The Best Laid Plans, Part IV
The Best Laid Plans, IV
I have had a bunch of good comments from readers about the three posts in this series about creating strategic plans (input phase, analysis phase, output phase). Many of them are leading me to write a fourth post in the series, one about how to make sure the result of the plan isnât shelfware, but flawless execution.
Thereâs a bit of middleware that has to happen between the completion of the strategic plan and the work getting done, and that is an operating plan. In my observation over the years, this is where most companies explode. They have good ideas and capable workers, just no cohesive way to organize and contextualize the work. There are lots of different formats operating plans can take, and a variety of acronyms to go with the formats, that Iâve heard over the years. No one of these formats is âright,â but Iâll share the key process steps my own team and I went through just over the past few months to turn our strategic planning into action plans, synchronizing our activities across products and groups.
- Theme:Â we picked a theme for the year that generally held the bulk of the key work together â a bit of a rallying cry
- Initiatives:Â recognizing that lots of people do lots of routine work, we organized a series of a dozen âmove the ball forwardâ projects into specific initiatives
- Communication:Â we unveiled the theme and the initiatives to ALL at our annual business meeting to get everyoneâs head around the work to be done in the upcoming year
- Plans:Â each of the dozen initiative teams, and then also each team/department in the company (theyâre different) worked together to produce a short (1-3 page) plan on a template we created, with a mission statement, a list of direct and indirect participants, important milestones and metrics
- Synchronization:Â the senior management team reviewed all the plans at the same time and had a meaningful discussion to synchronize the plans, making edits to both substance and timing
- Scorecard:Â we built our company scorecard for the year to reflect âgreen/yellow/redâ grading on each initiative and visually display the most important 5-6 metrics across all initiatives
- Ongoing reporting:Â we will publish the scorecard and updated to each initiative plan quarterly to the whole company, when we update them for Board meetings
As I said, thereâs no single recipe for success here, but this is a variant on what weâve done consistently over the years at Return Path, and it seems to be working well for us. I think thatâs the end of this series, and judging from the comments Iâve received on the blog and via email, Iâm glad this was useful to so many people.
The Best Laid Plans, Part I
The Best Laid Plans, Part I
One of my readers asked me if I have a formula that I use to develop strategic plans. While every year and every situation is different, I do have a general outline that I’ve followed that has been pretty successful over the years at Return Path. There are three phases — input, analysis, and output. I’ll break this up into three postings over the next three weeks.
The Input Phase goes something like this:
Conduct stakeholder interviews with a few top clients, resellers, suppliers; Board of directors; and junior staff roundtables. Formal interviews set up in advance, with questions given ahead. Goal for customers: find out their view of the business today, how weâre serving them, what theyâd like to see us do differently, what other products we could provide them. Goal for Board/staff: get their general take on the business and the market, current and future.
Conduct non-stakeholder interviews with a few industry experts who know the company at least a little bit. Goal: learn what they think about how we were doing todayâŠand what they would do if they were CEO to grow the business in the future.
Re-skim a handful of classic business books and articles. Perennial favorite include Good to Great, Contrarian Thinking, and Crossing the Chasm.
Hold a solo visioning exercise. Take a day off, wander around Central Park. No phone, no email. Nothing but thinking about business, your career, where you want everything to head from a high level.
Hold senior staff brainstorming. Two-day off-site strategy session with senior team and maybe Board.
Next up:Â the Analysis Phase.
The Best Laid Plans, Part III
The Best Laid Plans, Part III
Once you’ve finished the Input Phase and the Analysis Phase of producing your strategic plan, you’re ready for the final Output Phase, which goes something like this:
Vision articulation. Get it right for yourself first. You should be able to answer âwhere do we want to be in three years?â in 25 words or less.
Roadmap from today. Make sure to lay out clearly what things need to happen to get from where you are today to where you want to be. The sooner-in stuff needs to be much clearer than the further out stuff.
Resource Requirements. Identify the things you will need to get there, and the timing of those needs â More people? More marketing money? A new partner?
Financials. Lay them out at a high level on an annual basis, on a more detailed level for the upcoming year.
Packaging. Create a compelling presentation (Powerpoint, Word, or in your case, maybe something more creative) that is crisp and inspiring.
Pre-selling. Run through it â or a couple of the central elements of it â with one or two key people first to get their buy-in.
Selling. Do your roadshow â hit all key constituents with the message in one way or another (could be different forms, depending on who).
