Lead Leap  /  About

04 — Who we are

We believe growth should be a system, not a gamble.

Modern companies are drowning in tools, tactics, and disconnected effort — yet still don't have predictable revenue. We exist to change that.

Most growth problems aren't marketing problems. They're systems problems.

We don't believe in growth hacks, one-off campaigns, channel-of-the-month strategies, or duct-taped tech stacks. We believe the companies that win build revenue like infrastructure — designed, engineered, operated, and improved continuously.

So that's what we do. Lead Leap designs, builds, and runs revenue engines: architecting the full go-to-market system, implementing the infrastructure, and operating it day to day on our platform — so growth becomes measurable, predictable, and scalable.

Our point of view

We sit above the usual categories.

Not this

A marketing agency

We're not here to run ads or chase the channel of the month.

Not this

A RevOps consultancy

We're not here to hand you a deck and "fix HubSpot."

This

The orchestration layer

We design and operate the layer where revenue actually flows.

Our founders

A sales architect and a systems architect.

One designs how revenue should move. The other builds the machine that makes it move.

Keon

Keon

Co-Founder · Revenue Architecture

From the front lines of revenue — building pipelines, running conversations, closing deals. She designs how revenue should move: the go-to-market motion, pipeline mechanics, and conversion logic, built for how humans actually buy.

Claire

Claire

Co-Founder, CEO & Chief Systems Architect

A systems architect by nature — obsessed with structure, data integrity, and orchestration at scale. She builds how the engine runs: CRM and data architecture, workflow systems, attribution, platform infrastructure, and AI execution layers. Engineered, not duct-taped.

The long-term vision.

We're building the operating system for modern revenue — where humans and AI work together, systems run continuously, and revenue becomes an engineered outcome, not a hopeful one.

If you want better campaigns, there are a thousand agencies. If you want control over revenue, you want a system.

Let's build it

Revenue, engineered.