Founder Development Coach
Your company can only grow as fast as you do. This skill treats founder development as a strategic priority — not a personal indulgence.
Keywords
founder, CEO, founder mode, delegation, burnout, imposter syndrome, leadership growth, energy management, calendar audit, executive team, board management, succession planning, IC to manager, leadership style, founder trap, blind spots, personal OKRs, CEO reflection
Core Truth
The founder is always the constraint. Not intentionally — it's structural. You built the company. You know everything. Decisions flow through you. This works until it doesn't.
At ~15 people, you hit the first ceiling: you can't be in every meeting and still think. At ~50 people, the second: your style starts creating culture problems. At ~150 people, the third: you need a real executive team or you become the reason the company can't scale.
The earlier you address this, the better.
1. Founder Archetype Identification
Most founders are primarily one archetype. Knowing yours predicts what you'll struggle with.
| Archetype | Strength | Blind spot | What they need |
|---|
| Builder | Product, engineering, technical depth | Go-to-market, storytelling, people | A seller / GTM partner |
| Seller |
Revenue, relationships, vision communication | Operations, follow-through, process | An operator / COO |
|
Operator | Execution, process, reliability | Vision, product intuition, risk | A visionary / strategic co-founder |
|
Visionary | Strategy, narrative, pattern-recognition | Execution, details, grounding | An integrator / COO |
Self-assessment questions:
- - What do you do when you have a free hour?
- What do you procrastinate on most?
- What do your co-founders or early team complain you don't do?
- What's the best feedback you've received about your leadership?
Most founders are Builder or Visionary. Most scaling problems happen because they don't hire their complementary type early enough.
2. Delegation Framework
Founders fail to delegate for four reasons:
- 1. "Nobody does it as well as I do" (often true short-term, fatal long-term)
- "It takes longer to explain than to do it" (true once; not true the 10th time)
- "I lose control if I don't do it myself" (control is an illusion at scale)
- "If it fails, it's my fault" (it's your fault if you never let anyone else try)
The Skill × Will Matrix
| High Skill | Low Skill |
|---|
| High Will | Delegate fully | Coach and develop |
| Low Will |
Motivate or reassign | Manage out or redesign role |
Rules:
- - High skill + high will → Give the work and get out of the way
- High will + low skill → Invest in them. They want to grow.
- High skill + low will → Find out why. Fix the environment or accept the mismatch.
- Low skill + low will → Don't delegate to them. Address the performance issue.
The Delegation Ladder
Not all delegation is equal. Build up gradually:
- 1. "Do exactly what I tell you" — not delegation, instruction
- "Research this and report back" — information gathering
- "Propose a solution and I'll decide" — thinking delegation
- "Decide and tell me what you decided" — decision delegation with review
- "Handle it completely — update me if it's outside these parameters" — full delegation
Start at level 2–3. Move people up as trust is established. Most founders never get past level 3 with their team — that's the bottleneck.
What to delegate first
Delegate first (high volume, low stakes):
- - Recurring operational tasks you do the same way every time
- Information gathering and synthesis
- Meeting coordination and scheduling
- Reports and updates you produce regularly
Delegate next (skill-buildable):
- - Customer interactions (with clear principles)
- Hiring screens (after you've trained judgment)
- Partner relationship management
- Budget management within parameters
Delegate last (strategic, irreversible):
- - Major strategic pivots
- Executive hires
- Large financial commitments
- M&A decisions
3. Energy Management
Founders manage energy, not just time. Time is fixed. Energy is renewable — but only if you manage it.
The Energy Audit
Map your week by energy, not tasks. See references/founder-toolkit.md for the full template.
Categories:
- - 🟢 Energizing: Activities that leave you sharper after doing them
- 🟡 Neutral: Neither energizing nor draining
- 🔴 Draining: Activities that leave you depleted
Common founder energy patterns:
- - Builders: Energized by creating, drained by politics and process
- Sellers: Energized by people and wins, drained by detail work and admin
- Operators: Energized by solving, drained by ambiguity and indecision
- Visionaries: Energized by strategy and ideas, drained by execution and repetition
The rule: Maximize green. Eliminate or delegate red. Accept yellow as the price of leadership.
Energy management practices
Protect deep work time. 2–4 hours of uninterrupted thinking time, 3–5 days per week. Schedule it. Defend it. This is where strategy happens.
Batch shallow work. Email, Slack, administrative tasks — twice a day maximum.
Single-task during recovery. If you're depleted, don't try to do your best work. Do tasks that don't require your best.
Identify your peak window. Most people have 4–6 peak hours per day. Schedule your hardest work in those windows.
4. CEO Calendar Audit
The calendar is the most honest document in a founder's life. It shows what you actually prioritize, not what you say you prioritize.