The best thing to keep in mind is that there is no perfect process, and there’s never a “right answer” to strategy — at least not without the benefit of hindsight!
People have asked me what the time allocation and elapsed time should or can be for this process. While again, there’s no right answer, I typically find that the process needs at least a full quarter to get right, sometimes longer depending on how many inputs you are tracking down and how hard they are to track down; how fanatical you are about the details of the end product; and whether this is a refresh of an existing strategy or something where you’re starting from a cleaner sheet of paper. In terms of time allocation, if you are leading the process and doing a lot of the work yourself, I would expect to dedicate at least 25% of your time to it, maybe more in peak weeks. It’s well worth the investment.
The Best Laid Plans, Part II
The Best Laid Plans, Part II
Once you’ve finished the Input Phase (see last week’s post) of producing your strategic plan, you’re ready for the Analysis Phase, which goes something like this:
Assemble the facts. Keep notes along the way on the input phase items, assemble them into a coherent document with key thoughts and common themes highlighted.
Select/apply framework. Go back to the reading and come up with one or more strategic frameworks. Adapted them from the academic stuff to fit our situation. Academic frameworks donât solve problems on their own, but they do force you to think through problems in a structured way.
Step back. Leave everything alone for two weeks and try not to think about it. Come back to it with a fresher set of eyes immediately before starting on the final outputs.
Reality check. Go back to one or two of the constituents you originally met with to begin laying out your thoughts to them â âtry them on for sizeâ â and get the unfiltered visceral reactions.
Next up:Â the Output Phase.
How to Get Laid Off
How to Get Laid Off – an Employee’s Perspective
One of my colleagues at Return Path  saw my post about How to Quit Your Job about 5 years ago and was inspired to share this story with me. Don’t read anything into this post, team! There is no other meaning behind my posting it at this time, or any time, other than thinking itâs a very good way of approaching a very difficult situation, especially coming from an employee.
In 2009 I was working at a software security start up in the Silicon Valley. Times were exceedingly tough, there were several rounds of layoffs that year, and in May I was finally on the list. I was informed on a Tuesday that my last day was that Friday. It was a horrible time to be without a job (and benefits), there was almost no hiring at all that year, one of the worst economic down turns on record. While it was a hard message,  I knew that it was not personal, I was just caught up on a bad math problem.
After calling home to share the bad news, I went back to my desk and kept working. I had never been laid off and was not sure what to do, but I was pretty sure I would have plenty of free time in the short term, so I set about figuring out how to wrap things up there. Later that day the founder of the company came by, asked why I had not gone home, and I replied that I would be fine with working till the end of the week if he was okay with it. He thanked me.
Later that week, in a meeting where we reviewed and prioritized the projects I was working on, we discussed who would take on the top three that were quite important to the future of the company. A few names were mentioned of who could keep them alive, but they were people who I knew would not focus on them at all. So I suggested they have me continue to work on them, that got an funny look but when he thought about it , it made sense, they could 1099 me one day a week. The next day we set it up. I made more money than I could of on unemployment, but even better I kept my laptop and work email, so I looked employed which paid off later.Â
That one day later became two days and then three, however, I eventually found other full time work in 2010. Layoffs are hard, but it is not a time to burn bridges.  In fact  one of the execs of that company is a reference and has offered me other opportunities for employment.
Best and Worst Practices (Plus FAQs) for Layoffs
Short of declaring failure and shutting down your company, laying off employees is the worst thing you may have to do as a startup CEO. Iâve had to lay people off on three separate occasions. It was difficult and emotionalâthose days were the worst of my career, and probably rank in the top 10 worst days of my life, period. This isnât firing for causeâemployees arenât being asked to leave because of their own failings. Theyâre being asked to leave because the company can no longer afford to keep them. Itâs not their fault.
Itâs a truly awful process. Some CEOs will fall into the trap of thinking that because itâs invariably messy, it doesnât matter how you do it. I couldnât disagree more. Layoffs are bad, but how you handle them makes all the difference in the world. Here are a few best and worst practices for orchestrating layoffs.
Best Practices
1. Cut earlier and deeper than you have to. You really, really donât want to go through this a second time. Assume you have less runway than you anticipate, and cut early. Cut more employees than you think you need to in order to reduce the risk of a second round of layoffs. Things are always worse than they look, even when the situation is bad enough to consider layoffs. Financing will take longer than expected to come through, receivables will dry up, and so on.
