Your billable rate is high because your expertise is rare. So why are you spending half your week on tasks any organized person could handle for a fraction of the cost?
Consulting is a leverage business. You sell your knowledge, judgment, and time — and when those are deployed at their highest value, your business thrives. But the moment your calendar fills with scheduling emails, proposal formatting, CRM updates, and invoice follow-ups, you've started burning your most expensive resource on low-value work.
A virtual assistant for your consulting firm is one of the highest-ROI investments you can make. For every hour a VA takes off your plate, you have the potential to bill out at $150, $300, or $500+. The math is simple. The challenge is finding the right VA and integrating them correctly.
This guide covers both.
What Makes a Consulting Firm VA Different
The average consulting VA isn't just handling admin — they're often the first and last point of contact for high-value clients, managing complex scheduling across time zones, and handling confidential business information. That raises the bar compared to, say, a VA for an e-commerce brand.
What you need in a consulting VA:
- Professional, polished communication — Your VA represents your brand to clients
- Discretion and confidentiality — Client information is often sensitive
- High organizational capability — Managing multiple engagements simultaneously is complex
- Business acumen — They don't need to be a consultant, but they need to understand how consulting works
- Tech fluency — CRMs, project management tools, video conferencing, document platforms
What a Consulting Firm VA Can Handle
Business Development & Sales Support
- Researching and qualifying inbound leads before you engage
- Building prospect lists from LinkedIn, industry directories, or databases
- Drafting outreach emails and follow-up sequences for your review
- Tracking opportunities and next steps in your CRM (HubSpot, Salesforce, Pipedrive)
- Preparing company background briefs before discovery calls
- Coordinating introductory meetings and demos
Client Communication & Scheduling
- Managing your inbox and triaging client emails by urgency
- Scheduling client calls, workshops, and check-ins across time zones
- Sending pre-meeting prep materials and agendas
- Drafting status update emails from your notes
- Coordinating multi-stakeholder meetings with clients and internal team
- Sending follow-up summaries after calls
Proposal & Deliverable Support
- Formatting proposals and decks using your approved templates
- Proofreading and editing deliverables for grammar and consistency
- Compiling research for client projects from public sources
- Creating charts, tables, or summaries from data you provide
- Managing document version control in Google Drive or SharePoint
- Preparing presentation materials for workshops or trainings
Operations & Administration
- Managing contracts and SOW execution through DocuSign or PandaDoc
- Sending invoices and tracking payment status
- Following up on overdue accounts
- Expense tracking and receipt organization for your accountant
- Maintaining a client database with project history and notes
- Onboarding new clients with intake forms and kickoff logistics
Marketing & Thought Leadership
- Scheduling LinkedIn posts and newsletter content
- Repurposing your long-form content into social snippets
- Managing your speaking calendar and award submissions
- Monitoring industry news and flagging relevant topics
- Publishing blog posts and updating your website
Step-by-Step: How to Hire a Consulting Firm VA
Step 1: Identify Your Highest-Value Time Drains
Most consultants lose billable capacity in a small number of areas. Before hiring, do a time audit over one or two weeks. Track every non-billable hour and categorize it.
Common findings from consultant time audits:
| Non-Billable Task | Avg. Hours/Week |
|---|---|
| Email management | 5–8 hrs |
| Scheduling and calendar coordination | 3–5 hrs |
| Proposal preparation and formatting | 3–6 hrs |
| CRM updates and pipeline management | 2–4 hrs |
| Invoice creation and follow-up | 1–2 hrs |
| Research for client projects | 3–5 hrs |
| Social media and LinkedIn | 2–4 hrs |
| Total | 19–34 hrs/week |
At $250/hr billable, even recovering 10 of those hours means $2,500/week in unlocked capacity. A senior VA costs a fraction of that.
Step 2: Decide What Kind of VA You Need
Not every consulting firm needs the same type of VA. Consider your situation:
Executive Assistant VA Best for: Senior consultants or firm principals who need calendar management, travel coordination, client communication support, and inbox handling. High communication quality required.
Operations VA Best for: Growing firms with multiple consultants who need CRM management, project tracking, contract coordination, and invoicing support.
Research VA Best for: Consultants who spend significant time doing client research, competitive analysis, or market data compilation.
Marketing VA Best for: Consultants building a personal brand or content marketing strategy who need LinkedIn, newsletters, and website support.
You may eventually need more than one. Start with the role that addresses your biggest constraint.
Step 3: Define the Confidentiality Framework
Consulting involves privileged client information. Before anyone accesses your systems:
Confidentiality Checklist
- Execute a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) before any onboarding begins
- Define explicitly what information the VA can and cannot access
- Use role-based access in your CRM (don't give full admin access initially)
- Use a password manager (1Password, LastPass) — never share raw passwords
- Clarify that client names, project details, and deliverables are confidential
- Include IP assignment clauses if the VA is producing any content or documents
This isn't paranoia — it's professional practice. Clients trust you with sensitive information. That trust extends to everyone in your operation.