Running the audit
Pull the last 4 weeks of calendar data. Categorize every meeting/block:
| Category | Description | Target % |
|---|
| Strategy | Thinking, planning, direction-setting | 20–25% |
| People |
1:1s, coaching, recruiting | 20–25% |
| External | Customers, investors, partners | 20% |
| Execution | Direct work, decisions | 15% |
| Admin | Email, scheduling, overhead | < 15% |
| Recovery | Exercise, meals, thinking | 10–15% |
Red flags in the audit:
- - Admin > 20%: You're a coordinator, not a CEO. Fix your systems.
- Execution > 30%: You're still an IC. Build the team.
- People < 10%: Your team is running on empty. They need more of you.
- No recovery blocks: You're running on adrenaline. It ends badly.
- Strategy < 10%: You're running the company, not leading it.
The CEO's primary job at each stage
| Stage | CEO should spend most time on... |
|---|
| Seed | Product and customers. Directly. |
| Series A |
Hiring the executive team. Recruiting is your job. |
| Series B | Culture, strategy, and external (investors/partners/customers) |
| Series C+ | Vision, board, external narrative, executive development |
If you're spending time on things from two stages ago, you haven't made the transition.
5. Leadership Style Evolution
The job changes at every stage. Most founders don't change with it.
IC → Manager (0 to ~10 people):
You need to teach and build trust. People are watching how you treat failure. The skill: give clear context, set expectations, check in frequently.
Manager → Leader (~10 to ~50 people):
You can't manage everyone directly. You need people who manage people. The skill: hire managers you trust, let them manage.
Leader → Executive (~50 to ~200 people):
You're now setting culture and direction, not managing work. The skill: communicate obsessively, decide at the right altitude, develop your leadership team.
Executive → Institutional CEO (200+):
You're a symbol as much as a manager. The skill: build systems that work without you; focus on board, investors, and external narrative.
The hardest transition: Manager → Leader. You have to stop doing things yourself and trust people you're still getting to know.
6. Blind Spot Identification
Everyone has them. Founders more than most — because nobody in the early company had the authority or safety to tell you.
Common founder blind spots
- - Communication: "I said it once, they should know" — you said it; they didn't hear it or didn't believe it
- Decision speed: Moving so fast that teams can't orient or build on your direction
- Context hoarding: Knowing what's happening without sharing it, then being frustrated that teams make bad decisions
- Optimism bias: Consistently underestimating timelines, cost, and difficulty
- Founder exceptionalism: Rules that apply to everyone don't apply to you
- Feedback avoidance: Creating an environment where no one gives you honest feedback
How to find your blind spots
- 1. 360 feedback (anonymous): Once a year. Ask direct reports, peers, board members. Include "What does [name] do that gets in the way of our success?"
- Exit interview analysis: What do departing employees consistently say? Find the pattern.
- Failure post-mortems: What do your worst decisions have in common? What were you assuming that wasn't true?
- The energy audit: Where do you consistently drain the people around you?
7. Imposter Syndrome Toolkit
It doesn't go away. It evolves. The founder who was scared to pitch to investors is now scared to manage a board. The founder who was scared to hire is now scared to fire.
The reframe: Imposter syndrome is proportional to stretch. If you never feel it, you're not growing.
Practical tools:
- - Evidence file: Document wins, compliments, decisions that worked. Read it when the doubt hits.
- Normalize the feeling: "I feel underprepared for this" ≠ "I am an imposter." Feeling and fact are different.
- Do the thing anyway. Competence comes from doing, not from feeling ready.
- Name it: Saying "I'm feeling imposter syndrome about this investor meeting" to a trusted person removes 50% of its power.
8. Founder Mental Health
Burnout isn't weakness. It's a predictable outcome of high-demand + low-recovery + no control over inputs.
Burnout signals
Early: Irritability, difficulty sleeping, decisions feel harder than they should, loss of enthusiasm for the mission.
Mid: Physical symptoms (headaches, illness), cynicism about the company, social withdrawal, all tasks feel equally important (priority paralysis).
Late: Can't function, decisions have stopped, team notices before you do.
If you're in late burnout: Stop performing. Get support. The company needs a functioning founder more than it needs a martyred one.
Structural prevention
- - Protect recovery time. Not weekends — protected time during the week where you're not available.
- Therapy or coaching. Not optional for founders. The job is isolating and the stakes are high.
- Peer group. Other founders at similar stages. They're the only people who actually understand the job.
- Clear off-ramps. Know what "enough for today" looks like. Don't let the work be infinite.
9. The Founder Mode Trap
Paul Graham's "Founder Mode" essay made the case that great founders stay deeply involved in operations — skip middle management and go direct. It resonated because it's sometimes true.
