Letters from Both Sides: From a Provider to a Consultant and from a Consultant to a Provider

Every good partnership starts with the intention to work together — but too often, what each side really needs, fears, or hopes for goes unspoken.

These two fictional letters — one from a provider leader to a consultant, and one from a consultant to the provider — are drawn from real conversations I’ve had with friends on both sides.

I’ve learned a lot from them. And I’m still learning — trying to get better at this work and share a few things that might be helpful along the way.

 

Letter 1

From a Provider to a Consultant

Leaders inside provider organizations are people trying to run complex systems, serve their communities, and find partners to help them do it better.

Here’s some of what they may like to say to consultants and professional services firms—if they had the time and space to say it plainly.

  • We actually want you to succeed. You’ve got ideas, experience, and tools that could help us a lot, but sometimes the way you show up makes us feel more like a case study than a client.

    You see, we’re not sitting around waiting to be fixed. We’re grinding through real, messy, mission-driven work—most days under-resourced and overstretched. We don’t need a hero. We need a guide.

    So, if we could sit down over coffee before the engagement starts, here’s what I’d say:

    1. Start by listening. Not just to the C-suite. Walk our halls. Learn how things really work here.

    2. Ditch the jargon. Clear beats clever. We don’t need buzzwords—we need language that moves people to action.

    3. Context is everything. A brilliant idea that doesn’t fit our culture or capacity is still a bad idea.

    4. Help us do it, not just understand it. Theories don’t transform systems. Capability-building does.

    5. Leave us better than you found us. That’s the gold standard. Not just deliverables—but confidence, clarity, and alignment.

    We’re not asking for perfection. Just partnership. And if you show up that way—fully present, humble, human—you’ll stand out more than any slick proposal ever could.

    Sincerely,
    A provider who’s rooting for the right kind of help

 

Letter 2

From a Consultant to a Provider

 

Leaders inside consulting and professional services firms really want to get partnership right. They’re not looking for one-off wins. They’re trying to build something lasting, helpful, and human.

Here is what true partnership with providers sounds and feels like from the consultants I’ve been talking to.

 
  • We see the weight you carry. You’re navigating policy shifts, workforce crises, financial pressures, and growing community needs—all while trying to keep your people inspired and your mission intact.

    When you bring us in, it’s not just for answers. It’s for energy, perspective, and the kind of thinking that helps you move forward with confidence.

    But, here’s what makes the difference between a transactional project and a true partnership:

    1. Invite us into the story, not just the task. We do our best work when we understand what you care about, not just what you need to be done.

    2. Be real with us. Tell us the good, the bad, and the messy. That’s how trust gets built.

    3. Share your people. If your team isn’t engaged, we’re just guests. When they’re involved, we’re collaborators.

    4. Let it be iterative. The best solutions evolve. Let’s build something responsive, not rigid.

    5. Hold us accountable—but also hold space. We want to earn your trust, not just your approval. And that takes honesty on both sides.

    Our goal? To walk with you through the tough stuff, bring clarity where there’s confusion, and help you leave stronger than you started.

    Not just a contract. A real partnership.

    Sincerely,
    A consultant who’s in it with you

 

At Aspire, our goal as consultants is partnership – to walk alongside, support, and provide guidance. We know you are the experts in your organizations, and we are here to support you in leading it well.

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