to do.
The marketing operation becomes documented and transferable. The brand develops institutional identity that is not contingent on the owner's presence or relationships. The reporting connects every marketing decision to the financial outcomes that matter at this level. And the strategic conversations that were happening in your head, or with your attorney, or with no one, begin happening with someone who understands both the marketing and the business context behind it.
For some operators, what changes is simply the feeling that the business is no longer fragile. That it could continue without them if it had to. That the thing they built is real and permanent and not entirely dependent on them showing up every day to hold it together.
That is not a small thing to build. And it is not a small thing to have built.
Frequently Asked Questions
What makes a service business marketing system transferable to a new owner or leadership team?
A transferable marketing system has three characteristics. It is documented, meaning every process, every channel relationship, every attribution source, and every vendor agreement is recorded and accessible to someone who was not part of building it. It is institutional, meaning the brand operates independently of any individual, including the owner, and its identity does not require that person to remain present for the brand to hold its meaning in the market. And it is diversified, meaning no single channel, platform, or relationship is responsible for a disproportionate share of demand. A business whose marketing checks all three boxes is worth more to a buyer or successor than one that depends on the owner's personal involvement, relationships, or reputation to sustain it.
How does a systematized marketing operation affect the value of a service business?
Enterprise value in a service business is largely a function of risk reduction. Buyers, successors, and incoming leadership pay more for businesses where the revenue is predictable, the systems are documented, and the growth does not depend on the owner. A marketing operation that produces consistent, attributed, platform-diversified demand reduces risk in a specific and measurable way. It demonstrates that the business can generate revenue through a system rather than through relationships. That demonstration, reflected in reporting that connects marketing investment to revenue outcomes over time, directly supports a higher EBITDA multiple. The marketing system is not just a growth tool at this level. It is a valuation tool.
What is the difference between personal brand equity and institutional brand equity in a service business?
Personal brand equity is the reputation, trust, and recognition that accumulates around the individual who built the business. It is real and valuable, but it does not transfer. When the owner steps back, retires, or exits, personal brand equity leaves with them. Institutional brand equity is the reputation, trust, and recognition that accumulates around the business itself, its name, its visual identity, its content, its review history, and its market presence, independent of any individual. It transfers. A service business with strong institutional brand equity is worth more than one where the brand is inseparable from the founder, because a buyer or successor is acquiring an asset, not a dependency. Legacy engagements are specifically designed to build the institutional layer and reduce the personal layer as a proportion of total brand value.
What should a service business operator think about their marketing in the years before a planned or possible transition?
The three to five years before any transition, planned or otherwise, are the most important marketing years in the life of a service business. They are the window in which documented systems, consistent attribution, and institutional brand authority can be built to the point where they are visible and credible to a buyer, a successor, or a leadership team. The businesses that capture the highest value at transition are the ones that began building transferable marketing systems years before they needed them, not in the months before. The specific priorities in this window include documenting every channel and process, diversifying away from any single platform or relationship, building content authority that compounds independently, and connecting marketing reporting to the financial metrics that matter in a valuation conversation. Beginning this work early is almost always worth more than beginning it at the moment of need.
How do I build a marketing operation that produces results without requiring my direct involvement?
Owner-independent marketing is built in stages. The first stage is systematization: every process is documented, every vendor relationship is managed through a system rather than a personal relationship, and every channel is reported against defined metrics that do not require the owner's interpretation. The second stage is delegation: a team, internal or agency-based, is capable of making day-to-day decisions within a defined strategic framework without escalating to the owner. The third stage is institutionalization: the brand, the content, and the market presence operate on momentum that was built over time and continues to compound without active input. Most service businesses at this revenue level are somewhere between the first and second stage. Legacy engagements are designed to move them through all three.
If you are asking the question, it may be time to have it.
Legacy engagements begin with a confidential conversation. There is no proposal stage. No pitch deck. The first conversation is diagnostic: what the business is, what it is becoming, and whether Legacy is the right engagement for where you are.
Brett leads every Legacy discovery conversation personally. If the engagement is right, the structure is defined together. If it is not, the conversation still has value. That is the standard we hold ourselves to.
Maximum five engagements. Currently accepting two.