2. Remove poor performers. You have no choice but to remove people if their positions are being cut altogether, regardless of performance. However, you can also take this as an opportunity for some major house cleaning. Just be sure to work with someone (a lawyer) who can help you navigate the legalitiesâparticularly if youâre dealing with employees outside the US.
3. Plan your talking points in advance of meetings. When Iâm planning all-hands meetings, I tend to write bullet-point notes and talk freely instead of scripting my commentsâbut not for this. A round of layoffs is likely to be one of the most emotional moments of your career, and when you face your employees to deliver the news, you wonât be in your usual headspace. Donât wing it. Plan everything youâre going to sayâboth to the individuals being let go and to your team as a wholeâin advance. How you handle these meetings will depend on the size of your company and how many layoffs youâre doing. Regardless, you want to communicate respect for and appreciation of your employees throughout the process.
4. Follow layoffs with an all-hands meeting. Layoffs are emotional for the entire team. Follow up with an all-hands meeting to explain what happened, why you made the choices you didâpreferably with metrics to back up your decisionsâwhatâs next for the company, and whether people who werenât laid off are at risk in the future. (Be honest!) Ideally, the people youâre laying off should be included, too. You want to honor and thank them in as public a forum as possible. For those who remain, itâs important to cultivate security and trust. However youâre communicating with your employees, youâll need to increase your efforts, and clarity is always better. Let them in on the state of the business, financials, and expectations. You donât want to skip over the pain that comes with layoffs, but you do need to be prepared to move forward effectively.
5. Treat employees who were laid off with dignity and honor the work they did. This will come into play when we talk about what not to do, but itâs important to remember that theyâre being laid off for no fault of their own. One meaningful thing you can do is help people find their next step. Promoting the profiles of your former employees on job boards, portfolio lists, etc., offering your own connections if itâs relevant, or giving excellent referrals when you can are all great places to start. Severance is also key. Be sure to consult your board and follow your company policies, if you have them, then be as generous as you can afford to be. If you can offer a safety net or bridge, do so.
These folks will still be alumni of your company, so the way you handle them personally will impact how they talk about the organization, rate you on Glassdoor, and refer to you as a leader. Every step of the process mattersâwhether itâs how you broke the news, how public things were, how helpful your team was, how much you paidâand will impact your companyâs brand as an employer and your own reputation as a CEO.
Worst Practices
1. (Per above) Do not assume, because layoffs are awful and messy no matter what, that it doesnât matter how you do it. It absolutely matters.
2. Do not treat the people you fire like criminals. Donât hire security guards or bring boxes into the office before breaking the news. Think very carefully about what systems you need to restrict access to, when, and whether there are any loopholes. Sure, you donât want someone to be able to download a whole list of contacts from HubSpot. But do you really want them to be cut off from their email, calendar, and personal contacts? Shouldnât you work with them to set up an autoresponder or figure out what happens to their email?
3. Do not promise this will never happen again. You canât predict the future. You can say âwe made the best decision possible, so that hopefully we wonât have to do this again.â Offer reassurance through facts and transparency rather than empty promises.
4. Do not delegate the responsibility for deciding to lay off employees. As the CEO, this decision is yours to own. Also, do not blame someone else or the economy. Circumstances contribute, but at the end of the day, the buck stops with you, and again, youâre the one making the decision.
5. Do not make mistakes about who is on which meeting invitation list or which employment list. Double check the list yourself, then have someone else check it.
FAQs
I held a webinar recently with about 20 CEOs on this topic, and there were a number of questions that came up with interesting crowdsourced answers. Here are some snippets of some of them:
Q: How much severance is the right amount?
A: This is impossible to generalizeâif youâre really out of cash, you may have your hands tied. If you can stick to your normal policies, you should. Companies represented on the call tended to give 1-2 weeks per year of service. Other thoughts that came up were: (a) offering a long post-termination exercise period for vested options, (b) accelerating some vesting, (c) creating a Salary Bridge program, which we did once at Return Path. The Salary Bridge program offered people an additional X weeks of continuing severance beyond the standard package if they still hadnât found a job (but were trying and could show us they were trying) after their severance ran out. Very few people needed this, but the goodwill from offering it was huge.
Q: Have you ever considered salary cuts?
A: Yes. Usually a big layoff will come with some kind of salary cut for those who are staying, even if itâs just executives or just you as the CEO (which is more symbolic than anything else, but symbolism matters). Companies also had experience with doing salary cuts and reinstating the salaries as soon as the economic situation improved. One company talked about doing a 5% salary cut but then offering everyone a 10% bonus based on company financial milestones. In situations like this, itâs also a good idea to share metrics. How many jobs are you preserving by making cuts?
