By the time a client came to us, it had already tried the obvious thing. A staffing vendor had placed several contractors on a long-running build, and on paper it looked like plenty of capacity. In practice the people who turned up did not always match the CVs that had been sent, the faces changed every few months as individuals were rotated off to other accounts, and each change reset the clock — new joiners spent weeks learning ground the last ones had only just covered. The client was paying for a team and getting a procession.

What they had run into is the body-shop model working exactly as it tends to: seats filled, invoices sent, nobody really standing behind the outcome. They wanted the opposite — fewer people, each of whom had actually done the work, who would stay long enough to matter.

The challenges we had to solve

  • The CVs supplied had not reliably matched the people who showed up to do the work.
  • Frequent rotation meant knowledge kept walking out before it could settle.
  • Headcount had been treated as the measure, rather than work actually delivered.
  • The client had lost confidence that anyone on the vendor side owned the result.

How we approached it

We put forward a smaller number of engineers and were specific about who they were and what they had built, so the people in the room were the people on the CVs. They embedded in the client’s team and were accountable to its delivery lead for outcomes, not hours logged. We do not rotate people off an account to suit our own staffing — continuity is the thing the client had been missing, and it is the thing we protect.

Because we also build and run systems like the one in question, we knew what a capable hire for it looked like and could stand behind each placement rather than hoping a CV held up. Where the work needed more hands for a stretch, we flexed up and then back down, without swapping out the people who held the context.

Fewer people, each one stood behind, beats a larger team nobody owns.

Where it stands

The build moved again once the same people stayed on it long enough to build real familiarity with the client’s systems. The client stopped managing a turnover problem and started getting work delivered. The arrangement is smaller than the one it replaced and accountable in a way the previous one never was.

Talk to us about your project.

A short conversation is usually enough to tell whether we are the right fit for the work. We will be straight with you either way.