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Leadership
Lessons For Emerging Growth Companies
Stage #2 Leadership Focus Keys
A mini-series on
practical leadership focus for growth companies
This is the third of a 5-part special series
This series explores how leadership
focus and skills must evolve as a company grows from a raw startup to an
expansion stage successful enterprise. Last time we looked at
leadership challenges at the formation stage of a raw startup (If you
missed the first part you can read it
here.) This week we will look at the appropriate leadership style in
more depth for a Stage 2 company.
Stage #2
Leadership Focus Keys
At this stage of a company’s
development the focus is shifting from product design and development
into a mode of “selling” and delivering the product to the first
customers. Convincing customers to take the higher risks to work with a
new company is no easy task today. Since the bubble popped, corporate
managers are reluctant to work with new companies because they have
learned about the high failure rate the hard way.
CEOs must have the ability to sell
their vision to the target customers at this point. The CEO must lead
the way and be directly involved in customer contact here. They must
know all the information needed to prove the business model and make
adjustments to the business and this only happens with direct customer
contact. It is likely at this stage that there is still much to learn
about the business and that lots of customer input will be needed to
optimize the business model. You must make these decisions; no one else
will have the breadth of experience and wisdom to do this as well.

The second additional leadership key at
this stage is the ability to select the right people. This can only be
learned through experience and if you have not learned to do it you
probably should not be starting a company yet. However, there are ways
to alleviate this risk using testing and the experience of others. You
also need to correct mistakes in hiring very quickly. The first twenty
people hired in a new company will determine the culture of the company
for a long time to come. These people will hire others and lead by your
example. Finding the first few experts in specific areas is actually
easy compared to finding and hiring the right people across all
disciplines that will set the appropriate tone and example. As Jim
Collins so aptly state in the book Good to Great, “Getting the
right people on the bus” is the key to success. There is no lack of
proof and anecdotes showing that choosing your first people is among the
most critical decisions you will make. It can even be life and death
for the company. I would argue that the intelligence, personality,
ethics and drive of these first people is even more important than their
specific skill sets. Skill sets can be learned but personality, ethics,
and drive can not be taught or forced.
This leadership challenge is not just
about people selection, but also about defining the right roles needed.
There are many choices that must be made by the leader. Do we hire
young, cheaper sales people, or do we need expensive six-figure proven
superstars? Or could we do with something in between these two extremes?
There are no pat answers as every situation is very different. Only
wisdom and experience can manage this risk, with a good amount of
testing too. There are many ways to skin a cat and many thousands of
ways to design a corporate organization.
I have seen people with this people
selection skill succeed even though they lacked basic management
skills. There is nothing more important at this stage of a company’s
development. Why is this part of leadership? Because you must sell the
company, the idea, the culture, and yourself successfully to attract the
best people. This is a leadership skill – you are “selling the vision”
to get employees, vendors, investors, and customers to see the benefits
of working with you. This is the most sensitive time in forming a
company, where even a single bad hire can mean failure, if not corrected
quickly. Getting the first few people right is not that hard compared
to finding twenty people that set the right example. Remember these
people will effectively make all the future hiring decisions for you so
weaknesses they have could be exaggerated tenfold later.
The
CEO & Entrepreneur Boot Camp
Training For Senior Managers at Emerging Growth Companies
Discover an integrated
system for designing, starting and running high-growth businesses from a
serial entrepreneur. This two-day event is a complete system at the
30,000-foot strategic level that goes across all key business
disciplines needed for success including: sales, marketing, product
development, management, marketing, operations, finance, hiring and
roadmaps to shift management gears for each company stage of
development.
Visit us here for an audio preview of what you will get from the Boot
Camp:
http://www.clevelbootcamp.com/audiopreview.htm
Next
in This Series: "Stage #3 Leadership Focus Keys"
Part #1
#2
#4
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