Q: Do voluntary termination programs work?
A: They might make you feel better, but be wary of doing them lest you lose key people you donât want to lose!
Q: Can I expect additional employee attrition after a layoff?
A: Almost certainly. Any time you jolt the system, youâll produce some unintended consequences. People will feel less stable in their role. Do your best to reassure key employeesâeven to the point of bringing a couple of them into the know immediately ahead of a layoffâso you donât lose more people you donât want to lose. Be wary of offering additional compensation or bonuses for them to stay, unless you are promoting them into expanded responsibilities (which can make sense if youâre consolidating things). Offering some people a raise âfor no reasonâ while youâre letting other people go isnât a great look.
Q: What about customer communications?
A: Our group was very mixed on whether or not you should do proactive external communications about a layoff. If you run a B2B organization, being a little more transparent with customers shows them you care about themâand gives you an opportunity to talk to them about any changes that might affect them, their service team, or their service levels. In a B2C organization, youâre likely either going to do something public like a short, empathetic blog post, or nothing at all. In all cases, please make sure you have a well developed internal FAQ and clear policies about who can and canât talk externally as a company representative before doing a layoff so youâre not caught flat-footed.
Layoffs are messy and unfortunate, but you can still handle them artfully as a leader. How you handle layoffs will impact how your company recovers, itâll impact your reputation as a CEO, and most importantly, itâll impact the lives of the employees you laid off. I talk a lot about having a people first culture. One of the things Iâve learned about building companies with this in mind is that itâs got to be true all the way through. Even when you resort to layoffs, the people come first.
(This post also appeared on the Bolster blog.)
In Defense of Email, Part 9,732
In Defense of Email, Part 9,732
I commented today on our partner Blue Sky Factory’s CEO, Greg Cangialosi’s excellent posting in defense of email as a marketing channel called Email’s Role and Future Thoughts. Since the comment grew longer than I anticipated, I thought I’d re-run parts of it here.
A couple quick stats from Forrester’s recent 5-year US Interactive forecast back up Greg’s points con gusto:
– 94% of consumers use email; 16% use social networking sites (and I assume they mean USE them – not just get solicitations from their friends to join). That doesn’t mean that social networking sites aren’t growing rapidly in popularity, at least in some segments of the population, and it doesn’t mean that email marketing may not be the best way to reach certain people at certain times. But it does mean that email remains the most ubiquitous online channel, not to mention the most “pull-oriented” and “on demand.”
– Spend on email marketing is $2.7b this year, growing to $4.2b in 2012. Sure, email by 2012 is the smallest “category” by dollars spent, but first of all, one of the categories is “emerging channels,” which looks like it includes “everything else” in the world other than search, video, email, and display. So it includes mobile as well as social media, and who knows what else. Plus, if you really understand how email marketing works, you understand that dollars don’t add up in the same way as other forms of media since so much of the work can be done in-house.Â
What really amazes me is how all these “web 2.0” people keep talking about how email is dying (when in fact it’s growing, albeit at a slower rate than other forms of online media) and don’t focus on how things like classifieds and yellow pages are truly DYING, and what that means for those industries.
I think a more interesting point is that in Forrester’s forecast, US Interactive Marketing spend by 2012 in aggregate reached $61b, more than triple where it is today — and that the percent of total US advertising going to interactive grows from 8 to 18 over the five years in the forecast.Â
The bigger question that leaves me with is what that means for the overall efficiency of ad spend in the US. It must be the case that online advertising in general is more efficient than offline — does that mean the total US advertising spend can shrink over time? Or just that as it gets more efficient,
marketers will use their same budgets to try to reach more and more prospects?
Understanding the Drivers of Success
Understanding the Drivers of Success
Although generally business is great at Return Path and by almost any standard in the world has been consistently strong over the years, as everyone internally knows, the second part of 2012 and most of 2013 were not our finest years/quarters. We had a number of challenges scaling our business, many of which have since been addressed and improved significantly.
When I step back and reflect on “what went wrong” in the quarters where we came up short of our own expectations, I can come up with lots of specific answers around finer points of execution, and even a few abstracted ones around our industry, solutions, team, and processes. But one interesting answer I came up with recently was that the reason we faltered a bit was that we didn’t clearly understand the drivers of success in our business in the 1-2 years prior to things getting tough. And when I reflect back on our entire 14+ year history, I think that pattern has repeated itself a few times, so I’m going to conclude there’s something to it.
