Join a Collaborative Collective of
Independent Experts.
Why a Collective?
Complex organisational challenges rarely sit within a single discipline.
Companies scaling today need coordinated expertise across leadership, strategy, people, and operations.
The Leadershift Collective brings together independent experts to deliver integrated solutions, combining specialised knowledge with a collaborative approach.
For clients, this means more holistic support.
For consultants, it creates a trusted environment to collaborate, learn, and build meaningful work together.
Why join?
Access to qualified projects
Fractional missions aligned with growth phases
.
Revenue through collaboration
Refer opportunities and receive 10% commission
.
A community of peers
Inspiration, brainstorming and meet-ups.
.
Visibility
Profile featured on the Leadershift website with regular Social Media mentions
How it works?
Referral commission:
Members who introduce a new client that leads to a project receive 10% of the project value for the first engagement.
Client ownership:
-
The consultant/entity who introduces the client remains the relationship owner
-
Leadershift coordinates the project if multiple experts are involved
Collective Orchestration commission:
On collective projects, Leadershift retains a 10% orchestration fee to structure
and coordinate the engagement. This includes project scoping, coordination
and admin.
Project assembly model:
A project team is assembled based on the following criteria:
Expertise required, availability and prior collaboration fit.
Project participation:
Members are free to accept or decline proposed projects based on their expertise, availability, or fit.
Project teams are formed through voluntary participation and mutual agreement.
Collaboration principles:
• We prioritise collaboration over competition
• Expertise is combined to deliver the best outcome for clients
• Members contribute to a culture of trust and knowledge sharing
Legal structure:
The entity introducing the client typically holds the main contract.
When multiple experts are involved, additional contributors operate through subcontracting agreements.
