A Magnified Impact
Are your behaviors accelerating or slowing your business’ trajectory?
As your company grows, so does its complexity. You add team members, skills, customers, products or services, and possibly locations. Your once small nimble shop that was able to pivot at a moment’s notice now struggles to adapt quickly enough to keep up with you.
Why? What’s happened? What do you do about it?
I was out driving on the inside lane of a 4 lane highway the other day. With a steady stream of cars in both lanes, the cars in the left lane were traveling about 10-15 miles an hour faster than the cars in the right. I was cruising along when all of a sudden I was forced to slam on my brakes, decelerating by 50 mph, losing momentum, and gaining a rush of adrenaline.
Why?
There was a dump truck in the right lane that wanted to pass the car in front of it. That car was traveling 20-25 mph slower than the vehicles in the left lane, so, without warning, he pushed his way in. This wouldn’t have been such a big deal if he’d been going the same speed or there were only a handful of cars on the road. But he wasn’t and there weren’t. He had a large heavy vehicle that took time to accelerate and was moving slower than the cars to his left. The resulting impact... everyone in the left lane that suddenly found themselves behind him was forced to react, causing a chain reaction of red lights, increased adrenaline, and lost time and momentum.
Without evolving the structure and approach, seemingly simple
moves can cause the entire business to slam on its brakes, halting
momentum and leaving teams and individuals frustrated.
This often happens to leaders as their business grows. Early days provide the luxury of seeing an obstacle or opportunity, making a move, and gaining momentum. Because the left lane IS NOT congested and their vehicle is smaller, faster, and more agile, the likelihood of hurting organizational momentum is significantly decreased. You make your move, gain momentum, and slide back over.
As your company grows and the complexity increases, so does the impact of these moves. Your vehicle becomes bigger and slower and the road becomes more congested. Without evolving the structure and approach, seemingly simple moves can cause the entire business to slam on it’s brakes, halting momentum and leaving teams and individuals frustrated.
Sound familiar? What can you do about it?
- Add a COO or fractional COO - The addition of senior leaders is one of the most crucial steps a founder can make when growing their business. Done correctly, these leaders multiply the CEO's impact, allow for concentrated discipline-specific execution, and create skillset expertise. They are the foundation that allows scaling to begin. In particular, introducing a COO provides a person responsible for turning the vision into a strategy that can be implemented and executed using the existing team and resources. This allows the CEO to cast a vision and freely pull the company towards it, while the COO provides the buffer that prevents a sea of brake lights from emerging at each change. The COO is thoughtful and intentional about the direction they provide their teams. They plan for a change, check for obstructions, signal to begin, accelerate, and then get back over.
- Understand the levers that increase or decrease momentum - Leaders need to understand their organization and the impact of their moves. The larger the business or organization, the more time it typically takes to move or change direction. More moving parts requires more time, coordinated effort, teaching, and communication. Moving a large organization without destroying momentum requires a steady and consistent rhythm, so take a little more time upfront to determine your direction. That leads to...
- Create a ‘Proof of Concept’ team - This small nimble team is there to evaluate and prove your ideas, opportunities, and potential directional changes before pushing them out to the rest of your organization. This allows you the ability to quickly experiment without hindering or halting the larger organization. It’s important to note this group is meant to prove ideas, not take them from start to finish. Proven ideas are then handed to teams in the larger organization for execution.






