Lead Research
Transforming LinkedIn Into a Luxury Investor Acquisition Engine
How Think Big Digital Built a High-Performance AI-Powered LinkedIn Growth System in Just 60 Hours
Case studies showing how Think Big approaches practical business problems across websites, SEO, lead research, outreach systems, automation, AI-assisted workflows, and digital operations. Each story focuses on the situation, the work delivered, what changed, and the proof available.
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A useful case study should show more than a finished screenshot or a broad claim.
Think Big case studies are written to explain the business context, the problem being solved, the implementation approach, and the improvement that followed. Where verified numbers are available, they can be included. Where exact metrics are not available, the story should focus on practical operational changes such as clearer workflows, better reporting, stronger website structure, improved lead research quality, reduced manual effort, or a more consistent execution process.
Browse practical examples by service area. Each story opens into a full case study.
Lead Research
How Think Big Digital Built a High-Performance AI-Powered LinkedIn Growth System in Just 60 Hours
Not every project has clean before-and-after numbers. Some projects improve how work is structured, reviewed, handed over, reported, or repeated.
Think Big case studies should use verified numbers only when they are available and appropriate to share. Otherwise, they should focus on operational proof: what was unclear, what was built, what changed, and what became easier to manage. This keeps the page credible for business buyers who want evidence, not exaggeration.
We focus on real work, real context, and measurable operational improvement—not vanity metrics.
No. Numbers are included only when they are available, verified, and appropriate to share. Some case studies focus on operational improvements such as clearer workflows, stronger research quality, better website structure, or improved reporting visibility.
Only where permission allows. If confidentiality applies, case studies may use client type, sector, or project context instead of public client names.
Portfolio items show visual work examples and operational snapshots. Case studies explain the business problem, approach, implementation, and outcome in more detail.
Yes. Selected case studies may include downloadable PDFs, reports, screenshots, workflow diagrams, or anonymized proof documents when a CMS phase adds that capability.
Yes, if the requirement fits Think Big's capabilities across websites, SEO, lead research, outreach systems, automation, AI workflows, dashboards, or internal tools.
Share the current situation, what is not working, and what you want to improve. We can review the problem, identify the right implementation path, and suggest a practical next step.