Business Coaching & Consulting Intake Forms: What to Capture Before the First Engagement
A business coach who walks into a first session knowing nothing more than the client's name and a vague sense that they "want to grow" is going to spend that entire hour asking questions that should have been answered before the meeting was booked. The client leaves feeling like they paid for an interview, not a session. The coach leaves without a framework for what this engagement is actually about. Both are right to be frustrated.
Business coaching and consulting sit in a category where the intake process matters more than almost any other professional service. Unlike a plumber who can see the leaking pipe or a dentist who can look at the X-ray, a business coach is working with information the client provides. If that information is incomplete, shallow, or never collected in the first place, every recommendation that follows is built on guesswork.
A structured business coaching intake form does not just collect contact details. It captures the full picture of where the business is today, what brought the owner to seek outside help, what success looks like in concrete terms, and what the organizational reality is behind the owner's narrative. Here is what that form should include and why each section matters.
Client and company overview: who you are working with
Every engagement starts with understanding the human being and the entity they represent. These are not formalities — they shape how you communicate, what you recommend, and where the leverage points are:
- Contact information — full name, email, phone, preferred contact method. Some clients want everything by text. Others want a scheduled call. Knowing this before the first session eliminates the awkward "how should I reach you" exchange.
- Company name and website — a functioning website tells you a lot before you ever speak to the client. A company with no web presence tells you something different. Both are useful data points.
- Industry and niche — "marketing agency" is not the same as "marketing agency specializing in dental practices." The niche determines the competitive dynamics, margin structure, and growth ceiling.
- Years in business — a company in its first eighteen months faces fundamentally different challenges than one that has been operating for twelve years. The first is still searching for product-market fit. The second may be stuck in patterns that worked a decade ago and no longer do.
- Revenue range — you do not need exact financials at intake, but a range matters. A $200K solo operation and a $5M company with twenty employees are different coaching engagements. Your approach, your frameworks, and your pricing should all reflect the scale of the business you are advising.
- Employee count — this tells you whether leadership and delegation are relevant topics, whether the client is doing everything themselves, and how complex the organizational dynamics are.
- Ownership structure — sole proprietor, partnership, LLC with multiple members, family business. Partnerships and family businesses introduce interpersonal dynamics that a sole proprietor engagement never touches. If there are co-owners, you need to know whether they are aligned on the decision to hire a coach — because if they are not, that becomes the first issue to address.
Business situation: what brought them here
This is the most important section on the form. A client who reaches out to a business coach has hit some kind of inflection point. Understanding what that inflection point is — in their own words — tells you more about the engagement than any financial statement will.
What brought them to coaching or consulting. Give them categories to select from, with room for narrative. The common triggers are remarkably consistent:
- Growth plateau — revenue has been flat for one to three years. They have tried the obvious things. Nothing is moving the needle. They know they need a different approach but cannot identify what it is.
- Operational chaos — the business is growing, but the infrastructure is not keeping up. Things fall through cracks. Quality is inconsistent. The owner is firefighting instead of leading.
- Leadership gaps — the team that got the business to this point cannot take it further. The owner knows they need to hire differently, manage differently, or develop existing leaders, but they do not know how.
- Transition or succession — the owner is preparing to sell, step back, bring in a partner, or hand the business to a family member. These transitions fail when they are not planned eighteen to thirty-six months in advance.
- Startup or launch — the client is building something new and wants to avoid the mistakes they have seen others make. They want structure and accountability from someone who has watched a hundred businesses navigate the first two years.
Current biggest challenge. One open-ended question: "What is the single biggest problem in your business right now?" This forces the client to prioritize. Many will want to list five things. Let them — but the first thing they write down is usually the real one.
What they have already tried. This prevents you from recommending solutions the client has already attempted and abandoned. If they hired a fractional COO six months ago and it did not work, you need to understand why before suggesting anything that sounds similar.
Why now. Timing matters. A client who has been thinking about hiring a coach for two years and just got around to it is in a different headspace than one whose biggest client just left and revenue dropped thirty percent last quarter. The urgency level shapes the engagement structure.
Goals and success metrics: what does winning look like
Coaching engagements fail most often not because the coach is bad, but because success was never defined. The client expected one thing, the coach was working toward another, and six months later both are dissatisfied. Your intake form is where you nail this down.
- Six-to-twelve-month vision — "Where do you want your business to be in one year?" This is a narrative question. Let them describe it in their own words. The language they use reveals their priorities — a client who talks about revenue is in a different place than one who talks about freedom.
- Specific financial targets — revenue goal, profitability target, headcount plan. Not every client has these. But those who do are easier to coach because you have a scoreboard. Those who do not have them need help establishing benchmarks before anything else.