What does that mean? Well, a rising tide — success in your company — papers over a lot of challenges in the business, things that probably aren’t working well that you ignore because the general trend, numbers, and success are there. Similarly, a falling tide — when the going gets a little tough for you — quickly reveals the cracks in the foundation.
In our case, I think that while some of our success in 2010 and 2011 was due to our product, service, team, etc. — there were two other key drivers. One was the massive growth in social media and daily deal sites (huge users of email), which led to more rapid customer acquisition and more rapid customer expansion coupled with less customer churn. The second was the fact that the email filtering environment was undergoing a change, especially at Gmail and Yahoo, which caused more problems and disruption for our clients’ email programs than usual — the sweet spot of our solution.
While of course you always want to make hay while the sun shines, in both of these cases, a more careful analysis, even WHILE WE WERE MAKING HAY, would have led us to the conclusion that both of those trends were not only potentially short-term, but that the end of the trend could be a double negative — both the end of a specific positive (lots of new customers, lots more market need), and the beginning of a BROADER negative (more customer churn, reduced market need).
What are we going to do about this? I am going to more consistently apply one of our learning principles, the Post-Mortem –THE ART OF THE POST-MORTEM, to more general business performance issues instead of specific activities or incidents. But more important, I am going to make sure we do that when things are going well…not just when the going gets tough.
What are the drivers of success in your business? What would happen if they shifted tomorrow?
Scaling the Team
Scaling the Team
(This post was requested by my long-time Board member Fred Wilson and is also running concurrently on his blog today. I’ll be back with the third and fourth installments of “The Best Laid Plans” next Thursday and the following Thursday)
When Return Path reached 100 employees a few years back, I had a dinner with my Board one night at which they basically told me, âManagement teams never scale intact as you grow the business. Someone always breaks.â Iâm sure they were right based on their own experience; I, of course, took this as a challenge. And ever since then, my senior management team and I have become obsessed with scaling ourselves as managers. So far, so good. We are over 300 employees now and rapidly headed to 400 in the coming year, and the core senior management team is still in place and doing well. Below are five reasons why thatâs the case.
- We appreciate the criticality of excellent management and recognize that it is a completely different skill set from everything else we have learned in our careers. This is like Step 1 in a typical â12-step program.â First, admit you have a problem. If you put together (a) management is important, (b) management is a different skill set, and (c) you might not be great at it, with the standard (d) you are an overachiever who likes to excel in everything, then you are setting the stage for yourself to learn and work hard at improving at management as a practice, which is the next item on the list.
- We consistently work at improving our management skills. We have a strong culture of 360 feedback, development plans, coaching, and post mortems on major incidents, both as individuals and as a senior team. Most of us have engaged on and off over the years with an executive coach, for the most part Marc Maltz from Triad Consulting. In fact, the team holds each other accountable for individual performance against our development plans at our quarterly offsites. But learning on the inside is only part of the process.
- We learn from the successes and failures of others whenever possible. My team regularly engages as individuals in rigorous external benchmarking to understand how peers at other companies â preferably ones either like us or larger â operate. We methodically pick benchmarking candidates. We ask for their time and get on their calendars. We share knowledge and best practices back with them. We pay this forward to smaller companies when they ask us for help. And we incorporate the relevant learnings back into our own day to day work.
- We build the strongest possible second-level management bench we can to make sure we have a broad base of leadership and management in the company that complements our own skills. A while back I wrote about the Peter Principle, Applied to Management that itâs quite easy to accumulate mediocre managers over the years because you feel like you have to promote your top performers into roles that are viewed as higher profile, are probably higher comp â and for which they may be completely unprepared and unsuited. Angela Baldonero, my SVP People, and I have done a lot here to ensure that we are preparing people for management and leadership roles, and pushing them as much as we push ourselves. We have developed and executed comprehensive Management Training and Leadership Development programs in conjunction with Mark Frein at Refinery Leadership Partners. Make no mistake about it â this is a huge investment of time and money. But itâs well worth it. Training someone who knows your business well and knows his job well how to be a great manager is worth 100x the expense of the training relative to having an employee blow up and needing to replace them from the outside.
- We are hawkish about hiring in from the outside. Sometimes you have to bolster your team, or your second-level team. Expanding companies require more executives and managers, even if everyone on the team is scaling well. But there are significant perils with hiring in from the outside, which Iâve written about twice with the same metaphor (sometimes I forget what I have posted in the past) â Like an Organ Transplant and Rejected by the Body. You get the idea.  Your culture is important. Your people are important. New managers at any level instantly become stewards of both. If they are failing as managers, then they need to leave. Now.
