How Southleft Grew Without “Salesy” Lead Gen
Interview: Why the Best Agency Pipeline Comes From Real Relationships (Not Tactics)
Behind the Agency Podcast with TJ Pitre, Founder & CEO of Southleft
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Prefer the highlights? Key takeaways and summary below.
TL;DR – Key Takeaways
TJ didn’t “decide to start an agency.” He left a job (Martha Stewart) to freelance… and it naturally turned into a firm.
The first year was basically one giant client (40 hours/week). Great cash. Huge risk. He knew it.
His first “new” clients came from a tight network inside digital media—people moving between big publication brands.
The real network wasn’t built in meetings. It was built after work: happy hours, coffee, being a normal human.
TJ hates cold outreach. Not because it doesn’t work… but because it feels fake, and people can smell it.
Their niche held up: front-end design/dev, especially design systems, component libraries, and API-driven front-end work.
Tech changes constantly, so they focus less on “pick one framework forever” and more on: right tool + who inherits it.
The goal isn’t hypergrowth. It’s a profitable, boutique team, low stress, and clients they actually like.
Meet the Guest
TJ Pitre is the Founder & CEO of Southleft, a front-end focused dev + design firm. They help teams build design systems, component libraries, and complex front-end experiences—often integrating with headless CMS setups (WordPress, Sanity, Contentful) and API-heavy ecosystems (CRMs, dashboards, authenticated apps).
TJ’s background blends art + design (he thought he’d be a comic book artist) with deep front-end development. Before South Left, he was Director of Front-End Development at Martha Stewart.
Episode Summary
1. The “Accidental Agency” Origin Story
TJ’s path is the classic “I’m gonna freelance” story that turns into… a company.
He left Martha Stewart around 2012, moved back to New Orleans, and Martha became his first client for basically a full year at ~40 hours/week. That stability gave him room to grow—but also created a dangerous single-client dependency.
2. The Main Tension: You Can’t Fake Relationships
TJ’s whole growth philosophy is basically: if you’re trying to “get something,” people feel it.
He’s blunt about it. Most templated outreach feels gross. Even when someone tries to tell themselves it’s “not sales,” the intent leaks through.
“If you’re going into the conversation trying to sell, most people are gonna sniff that out.”
And that’s why his playbook is simple:
be around people
be real
let business be the byproduct
3. Their Unique Way of Solving It: Front-End as a Specialty
South Left stayed focused on front-end when it was more niche, and they kept evolving with the industry.
They’ve done waves of:
component libraries (the old days)
Storybook + design systems (current)
web components (a big focus now)
headless/decoupled front ends
API-driven UI: dashboards, authenticated experiences, CRM integrations
The through-line isn’t “we only use X framework.”
It’s “we build the front end right—and we build it so someone else can live with it after we leave.”
4. Framework, Method, or Mental Model
TJ’s decision model is super practical:
Start with who inherits it.
What skills does the client team have?
What will they maintain?
Are they hiring more of that skill set?
Then work backward into architecture.
He also called out a very agency-real approach:
Boilerplates for the first 20–35%
starter kits for Storybook/design systems
starter kits for decoupled Next.js setups
starter kits for WordPress patterns
Then adapt based on:
the client’s existing tech
whether it’s augmentation vs net-new
what teams consume the system later
5. Common Mistake or ‘Cringe’ Moment
The big “cringe” is the fake networking / fake outreach thing.
TJ basically says: if you’re networking like it’s a vending machine (“insert friendliness → receive leads”), you’re doing it wrong.
His fix is a hard one for a lot of founders:
stop trying to force an outcome
prioritize the relationship even if no project comes from it
“I would rather choose a relationship over the project.”
6. Where the Founder Still Belongs
This part was subtle but important: TJ is actively trying to make South Left less owner-led.
Because if the company is “TJ’s network + TJ’s relationships,” the business isn’t very transferable or durable.
So even though he dislikes outbound personally, he’s willing to bring in help so the company can grow beyond him.
7. Hiring, Scaling, or Process Lessons
TJ uses EOS and has 1-year / 3-year / 5-year / 10-year plans… but not in the “money grab” way.
His version of success is:
boutique-sized
profitable
low stress
a team where he knows everyone
a handful of high-end clients who value the work
He’s not chasing 150 people and $150M.
Notable Quotes
“If you’re going into the conversation trying to sell, most people are gonna sniff that out.”
“The relationship in and of itself is the thing that is really what you want.”
“Most of the business comes in through referrals… and stupid stuff I post on LinkedIn.”
“I don’t want to live a stressful life… If we can create that culture and harmony, then that’s success.”
📞 Learn More / Get in Touch
Visit → southleft.com
LinkedIn → (TJ’s DMs are open; connect there)
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