- Non-financial goals — work-life balance, delegation (finally taking a vacation without the business falling apart), building a leadership team, preparing for an exit, improving company culture. These goals are often more important to the client than the financial ones, but they rarely state them first. The form gives them permission to.
- How they will measure progress — what KPIs or milestones will tell both of you that the engagement is working? Monthly revenue? Customer retention rate? Hours the owner works per week? Number of direct reports? If you do not define the measuring stick at intake, you will argue about it at the six-month review.
Business assessment: what is actually happening inside the company
The client's narrative about their business and the operational reality of their business are frequently two different things. Your intake form bridges that gap by asking structured questions about how the company actually functions:
- Organizational structure — ask for a brief description or an org chart. Who reports to whom? How many layers are there between the owner and the front-line employees? A flat organization with fifteen people reporting to the owner has a span-of-control problem. A heavily layered organization with only twenty employees has a bureaucracy problem.
- Key team members and roles — who are the critical people in the business? Not just titles — who actually makes things run? Every business has one or two people who, if they left tomorrow, would create a crisis. Identifying them at intake helps you understand the risk profile and the dependency structure.
- Current technology stack — what tools is the business running on? CRM, project management, accounting software, communication platforms. A business still running on spreadsheets and email has different needs than one with a fully integrated tech stack. Technology gaps are often symptoms of deeper operational problems.
- Financial health — is the business profitable, at breakeven, or burning cash? What are the margins? Is there a line of credit? Is the owner taking a salary or reinvesting everything? You do not need a full P&L at intake, but you need to understand the financial temperature.
- Customer acquisition — how does the business get customers? Referrals, paid advertising, content marketing, cold outreach, partnerships? What is the approximate cost to acquire a customer, and what is a customer worth over their lifetime? A business that depends entirely on referrals is one personal relationship away from a dry pipeline.
- Operations maturity — are processes documented or is everything tribal knowledge? Can the business run for two weeks without the owner? The answer to this question determines whether you are coaching an executive or untangling a job that someone accidentally turned into a company.
Leadership and decision-making: the owner under the microscope
In most small and mid-size businesses, the owner is the business. Their habits, blind spots, decision-making patterns, and daily routines determine the company's ceiling. Your intake needs to capture this honestly, which means asking questions the owner may not have considered before:
- Owner's role day-to-day — what do they actually spend their time on? Sales? Operations? Putting out fires? Doing the work themselves because they cannot find anyone who does it to their standard? The gap between what an owner should be doing and what they are actually doing is usually where the coaching starts.
- Hours worked per week — a number, not a narrative. Sixty-five hours a week is not a badge of honor — it is a symptom. An owner working thirty hours who feels overwhelmed has a different problem than one working seventy hours who cannot stop.
- Delegation comfort level — on a scale, how comfortable are they handing work to others? Many owners intellectually understand delegation but emotionally cannot let go. This is not a business problem — it is a coaching problem, and your approach needs to account for it.
- Leadership style — how do they describe their own management approach? Hands-on, collaborative, directive, laissez-faire? Their self-assessment may differ from reality, but it tells you how they see themselves, which matters when you start suggesting changes.
- Key decisions pending — are there major decisions they are sitting on? A new hire, a lease, a product launch, a partnership, a firing? Pending decisions create mental load. Surfacing them at intake gives you context for the first session and may reveal the real reason they hired a coach.
- Board, advisors, or partners — who else provides input on business decisions? Are there investors with expectations? A spouse who co-owns the business? An informal advisory board? Understanding the full decision-making ecosystem prevents you from giving advice that gets vetoed by someone you did not know existed.
For engagements focused specifically on C-suite leaders rather than business owners — where the coaching is developmental, sponsored by the organization, and anchored in 360 feedback and psychometric assessments — a dedicated executive coaching intake form captures the tri-party confidentiality boundaries, sponsor expectations, and assessment baselines that a general business coaching intake does not cover.
Coaching logistics: how the engagement works
Logistics seem administrative, but misaligned expectations about format and frequency are among the top reasons coaching engagements end prematurely. Capture these at intake so both sides are clear:
- Format preference — in-person, virtual, or hybrid. Some clients want the accountability of sitting across the table. Others value the efficiency of video calls. Some want in-person for the first few sessions and virtual after trust is established. There is no wrong answer, but there needs to be an agreed-upon answer.
- Session frequency — weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly. Weekly works well for clients in active crisis or major transitions. Bi-weekly is the most common cadence for ongoing engagements. Monthly suits clients who are further along and need a strategic check-in rather than tactical support.