Iâm sure there are other things we do to scale ourselves as a management team â and more than that, Iâm sure there are many things we could and should be doing but arenât. But so far, these things have been the mainstays of happily (they would agree) proving our Board wrong and remaining intact as a team as the business grows.
Startup CEO (OnlyOnce- the book!), Part III – Pre-Order Now
Startup CEO (OnlyOnce – the book!), Part III – Pre-Order Now
My book, Startup CEO: A Field Guide to Scaling Up Your Business, is now available for pre-order on Amazon in multiple formats (Print, Kindle), which is an exciting milestone in this project! The book is due out right after Labor Day, but Brad Feld tells me that the more pre-orders I have, the better. Please pardon the self-promotion, but click away if youâre interested!
Here are a few quick thoughts about the book, though Iâll post more about it and the process at some point:
- Iâll be using the hashtag #startupceo more now to encourage discussion of topics related to startup CEOs â please join me!
- The book has been described by a few CEOs who read it and commented early for me along the lines of âThe Lean Startup movement is great, but this book starts where most of those books end and takes you through the âso you have a product that works in-market â now what?â questionsâ
- The book is part of the Startup Revolution series that Brad has been working on for a couple years now, including Do More (Even) Faster, Venture Deals, Startup Communities, and Startup Life (with two more to come, Startup Boards and Startup Metrics)
- Writing a book is a LOT harder than I expected!
At this point, the best thing I can do to encourage you to read/buy is to share the full and final table of contents with you, sections/chapters/headings. When I get closer in, I may publish some excerpts of new content here on Only Once. Hereâs the outline:
Part I: Storytelling
- Chapter 1: Dream the Possible DreamâŠEntrepreneurship and Creativity, âA Faster Horse,â Vetting Ideas
- Chapter 2: Defining and Testing the StoryâŠStart Out By Admitting Youâre Wrong, A Lean Business Plan Template, Problem, Solution, Key Metrics, Unique Value Proposition and Unfair Advantages, Channels, Customer Segments, Cost Structure and Revenue Streams
- Chapter 3: Telling the Story to Your InvestorsâŠThe Business Plan is Dead. Long Live the Business Plan, The Investor Presentation, The Elevator Pitch, The Size of the Opportunity, Your Competitive Advantage, Current Status and Roadmap from Today, The Strength of Your Team, Summary Financials, Investor Presentations for Larger Startups
- Chapter 4: Telling the Story to Your TeamâŠDefining Your Mission, Vision and Values, The Top-down Approach, The Bottom-Up Approach, The Hybrid Approach, Design a Lofty Mission Statement
- Chapter 5: Revising the StoryâŠWorkshopping, Knowing When Itâs Time to Make a Change, Corporate Pivots: Telling the Story Differently, Consolidating, Diversifying, Focusing, Business Pivots: Telling a Different Story
- Chapter 6: Bringing the Story to LifeâŠBuilding Your Company Purposefully, The Critical Elements of Company-Building, Articulating Purpose: The Moral of the Story, You Can Be a Force for Helping OthersâEven If Indirectly
Part II: Building the Companyâs Human Capital
- Chapter 7: Fielding a Great TeamâŠFrom Protozoa to Pancreas, The Best and the Brightest, What About HR?, What About Sales & Marketing?, Scaling Your Team Over Time
- Chapter 8: The CEO as Functional SupervisorâŠRules for General Managers
- Chapter 9: Crafting Your Companyâs CultureâŠ, Introducing Fig Wasp #879, Six Legs and a Pair of Wings, Let People Be People, Build an Environment of Trust
- Chapter 10: The Hiring ChallengeâŠUnique Challenges for Startups, Recruiting Outstanding Talent, Staying âIn-Marketâ, Recruitment Tools, The Interview: Filtering Potential Candidates, Two Ears One Mouth, Who Should You Interview?, Onboarding: The First 90 Days
- Chapter 11: Every Day in Every Way, We Get a Little BetterâŠThe Feedback Matrix, 1:1 Check-ins, âHallwayâ Feedback, Performance Reviews, The 360, Soliciting Feedback on Your Own Performance, Crafting and Meeting Development Plans     Â
- Chapter 12: CompensationâŠGeneral Guidelines for Determining Compensation, The Three Elements of Startup Compensation, Base Pay, Incentive Pay, Equity             Â
- Chapter 13: Promoting               âŠRecruiting from Within, Applying the âPeter Principleâ to Management, Scaling Horizontally, Promoting Responsibilities Rather than Swapping Titles              Â
- Chapter 14: Rewarding: âItâs the Little Thingsâ That MatterâŠIt Never Goes Without Saying, Building a Culture of Appreciation
- Chapter 15: Managing Remote Offices and EmployeesâŠBrick and Mortar Values in a Virtual World, Best Practices for Managing Remote Employees
- Chapter 16: Firing: When Itâs Not WorkingâŠNo One Should Ever Be Surprised to Be Fired, Termination and the Limits of Transparency, Layoffs
Part III: Execution
- Chapter 17: Creating a Company Operating SystemâŠCreating Company Rhythms, A Marathon? Or a Sprint?
