We started because budgets needed different thinking
Most organisations treat budget cuts like surgery — remove what hurts least and hope for recovery. We approach it more like redesigning a system that wasn't built for current conditions.
How this actually started
The 2022 observation
A mid-sized public sector department contacted us about their recurring deficit. They had cut training, delayed equipment replacement, and frozen three positions.
Yet somehow the deficit kept growing. When we mapped their actual spending patterns over 18 months, we found that their cuts had increased operational costs by forcing workarounds, overtime, and emergency purchases.
What we learned from twelve similar cases
Over the next year, we ran through twelve organisations with the same symptoms. Different sectors, different sizes, but the pattern repeated: budget cuts that made sense on paper created hidden costs elsewhere.
The issue wasn't that people didn't know how to cut budgets. It was that cutting budgets requires understanding the entire system, not just the line items. And most decision-makers were working with incomplete information.
Why we focus on seminars rather than consulting
After those first twelve engagements, we realised something. The organisations that implemented changes successfully weren't the ones where we did the work for them. They were the ones where their own teams developed the capability to analyse their systems properly.
That shifted our entire approach. Instead of providing answers, we started teaching the analysis methods. Instead of building solutions, we trained people to design their own. The seminar format emerged from that realisation.
What guides our work
These aren't values statements or aspirations. They're the specific practices that define how we run every seminar.
System visibility first
Before discussing cuts, we spend significant time mapping how resources actually flow through organisations. Most budget problems hide in the connections between departments, not in the obvious line items.
Real scenarios only
Our examples come from actual cases we've worked through. No theoretical frameworks or abstract models. Participants work with the same messy, incomplete data they face in their organisations.
Peer learning emphasis
The most valuable insights usually come from other participants dealing with similar constraints. We structure seminars to facilitate those exchanges rather than positioning ourselves as the sole knowledge source.
Documentation matters
Every analysis method we teach includes the documentation framework participants need to implement it back home. Good decisions require good records of how you arrived at them.
Time horizon clarity
We're explicit about what timeframes different strategies require. Some budget cuts work immediately. Others create worse problems if you don't give them enough runway. Distinguishing between them is critical.
Honest about limitations
Some situations genuinely can't be fixed through better budget management. We're direct about when that's the case and what the actual constraints are. False hope serves no one.
Who runs these seminars
We keep the team small because depth of expertise matters more than breadth of coverage. Both facilitators have spent years working directly with organisations on budget implementation.
Thulani Gumede
Lead Facilitator
Spent eight years in municipal finance before shifting to education. Specialises in public sector constraints and works primarily with government departments facing structural deficits. Background includes operational management and compliance oversight.
Lerato Phiri
Research Director
Develops the case studies and analysis frameworks used in seminars. Previously worked in corporate restructuring and handled twelve turnaround projects between 2018 and 2023. Focuses on identifying hidden cost drivers in complex organisations.
See if our approach fits your situation
We run detailed seminars on budget analysis methods that work in resource-constrained environments. Most participants are dealing with structural deficits that standard approaches haven't solved.
View Current Seminars