Step 4: Write a Job Description for a Consulting VA
A strong consulting VA job description signals the professionalism of your firm. Here's a template:
Executive Virtual Assistant — Consulting Firm (Part-Time or Full-Time, Remote)
We're an independent consulting firm specializing in [your niche] seeking a highly organized, professional virtual assistant to support our principal consultant.
Key Responsibilities:
- Manage and prioritize executive inbox; draft responses for approval
- Schedule and coordinate client meetings, workshops, and internal calls across time zones
- Prepare client-facing documents, proposals, and presentations using our templates
- Maintain and update CRM with pipeline activity, notes, and follow-up tasks
- Send and track contracts and invoices through DocuSign and QuickBooks
- Conduct background research on prospect companies before discovery calls
- Support LinkedIn content scheduling and newsletter distribution
You'll Thrive in This Role If You:
- Have 2+ years supporting a professional services firm, law practice, or executive
- Write exceptionally well and adapt to different communication styles
- Are highly discreet with confidential business information
- Are proactive — you anticipate needs and flag issues before they become problems
- Are comfortable with: [list your tools — HubSpot, Slack, Zoom, Google Workspace, etc.]
Step 5: Conduct a Structured Interview
For a consulting firm, the interview process should include a written component. A VA who will draft your emails needs to demonstrate they can write at the level your clients expect.
Interview Process:
- Initial screen (30 min) — Background, experience, tool familiarity, communication style
- Written test — Give a realistic scenario: draft an email declining a meeting, prepare a brief on a hypothetical company, or summarize a document
- Final interview (45 min) — Behavioral questions, confidentiality understanding, working style
Key Questions to Ask:
- "Tell me about a time you managed a complex scheduling situation with multiple stakeholders. How did you handle it?"
- "A client replies to an email you drafted on my behalf with a question I'm not available to answer. What do you do?"
- "You accidentally send a draft proposal to the wrong client. How do you handle it?"
- "How do you prioritize when you have five urgent tasks from different people at the same time?"
- "Walk me through how you'd organize and maintain a CRM for a 12-person consulting pipeline."
Step 6: Structured Onboarding for Maximum Speed-to-Value
Consultants often rush onboarding and then wonder why the VA doesn't perform well in week two. Invest the first two weeks properly.
Week 1: Systems Access and Shadowing
- Grant access to email (read only initially), CRM, scheduling tool, and document storage
- Provide brand voice guide and 10 example client emails (redact sensitive details)
- Share proposal and contract templates
- Record Loom walkthroughs of key processes (scheduling, proposal prep, invoicing)
- Introduce to any other team members they'll coordinate with
- Review your client list — who are your top clients and what do they need from you?
Week 2: Supervised Execution
- VA drafts responses; you review and send for the first week
- VA manages calendar under supervision — you confirm before anything is locked
- VA prepares first proposal draft; you revise together
- Daily 15-minute check-in to surface questions and give feedback
Week 3+: Independent Operation
- Expand scope based on performance
- Move to async communication for most items
- Weekly 30-minute sync to review pipeline, priorities, and blockers
Step 7: Set the Right Performance Metrics
Track these to evaluate your VA's impact:
| KPI | Measurement |
|---|---|
| Email response time | Hours from receipt to draft/send |
| Scheduling accuracy | Errors or conflicts per week |
| Pipeline hygiene | % of CRM records up to date |
| Invoice collection rate | % of invoices paid on time |
| Proposal turnaround time | Hours from brief to draft delivery |
| Client satisfaction | Qualitative feedback from clients on communication |
Review monthly. Adjust scope and processes based on data, not gut feel.
What to Pay a Consulting Firm VA
Expect to pay more than average for a VA supporting high-stakes client interactions:
| Experience Level | Hourly Rate (Direct Hire) |
|---|---|
| 1–2 years, general VA with professional communication | $20–$30/hr |
| 3–5 years, professional services or executive support | $30–$50/hr |
| 5+ years, consulting or law firm experience | $45–$70/hr |
A 15-hour/week VA at $35/hr costs approximately $2,100/month. If that frees up 10 billable hours at $250/hr, you've generated $2,500 in recovered capacity — a net gain from month one.
The Strategic Case for Delegating in Consulting
Here's the deeper argument: consultants who delegate well don't just save time — they fundamentally change the ceiling on their business.
A solo consultant handling everything themselves maxes out at roughly 20–25 billable hours per week after admin. A consultant with a skilled VA can maintain 30–35 billable hours while delivering a better client experience — faster response times, cleaner proposals, more consistent follow-through.
That's the difference between a $300K practice and a $500K practice — often not expertise, but operational leverage.
Stealth Agents has extensive experience placing VAs with professional services firms and independent consultants. They pre-vet for the communication quality, discretion, and business acumen that consulting demands.
If you're still figuring out what to delegate first, our 10 tasks that take you hours but a VA does in minutes article is a practical starting point — many of those tasks are especially relevant to consultants.
The best consultants aren't the ones who work the most hours. They're the ones who use their hours best. A VA makes that possible.