Latest episode
[Podcast Episode #32] Fire Yourself First: The Counter-Intuitive Move That Scales Every Business
Most founders say they want freedom, but we keep building companies that can’t survive a week without us. That’s why we’re arguing for a move that feels backward at first: fire yourself first. When you stop being the daily operator and start becoming the designer of leaders, systems, and decision-making, the business can finally scale without burning you out.
Latest episode
[Podcast Episode #32] Fire Yourself First: The Counter-Intuitive Move That Scales Every Business
Most founders say they want freedom, but we keep building companies that can’t survive a week without us. That’s why we’re arguing for a move that feels backward at first: fire yourself first. When you stop being the daily operator and start becoming the designer of leaders, systems, and decision-making, the business can finally scale without burning you out.
Episodes
Most founders say they want freedom, but we keep building companies that can’t survive a week without us. That’s why we’re arguing for a move that feels backward at first: fire yourself first. When you stop being the daily operator and start becoming the designer of leaders, systems, and decision-making, the business can finally scale without burning you out.
Your day gets decided fast: one glance at your phone, one “quick” message, and suddenly you’re living inside everyone else’s agenda. In this episode we want to pull you back to the one part of the day you can still truly own, your morning, and show how a protected first hour can change your focus, mood, and long-term results.
The wins you’re most proud of can vanish faster than you think—not from one colossal blunder, but from small, compounding mistakes. In this episode we dig into a simple yet powerful lens: some parts of life are rubber balls that bounce back, while others are fragile ornaments that shatter once and never look the same.
Your sharpest deals and worst mistakes often start in the same place: your emotional state. So in this episode we get honest about emotional health as operational risk—and share the practices that keep our own decisions clean when pressure climbs.
Ever feel “always on” but rarely satisfied with the results? In this episode we take a scalpel to modern busyness and rebuild your week around outcomes, not alerts. From killing inbox addiction to installing clear access protocols, this conversation shows how to trade reactive work for deliberate results—and save at least 10 hours every week.
Happiness is a shaky finish line; it wobbles with every mood swing and market turn. In this episode, we set our sights higher. We challenge the modern obsession with happiness and outline a richer target: a beautiful life shaped by meaning, purpose, sacrifice, and generosity.
Most founders say they want freedom, but we keep building companies that can’t survive a week without us. That’s why we’re arguing for a move that feels backward at first: fire yourself first. When you stop being the daily operator and start becoming the designer of leaders, systems, and decision-making, the business can finally scale without burning you out.
Your day gets decided fast: one glance at your phone, one “quick” message, and suddenly you’re living inside everyone else’s agenda. In this episode we want to pull you back to the one part of the day you can still truly own, your morning, and show how a protected first hour can change your focus, mood, and long-term results.
The wins you’re most proud of can vanish faster than you think—not from one colossal blunder, but from small, compounding mistakes. In this episode we dig into a simple yet powerful lens: some parts of life are rubber balls that bounce back, while others are fragile ornaments that shatter once and never look the same.
Your sharpest deals and worst mistakes often start in the same place: your emotional state. So in this episode we get honest about emotional health as operational risk—and share the practices that keep our own decisions clean when pressure climbs.
Ever feel “always on” but rarely satisfied with the results? In this episode we take a scalpel to modern busyness and rebuild your week around outcomes, not alerts. From killing inbox addiction to installing clear access protocols, this conversation shows how to trade reactive work for deliberate results—and save at least 10 hours every week.
Happiness is a shaky finish line; it wobbles with every mood swing and market turn. In this episode, we set our sights higher. We challenge the modern obsession with happiness and outline a richer target: a beautiful life shaped by meaning, purpose, sacrifice, and generosity.