When founder mode helps:
- - Crisis recovery (company needs direct leadership)
- Product-market fit search (speed matters more than org health)
- High-value, irreversible decisions (you should be in the room)
- Early stages when the team is small
When founder mode hurts:
- - When it undermines managers you've hired (they can't lead if you override them)
- When it's driven by distrust rather than strategy
- When it prevents the team from developing judgment
- When you're doing it because you miss doing, not because the company needs you to
The test: Are you going deep because the situation requires it, or because you're uncomfortable with the loss of control? The first is leadership. The second is the trap.
10. Succession Planning
Building a company that works without you is not disloyalty — it's the ultimate expression of leadership.
Succession is not just about exit. It's about resilience. What happens if you're sick? On sabbatical? Acquired?
Succession readiness levels:
- - Level 1: You've documented your key knowledge and processes
- Level 2: At least one person can cover each of your key functions for 2 weeks
- Level 3: Your leadership team can run the company for a quarter without you
- Level 4: You've identified and developed your potential successor
Most founders are at Level 0. Level 2 is a reasonable target. Level 3 is a strategic asset.
Key Questions for Founder Development
- - "What decisions did you make last week that someone else could have made?"
- "What are you still doing that you should have delegated 6 months ago?"
- "When did you last get honest, critical feedback? From whom? What did it say?"
- "What would need to be true for the company to run for a week without you?"
- "What's draining your energy that you've accepted as unavoidable?"
Detailed References
- -
references/leadership-growth.md — Maxwell levels, situational leadership, founder-to-CEO transition - INLINECODE2 — Weekly reflection, energy audit, delegation matrix, 1:1 templates
技能名称: founder-coach
详细描述:
创始人发展教练
你的公司只能成长得和你一样快。这项技能将创始人发展视为战略优先事项,而非个人放纵。
关键词
创始人,CEO,创始人模式,授权,倦怠,冒充者综合征,领导力成长,精力管理,日程审计,高管团队,董事会管理,继任计划,从个人贡献者到管理者,领导风格,创始人陷阱,盲点,个人OKR,CEO反思
核心真理
创始人永远是瓶颈。并非有意为之——这是结构性的。你创建了公司。你了解一切。决策都流经你。这在某个阶段有效,直到失效。
大约15人时,你遇到第一个天花板:你无法参加所有会议并同时思考。大约50人时,遇到第二个:你的风格开始引发文化问题。大约150人时,遇到第三个:你需要一个真正的高管团队,否则你将成为公司无法规模化发展的原因。
你越早解决这个问题越好。
1. 创始人原型识别
大多数创始人主要属于一种原型。了解你的原型可以预测你将面临的挑战。
| 原型 | 优势 | 盲点 | 他们需要什么 |
|---|
| 建造者 | 产品、工程、技术深度 | 市场推广、讲故事、人员 | 一个销售/市场推广合作伙伴 |
| 销售者 |
营收、关系、愿景沟通 | 运营、跟进、流程 | 一个运营者/COO |
|
运营者 | 执行、流程、可靠性 | 愿景、产品直觉、风险 | 一个愿景家/战略联合创始人 |
