What looks like high standards and hard work can easily become the reason your business stops growing.
When you build from scratch, being in the middle of everything feels normal. It’s part of why the business exists.
Then the company grows, the work changes, and you stay just as central because it still feels like the safe, responsible thing to do.
You might think the answer is more people or better systems. Often, it’s how much still runs through you.
After a while, that stops being a habit and starts becoming identity. The more Millennial Masters interviews I’ve done, the more I’ve recognised parts of this in myself.
Gary Das realised he was the problem.
“I was the bottleneck. The business had almost outgrown me. I hadn’t grown with the business as a person, in my mindset, my behaviours, and my habits.”
Your company can outgrow your old way of operating long before it outgrows your ambition. 👇🏻
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You stay too central
This usually builds slowly, as you stay close to everything. Harry Sanders said it’s a symptom of founders who want to “know everything, touch everything, feel everything.”
Businesses like that stay around the same size because the founder never stops acting like the centre of gravity. Every decision routes back to you. The team waits for your reaction before moving.
You drop new ideas into work that’s already moving because being involved still feels like your job. That’s why the habit lasts longer than it should.
When you hold on to the version of yourself the early business needed, the strain shows up before the systems problem is even obvious.
Standards are just a cover story
This is where you can hide. You tell yourself the issue is quality or standards.
Gary’s attitude was that “no one can do it as good as me,” which made it easier to step back in instead of training people properly.
That can sound sensible when you’re the one doing it. But the harder part is letting someone else not do it your way.
Damon Flowers said founders often want staff to do things exactly the way they would do them, and they struggle to accept handing over a task and getting 60% of the result back while someone learns.
Founders often can’t tolerate that stage, so they step back in because fixing the problem still feels like their job. All that does is teach the team to hand problems back to you.
You teach the wrong habit
Damon’s point is what your behaviour teaches the team. If you take the work back every time it comes back imperfect, you train people in exactly the wrong way.
They learn they don’t need to finish the hard part because they know it can always come back to you. After a while, the whole company starts working like that.
Then you complain that nobody can take anything off your plate, while teaching the business that it still cannot function without you.
You call it high standards, but the team experiences a system where ownership never settles anywhere because you keep pulling it back in.
That’s one of the easiest ways to build a company full of capable people who never become fully capable inside your business.
The role changed, you didn’t
Tyler Dunagin uses an American football analogy: you start as the all-star player, move into coaching, and end up in the owner’s box.
That’s a tough change when your identity was built around being the only one who could move things forward through effort.
Harry Sanders said realising he wasn’t a good manager was an ego hit. “You can either be rich, or you can be king. You can’t be both. The king is the person that everyone loves, that comes in, says hi. Being rich is building the organisation that doesn’t need you.”
Delegation is only part of it because your role changed. The business needed you to build the structure around the work and let other people carry more of it.
Part of you still wanted the emotional reward of being the all-star player. That’s normal. It also keeps the company smaller than it should be.
Then you resent the business
Joy Zarine’s example is painfully recognisable. You’re on holiday, laptop by the pool, answering emails, annoyed, thinking this isn’t why you built a business.
You keep yourself central because it feels safer, then you resent the business for still needing you. You complain that you can’t switch off while still holding onto the habits that make switching off impossible.
Joy’s point was that this is on you. The frustration is real, but the structure underneath it is self-created. You need people around you, and you have to let them mess up, as painful as that is.
Emma Mills was told more directly that she was stuck in her ways. She runs a personal assistants business, but didn’t have a PA of her own.
Her mastermind facilitator pointed out she was coaching other owners on leverage while still being the bottleneck in her own business.
You can usually see the pattern in other people long before you see it in yourself.
When pushing harder stops working
Mike Jones lived the darkest version of this in his CrossFit business. He tried to push through scaling, but the way he was running it started taking a real toll on his life.
He worked more and more, the business got on top of him, and in the end his brain couldn’t cope. The pressure built until he shut down a good business.
That strips away the idea that this is just a productivity problem. You can carry the wrong structure for a while and still keep the business alive.
There’s still a cost, and it can be big enough to take the whole thing down.
What changes when you step back properly
James Fleming admitted he “was getting frustrated, and the excuse I was making was… it’s your fault,” pointing fingers at the team.
He realised “I had to change” when one of his senior leaders called him out for pushing too hard.
He started stepping back and saying, “I don’t know, but I know you guys do,” passing ownership back to the people he’d hired.
That matters because the role changed. Your job is no longer to fix everything yourself. It’s to set direction, hire well, and trust people to do the work to the standard you expect.
Without this identity shift, the business still runs through you, even after you’ve built the team.
If you keep stepping back in every time something is imperfect, you stay the bottleneck. You’re teaching the company that it still can’t move without you.
If that never changes, the business stays stuck with you at your limit.
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I believe a business is meant to provide the owner with the work/lifestyle that best fulfills their purpose for it. For my own understanding and simplicity's sake, years ago, I broke down ownership style into three categories: visionary, manager, and technician.
Visionary owners think about growing all the time, but often need support.
Manager owners fit well in franchise organizations and like to manage systems and grow, but they often need good sales support.
Technician owners like to get their hands dirty and are more of a hands-on person, say like plumber owners, but yet they can't think of not also doing the work themselves.
Because I believe in my first sentence, I do not believe one style is better than the next if an owner fits the description, and I'm happy for them if this is what makes them happy.
However, one style over the next does make a difference in the success of growth, as you mention in your article. What I see in the problem, for example, is when the technician-style owner is attempting to be a visionary owner but cannot understand why he is so unhappy and starts to sabotage the company back down to a five or six-employee company after achieving 20 plus employees. Just my simple observations over the last several years working with business owners.
Thanks for the post, I enjoyed the read!
The business only grows as far as the founder is willing to change.