How to choose the right pot consultant
Hiring a pot consultant is a high-leverage decision: the right one compresses months of trial and error into a few focused weeks, while the wrong one quietly burns budget. The hard part is that almost everyone presents well. This guide is about looking past the pitch.
Start with outcomes, not credentials. Ask a prospective pot consultant to describe a recent engagement in terms of the result the client got — not the activity they performed. Specific, measurable outcomes ("we cut response time 40%") signal someone who owns results; vague activity language ("we provided strategic guidance") is a flag.
Next, test for fit with your actual situation. A strong pot specialist will ask sharp questions about your constraints before proposing anything. If they jump straight to a packaged solution, they're selling, not diagnosing.
Finally, insist on references and a small, scoped first engagement. On PotConsultant.com, every listed consultant is reviewed before going live, and verified profiles carry a badge — but you should still talk to one or two past clients before committing to a large scope.