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Prasid's avatar

Really love this. I agree teams want clarity, they also want to move fast and win. I've worked at some businesses where the founder doesn't make the tough decisions and instead "pushes them down to the teams" to figure it out. The results are often that two teams (in my case Product and Marketing) had different priorities, and spent countless hours negotiating and horse trading trying to do both sets of priorities, and making very little progress on both.

In retrospect I think we would have gotten a lot further if the CEO had completely shut down my teams goals for a quarter and then circled back to them. We would have shipped more, we would have won, and then we all would have felt a lot happier and less thrash.

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Rick Foerster's avatar

Within the evolution of one company, I've seen Founder Mode work well, then be totally wiped out and replaced by Manager Mode. Two observations:

1. The wrong senior leaders ruin Founder Mode. In my experience, experienced, senior leaders HATE Founder Mode. They're used to Manager Mode - they like having control and power over their turf. Founder Mode requires senior leaders to drop most of their ego and let the top dog make the decisions. Too many of the wrong people can revolt and make this entire mode fall apart.

2. The wrong Board can ruin Founder Mode. If the Founder doesn't control the board, say goodbye to Founder Mode. Because if the Board isn't aligned with the trajectory mapped out by the Founder, it's VERY EASY to throw the Founder under the bus as crazy, hard-to-work-with, etc. As the unconventional model it's very easy to find blame at the Founder vs. Manager Mode where there's many things you can blame.

The Founders who are able to maintain Founder Mode throughout multiple evolutions of a business are truly special people. Most people aren't that though.

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