- Engagement length — is this a three-month sprint or a twelve-month relationship? Some coaches sell packages. Others work month-to-month. The client's expectation about timeline needs to match yours, and it needs to be documented.
- Between-session expectations — will there be homework? Accountability check-ins via text or email? Access to the coach between sessions for quick questions? A client who expects unlimited between-session access and a coach who expects zero contact between calls will have a problem by week three.
- Communication preferences — email, phone, text, Slack, Voxer. How quickly should the client expect a response? What constitutes an emergency that justifies an off-schedule contact?
- Stakeholder involvement — should anyone else attend sessions? A business partner, COO, spouse, or key employee? If someone else needs to be in the room for certain conversations, that should be established upfront.
The logistics section overlaps with what life coaches capture, but the business context adds complexity. A life coaching engagement typically involves one person working on personal goals. A business coaching engagement may involve multiple stakeholders, financial reporting between sessions, and organizational changes that affect employees who never appear in the coaching room.
Investment and commitment: are they ready to do this
This section is not about closing a sale. It is about qualifying whether the client is genuinely prepared for a coaching engagement, both financially and psychologically. A client who is not ready to invest money, time, or emotional energy will stall, cancel sessions, and eventually ghost — and both of you will have wasted months.
- Budget range — what have they allocated for coaching or consulting? This prevents the awkward conversation where you present a $3,000-per-month engagement to someone who was thinking $500. It also prevents you from under-pricing yourself to a client who was prepared to invest significantly more.
- Previous coaching or consulting experience — have they worked with a coach or consultant before? What worked? What did not? If a previous engagement ended badly, you need to understand why so you do not repeat the pattern. If they have never worked with a coach, you may need to spend more time setting expectations about what coaching is and is not.
- Decision-maker confirmation — is the person filling out this form the one who makes the financial decision? In partnerships and family businesses, the person who wants coaching is not always the person who controls the budget. Discover this at intake, not after you have done a discovery session and drafted a proposal.
- Timeline to start — are they ready to begin immediately, or are they researching options? A client who is comparing three coaches needs a different follow-up cadence than one who wants to start next week.
- Potential obstacles — what might prevent them from fully engaging? Travel schedule, seasonal business demands, a partner who is skeptical about coaching, cash flow constraints in certain months. Surfacing obstacles at intake lets you plan around them rather than be surprised by them.
Confidentiality and NDA considerations
Business coaching involves access to information that most companies would never share with an outsider — revenue figures, margin data, employee performance issues, strategic plans, customer lists, vendor contracts. Your intake form needs to address confidentiality directly:
- Sensitivity level — what categories of information does the client consider highly confidential? Financial data, customer information, trade secrets, personnel matters, pending deals? Understanding their sensitivity helps you handle information appropriately and store records securely.
- NDA requirement — does the client require a mutual or one-way non-disclosure agreement before sharing business information? Many sophisticated clients will expect this. Having it as a checkbox on the intake form signals that you take confidentiality seriously and that you have an NDA ready to go.
- Case study and testimonial consent — can you reference this client (anonymously or by name) in your marketing materials? Can you use their results as a case study? This consent is much easier to obtain at intake, when the relationship is new and the client is enthusiastic, than it is six months later when you are asking for a favor.
Professionals in adjacent fields face similar confidentiality dynamics. Bookkeepers handle equally sensitive financial data and need to establish information-handling protocols at intake. The difference is that a bookkeeper's access is primarily to financial records, while a business coach may be privy to everything from the owner's personal compensation to their plan to replace a long-tenured employee.
Why a structured form beats a "discovery call"
Many business coaches rely entirely on a discovery call to gather this information. The problem with discovery calls is that they are unstructured, they depend on the coach remembering to ask every question, and the client is speaking off the cuff rather than reflecting. A business owner who fills out an intake form at their desk — with their financials open, their org chart in front of them, and time to think about what they actually want — provides dramatically better information than the same person answering rapid-fire questions on a thirty-minute call.
The form does not replace the discovery conversation. It makes the discovery conversation productive. Instead of spending forty-five minutes on background questions, you spend forty-five minutes on the questions that matter — the ones that came up because you read their intake form and noticed that their revenue has been flat for three years, they have no documented processes, and their biggest customer represents forty percent of their income. That is a conversation worth having. That is a conversation the client is willing to pay for.
If you serve a broader professional services clientele, the Professional Services Bundle includes business coaching alongside 34 other service categories, each with profession-specific intake fields designed for the way that practice actually operates.
Business coaching intake forms — $19.99 complete set
Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Company overview, business situation, goals and success metrics, organizational assessment, leadership profile, coaching logistics, investment readiness, and confidentiality terms. Built for business coaches and consultants.
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