- Chapter 18: Creating Your Operating Plan and Setting GoalsâŠTurning Strategic Plans into Operating Plans, Financial Planning, Bringing Your Team into Alignment with Your Plans, Guidelines for Setting Goals
- Chapter 19: Making Sure Thereâs Enough Money in the BankâŠScaling Your Financial Instincts, Boiling the Frog, To Grow or to Profit? That Is the Question, First Perfect the Model, Choosing Growth, Choosing Profits, The Third Way
- Chapter 20: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of FinancingâŠEquity Investors, Venture Capitalists, Angel Investors, Strategic Investors, Debt, Convertible Debt, Venture Debt, Bank Loans, Personal Debt, Bootstrapping, Customer Financing, Your Own Cash Flow
- Chapter 21: When and How to Raise MoneyâŠWhen to Start Looking for VC Money, The Top 11 Takeaways for Financing Negotiations
- Chapter 22: Forecasting and BudgetingâŠRigorous Financial Modeling, Of Course Youâre WrongâBut Wrong How?, Budgeting in a Context of Uncertainty, Forecast, Early and Often
- Chapter 23: Collecting DataâŠExternal Data, Learning from Customers, Learning from (Un)Employees, Internal Data, Skip-Level Meetings, Subbing, Productive Eavesdropping
- Chapter 24: Managing in Tough TimesâŠManaging in an Economic Downturn, Hope Is Not a StrategyâBut Itâs Not a Bad Tactic, Look for Nickels and Dimes under the Sofa, Never Waste a Good Crisis, Managing in a Difficult Business Situation
- Chapter 25: Meeting RoutinesâŠLencioniâs Meeting Framework, Skip-Level Meetings, Running a Productive Offsite
- Chapter 26: Driving AlignmentâŠFive Keys to Startup Alignment, Aligning Individual Incentives with Global Goals
- Chapter 27: Have You Learned Your Lesson?…The Value (and Limitations) of Benchmarking, The Art of the Post-Mortem
- Chapter 28: Going GlobalâŠShould Your Business Go Global?, How to Establish a Global Presence, Overcoming the Challenges of Going Global, Best Practices for Managing International Offices and Employees
- Chapter 29: The Role of M&AâŠUsing Acquisitions as a Tool in Your Strategic Arsenal, The Mechanics of Financing and Closing Acquisitions, Stock, Cash, Earn Out, The Flipside of M&A: Divestiture, Odds and Ends, Integration (and Separation)
- Chapter 30: CompetitionâŠPlaying Hardball, Playing Offense vs. Playing Defense, Good and Bad Competitors
- Chapter 31: FailureâŠFailure and the Startup Model, Failure Is Not an Orphan
Part IV: Building and Leading a Board of Directors
- Chapter 32: The Value of a Good BoardâŠWhy Have a Board?, Everybody Needs a Boss, The Board as Forcing Function, Pattern Matching, Forests, Trees, Honest Discussion and Debate
- Chapter 33: Building Your BoardâŠWhat Makes a Great Board Member?, Recruiting a Board Member, Compensating Your Board, Boards as Teams, Structuring Your Board, Board Size, Board Committees, Chairing the Board, Running a Board Feedback Process, Building an Advisory Board
- Chapter 34: Board Meeting MaterialsâŠâThe Board Bookâ, Sample Return Path Board Book, The Value of Preparing for Board Meetings
- Chapter 35: Running Effective Board MeetingsâŠScheduling Board Meetings, Building a Forward-Looking Agenda, In-Meeting Materials, Protocol, Attendance and Seating, Device-Free Meetings, Executive and Closed Sessions
- Chapter 36: Non-Board Meeting TimeâŠAd Hoc Meetings, Pre-Meetings, Social Outings
- Chapter 37: Decision-Making and the BoardâŠThe Buck StopsâWhere?, Making Difficult Decisions in Concert, Managing Conflict with Your Board
- Chapter 38: Working with the Board on Your Compensation and ReviewâŠThe CEOâs Performance Review, Your Compensation, Incentive Pay, Equity, Expenses
- Chapter 39: Serving on Other BoardsâŠThe Basics of Serving on Other Boards, Substance, or Style?
