Founder's Mentality Blog
From a Time of Heroes to a Time of Balance
From a Time of Heroes to a Time of Balance
Founders encounter three typical phases when they try to scale their talent and their organizations.
Founder's Mentality Blog
Founders encounter three typical phases when they try to scale their talent and their organizations.
“Revenue grows faster than talent. Discuss.”
In my recent visit to Mumbai, I conducted two workshops on the statement above. This issue is often the hardest single problem founders face as they scale their organizations to match their growth rates. We opened each workshop talking about the typical phases that founders encounter when trying to scale their talent and their organizations:
A time of heroes. As a founder-led company scales in its first phase, the leadership team closes most of the gaps in its organization through heroics. They simply throw the existing team into the gaps and pray that it can handle the new responsibilities. Heroes are born. The 30-year old brought in to help with sales blossoms into the top salesperson, performing at levels rarely expected from someone 20 years more senior. The young computer guy, brought in to set up the company’s Internet systems, somehow morphs into an effective IT manager and helps scale the company’s early finance system. Everyone works 80 hours a week, some marriages suffer, but during this time of heroes, a winning company is born and legendary stories of heroes become the foundation of the culture.
The only problem with this phase is that it is unsustainable. The head of sales burns out and fails miserably to manage a salesforce. The IT manager fails spectacularly at managing the rollout of a big enterprise-management software project. The founders find they can’t keep relying on the original team to step into every breach. They need to recruit professionals; they need to introduce systems.
A time of systems and professionals. And so the founders move from heroes to systems and professionals. They try to scale their organization in four ways, each of which is filled with pitfalls.
They try to harmonize everything. During the time of heroes, every compensation package was a “one-off,” too often agreed to in the hallway with little consideration of precedent or consistency. The company has 50 leaders and 50 different compensation deals. The founders decide to harmonize, working to create clear procedures, standard work levels and pay packages for each level. The 50 leaders experience a lot of pain as they are pulled and twisted into a standard package for their work level. And the issue doesn’t just apply to executive compensation. The same phenomenon happens across supply contracts, customer pricing, service levels and more.
But founders quickly discover that while harmony is wonderful in theory, in practice it produces constant discord. And after the latest group of top talent exits over dissatisfaction with their work-level pay grade or other issues, the founders ask: “Is this all worth it? Can you really solve individual issues with committee-developed packages?”
The time of systems and professionals should in theory be a good time, but in practice, it is often a disaster. The company is filled with big-company functional experts who alienate the founding team. New recruits are faced with procedural manuals and processes that feel disconnected from the founders’ speeches they hear. Every new recruit is very nice … but the quirky genius of the company appears to be fading.
The three elements of the Founder's Mentality help companies sustain performance while avoiding the inevitable crises of growth.
A time of balance. It is at this point that the founders realize that the company needs balance. The company needs to grow by balancing the need for professionals and the need to maintain Founders Mentality®. Examples pop up everywhere:
These phases are real. Too many founders we talk with are in the middle phase, wondering what went wrong. At our workshop, one founder asked in great frustration, “If we know about these three phases, surely we can move from heroes to balance and just skip that whole painful period in the middle?”
Yes, indeed, you can.
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