The Great CEO Within: The Tactical Guide to Company Building – Matt Mochary

The Great CEO Within: The Tactical Guide to Company Building – Matt Mochary

What to do when you are the CEO.

Getting Buy-In

You get buy-in when people feel they are part of the decision and their input matters

When people are given more influence, they feel more invested.

Don’t discuss issues verbally. It is both inefficient and ineffective.

Instead, require that anyone who presents an Issue at a team meeting do so in writing.

The write-up should include both a detailed description of the Issue as well as their Proposed Solution. They cannot say “I don’t know.” They must at least present a guess. It must be phrased boldly, in direct terms.

All issues should be presented at the weekly Team Meeting.

Allow 5 minutes to discuss each Proposed Solution. If consensus is reached in that time – great. If not, don’t spend more time debating.

The Four Zones

 

  1. Zone of incompetence: other people do better than you
  2. Zone of competence: you can do it just fine, but others are just as good as you
  3. Zone of excellence: things you are better at than others. You will want to keep doing these things, but this is dangerous. You need to move away from these things.
  4. Zone of genius: these are the things that you are uniquely good at in the world and that you love to do. This is where you should be driving toward spending most, if not all, of your time.

Decision Making

If you want the most effective and efficient decision-making process, require that anyone who wants to discuss an issue write it up, along with the desired solution, ahead of time.

The hard way: Write an extraordinarily thorough analysis from the get-go.

The easy way: Write a draft, circulate it to the meeting participants before the meeting, and invite comments and questions. 

This method, though time-consuming for the sponsor, yields extraordinarily thoughtful decisions in a very short amount of time.

Values And Culture

Issue Identification

Ask each person to pretend that they’re the CEO and answer “What are the most important issues (max 3) for me to solve in the next 90 days?

Ask people to write down their thoughts about the company when they source their Joy, Excitement, Sadness, Anger and Fear.

Inbox Zero: Work On Your Top Goals

Inefficient leaders waste a lot of time reaching out about or responding to, one-off issues in real-time. A much more efficient method is to batch your issues and discuss them all at once. 

Check email only twice a day: morning and afternoon.

Schedule two hours each day to work on your Top Goal only. And do this every single workday. Period.

The earlier in the day you schedule this Top Goal time, the better, so as to avoid other issues (and people) from pressing for your attention.

On-Time and Present

Don’t Pretend To Thank

o not feign humility by downplaying the act with statements like “It was nothing, anyone could have done it.” No. The person is trying to make you feel appreciated. Anything other than “thank you” will rob them of their goal.

The Initial Team

 

PMF is having created a product that customers are finding so much value in that they are willing to both buy it and recommend it later.

Metrics that show whether PMF has been achieved include: revenue, renewal rates, NPS (net promoter score).

Goal Tracking And Responsibility

Never assign someone an action without them agreeing to it verbally or in writing.

Encourage people to use their own individual tools for tracking their specific actions. Keep the group goal tracker high level.

 

When more than one person shares a responsibility, it often does not get done well, or at all. 

One person is assigned to each function in the company.  Maintain and update a list of responsibilities as they change.

Great CEOs Use These Handy Tips

Loudest Voice in the Room: Ensure Fairness In Meetings

Be aware of who is in the room when you have a group discussion. Know that work titles will influence other people’s answers.

To avoid influencing other people’s ideas, have people write down their votes or thoughts before you share your perspective.

Let junior people speak and ask questions first.

Sloppy Agreements

Sloppy agreements are when people don’t show up on time, and don’t complete the goals that they declare.

The antidote is Impeccable Agreements. They are 1) precisely defined and 2) fully agreed to (which almost always means in writing) by all relevant people.

There must be consequences for breaking agreements.

If you can’t meet the agreement, then you have an obligation to let other members of the agreement circle know as soon as possible.

Check Your Energy

If you can spend 75-80% of your time doing things that energize you – magic will occur.

Audit your time and figure out how much of it is spent on activities that energize you and what activities drain you. Outsource or delegate the things that drain you as much as possible.

Your physical health is paramount.

 Take care of your mental health. Build a support group.

Get a therapist, even if you don’t think you need one. You will find it invariably useful.

Gratitude

Transparency

Conflict Resolution

Interpersonal conflict is almost always due to people:

Prove to people that you have heard them by summarizing what you just said back to you until they say “that’s right!” Once you assure them that you’ve heard them, then, and only then, will they be open to what you have to say in response.

Sales: Customer Development

Identify the customer’s specific challenges by asking the right questions.

You need to understand your customer’s pain before you present your solution.

Over time, you will want to build an inventory of problem and solution statements for the different kinds of customers and different product features your product serves.

Don’t hire salespeople right away.

In most cases, salespeople will never be able to sell better than the founders and they won’t be able to sell the product if you are not able to.

To thrive, salespeople need to have a very clear product offering to sell and a very clear direction on who to sell to.

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