By the time GrowthPad launched, I had worked with HubSpot long enough and with enough partners to notice a pattern.
Most HubSpot partners are good at HubSpot.
Fewer are good at understanding what it actually means to operate a business.
That difference matters more than most people realize.
When you’re leading a business, you’re not looking for:
You’re looking for:
From a leadership perspective, HubSpot isn’t a project.
It’s part of how decisions get made.
In my experience, most partners struggle in one or more of these areas:
1. They optimize for launch, not longevity
The system looks great at go-live.
But no one is accountable for what happens next.
2. They underestimate organizational change
A technically right solution can still fail if the team isn’t ready for it.
3. They confuse capability with readiness
Just because HubSpot can do something doesn’t mean a business should do it yet.
4. They design for experts, not operators
Systems that only work if a specialist is always involved don’t scale.
None of this is malicious.
It’s just disconnected from day-to-day reality.
Leaders need partners who understand:
They need systems that:
That takes judgment, not just technical skill.
Having lived on the user side for years before becoming a partner changed how I see this work.
I know:
And I know the downstream cost of all of it.
That experience shapes everything we do.
Because of this journey:
And just as importantly, there are things we won’t do.
We won’t:
The best partners don’t make a business feel smarter.
They make it feel safer to run.
Safer trusting the numbers.
Safer making decisions.
Safer knowing the system won’t collapse if someone leaves.
That’s the standard I didn’t know to ask for early on but one I won’t compromise on now.