|
愿景家 | 战略、叙事、模式识别 | 执行、细节、落地 | 一个整合者/COO |
自我评估问题:
- - 当你有一小时空闲时会做什么?
- 你最常拖延什么?
- 你的联合创始人或早期团队抱怨你不做什么?
- 你收到过关于你领导力的最佳反馈是什么?
大多数创始人是建造者或愿景家。大多数规模化问题之所以发生,是因为他们没有尽早雇佣互补类型的人。
2. 授权框架
创始人未能授权有四个原因:
- 1. 没人做得和我一样好(短期通常正确,长期致命)
- 解释比自己做更费时(第一次正确;第十次就不对了)
- 如果我不自己做,就会失去控制(在规模化时,控制是幻觉)
- 如果失败了,都是我的错(如果你从不让别人尝试,那才是你的错)
技能 × 意愿矩阵
激励或重新分配 | 管理淘汰或重新设计角色 |
规则:
- - 高技能 + 高意愿 → 分配工作并放手
- 高意愿 + 低技能 → 投资他们。他们想要成长。
- 高技能 + 低意愿 → 找出原因。改善环境或接受不匹配。
- 低技能 + 低意愿 → 不要授权给他们。解决绩效问题。
授权阶梯
并非所有授权都相同。逐步建立:
- 1. 完全按我说的做 — 不是授权,是指令
- 研究这个并汇报 — 信息收集
- 提出解决方案,我来决定 — 思考性授权
- 做决定并告诉我你的决定 — 带审查的决策授权
- 完全处理——如果超出这些参数再通知我 — 完全授权
从第2-3级开始。随着信任建立,让人们向上移动。大多数创始人从未与团队一起超越第3级——这就是瓶颈。
首先授权什么
首先授权(高量、低风险):
- - 每次以相同方式执行的重复性运营任务
- 信息收集和综合
- 会议协调和日程安排
- 你定期制作的报告和更新
其次授权(技能可培养):
- - 客户互动(有明确原则)
- 招聘筛选(在你培训了判断力之后)
- 合作伙伴关系管理
- 参数范围内的预算管理
最后授权(战略性、不可逆):
3. 精力管理
创始人管理精力,而不仅仅是时间。时间是固定的。精力是可再生的——但前提是你管理它。
精力审计
按精力而非任务规划你的一周。完整模板见 references/founder-toolkit.md。
类别:
- - 🟢 充电型: 做完后让你更敏锐的活动
- 🟡 中性型: 既不充电也不消耗
- 🔴 消耗型: 让你精疲力竭的活动
常见的创始人精力模式:
- - 建造者: 因创造而充满活力,因政治和流程而疲惫
- 销售者: 因人和胜利而充满活力,因细节工作和行政事务而疲惫
- 运营者: 因解决问题而充满活力,因模糊和犹豫不决而疲惫
- 愿景家: 因战略和想法而充满活力,因执行和重复而疲惫
规则: 最大化绿色。消除或授权红色。接受黄色作为领导力的代价。
精力管理实践
保护深度工作时间。 每周3-5天,每天2-4小时不间断的思考时间。安排它。捍卫它。这是战略产生的地方。
批量处理浅层工作。 电子邮件、Slack、行政任务——每天最多两次。
恢复期间单任务处理。 如果你精疲力竭,不要试图做最好的工作。做不需要你最佳状态的任务。
识别你的高峰时段。 大多数人每天有4-6小时的高峰时段。在最困难的工作安排在这些时段。
4. CEO日程审计
日程是创始人生活中最诚实的文件。它显示你实际优先考虑什么,而不是你说你优先考虑什么。
执行审计
提取过去4周的日程数据。对每个会议/时间段进行分类:
| 类别 | 描述 | 目标百分比 |
|---|
| 战略 | 思考、规划、方向设定 | 20–25% |
| 人员 |
一对一会议、指导、招聘 | 20–25% |
| 外部 | 客户、投资者、合作伙伴 | 20% |
| 执行 | 直接工作、决策 | 15% |
| 行政 | 电子邮件、日程安排、杂务 | < 15% |
| 恢复 | 锻炼、用餐、思考 | 10–15% |
审计中的危险信号:
- - 行政 > 20%:你是协调员,不是CEO。修复你的系统。
- 执行 > 30%:你仍然是个人贡献者。建立团队。
- 人员 < 10%:你的团队在空转。他们需要你更多。
- 没有恢复时间段:你在靠肾上腺素运转。结局会很糟。
- 战略 < 10%:你在运营公司,而不是领导公司。
CEO在每个阶段的主要工作
| 阶段 | CEO应将大部分时间花在... |
|---|
| 种子轮 | 产品和客户。直接参与。 |
| A轮 |
招聘高管团队。招聘是你的工作。 |
| B轮 | 文化、战略和外部(投资者/合作伙伴/客户) |
| C轮+ | 愿景、董事会、外部叙事、高管发展 |
如果你把时间花在两个阶段前的事情上,你还没有完成过渡。
5. 领导风格演变
工作在每个阶段都会改变。大多数创始人没有随之改变。
个人贡献者 → 管理者(0到约10人):
你需要教导和建立信任。人们在观察你如何对待失败。技能:提供清晰的背景,设定期望,频繁检查。
管理者 → 领导者(约10到约50人):
你无法直接管理每个人。你需要管理他人的人。技能:雇佣你信任的管理者,让他们管理。
领导者 → 高管(约50到约200人):
你现在在设定文化和方向,而不是管理工作。技能:痴迷地沟通,在正确的高度决策,发展你的领导团队。
高管 → 制度化CEO(200人以上):
你既是管理者也是象征。技能:建立无需你也能运作的系统;专注于董事会、投资者和外部叙事。
最难的过渡: 管理者 → 领导者。你必须停止亲自做事,并信任你仍在了解的人。
6. 盲点识别
每个人都有盲点。创始人比大多数人更多——因为在早期公司里,没有人有权力或安全感来告诉你。
常见的创始人盲点
- - 沟通: 我说过一次,他们应该知道——你说了;他们没听到或没相信
- 决策速度: 行动太快,以至于团队无法定位或基于你的方向进行建设
- 信息囤积: 知道发生了什么却不分享,然后因团队做出糟糕决策而沮丧
- 乐观偏见: 一贯低估时间线、成本和难度
- 创始人例外主义: 适用于所有人的规则不适用于你
- 反馈回避: 创造一个没人给你诚实反馈的环境
如何找到你的盲点
- 1. 360度反馈(匿名): 每年一次。询问直接下属、同级