Part V: Managing Yourself So You Can Manage Others
- Chapter 40: Creating a Personal Operating SystemâŠManaging Your Agenda, Managing Your Calendar, Managing Your Time, Feedback Loops
- Chapter 41: Working with an Executive AssistantâŠFinding an Executive Assistant, What an Executive Assistant Does
- Chapter 42: Working with a CoachâŠThe Value of Executive Coaches, Areas Where an Executive Coach Can Help
- Chapter 43: The Importance of Peer GroupsâŠThe Gang of Six, Problem-Solving in Tandem
- Chapter 44: Staying FreshâŠManaging the Highs and Lows, Staying Mentally Fresh, At Your Company, Out and About, Staying Healthy, Me Time
- Chapter 45: Your FamilyâŠMaking Room for Home Life, Involving Family in Work, Bringing Work Principles Home
- Chapter 46: TravelingâŠSealing the Deal with a Handshake, Making the Most of Travel Time, Staying Disciplined on the Road
- Chapter 47: Taking Stock of the YearâŠCelebrating âYesâ; Addressing âNoâ, Are You Having Fun?, Are You Learning and Growing as a Professional?, Is It Financially Rewarding?, Are You Making an Impact?
- Chapter 48: A Note on ExitsâŠFive Rules of Thumb for Successfully Selling Your Company
 If you’re still with me and interested, again here are the links to pre-order (Print, Kindle).
Grow or Die
My cofounder Cathy wrote a great post on the Bolster blog back in January called Procrastinating Executive Development, in which she talks about the fact that even executives who appreciate the value of professional development usually don’t get to it because they’re too busy or don’t realize how important it is. I see this every day with CEOs and founders. Cathy had a well phrased but somewhat gentle ask at the end of her post:
My ask for all CEOs is this: give each of your executives the gift of feedback now, and hold each other accountable for continued growth and development to match the growth and development of your company.
Let me put it in starker terms:
Grow or Die.
Every executive, every professional, can scale further than they think is possible, and further than you think is possible. Most of us do have some ceiling somewhere…but it will take us years to find it (if we ever find it). The key to scaling is a growth mentality. You have to not just value development, you have to crave it, view it as essential, and prioritize it.
Startups are incredibly dynamic. You’re creating something out of nothing. Disrupting an industry. Revolutionizing something. Putting a dent in the universe. For a startup to succeed, it has to constantly put something in market, learn, calibrate, accelerate, maybe pivot, and most of all grow. How can a leader of a startup scale from one stage of life to the next without focusing on personal growth and development if the job changes from one quarter to the next?
I was lucky enough to have a great leadership team at my prior company, Return Path, over the course of 20 years. Within that long block of time with many executives, there was a particular period of time, roughly 2004-2012, that I jokingly refer to as the “golden age.” That’s when we grew the business from roughly $5mm in revenue to $50 or $60mm. The remarkable thing was that we executed that growth with the same group of 5-6 senior executives. A couple new people joined the team, and we struggled to get one executive role right, but by and large one core group took us from small to mid-sized. Why? We looked at each other — literally, in one meeting where we were talking about professional development — and said, “we have to commit to individual coaching, to team coaching, and to growth as leaders, or the company will outpace us and we’ll be roadkill.”
That set us on a path to focus on our own growth and development as leaders. We were constantly reading and sharing relevant articles, blog posts, and books. We engaged in a lot of coaching and development instruments like MBTI, TKI, and DISC. We learned the value of retrospectives, transparent 360s, and a steady diet of feedback. We challenged ourselves to do better. We worked at it. As one of the members of the Golden Age said of our work, “we went to the gym.”
The “Grow or Die” mantra is real. You can’t possibly be successful in today’s world if you’re not learning, if you don’t have a growth mentality. You are never the smartest person in the room. The minute you are convinced that you are…you’re screwed.
If you don’t believe me, look at the development of your business itself as a metaphor for your own development as a leader. What happens to your startup if it stops growing?
(You can find this post on the Bolster Blog here)