Artwork for podcast The Operations Room: A Podcast for COO’s
72. Is the COO the Single Source of Truth?
Episode 7227th February 2025 • The Operations Room: A Podcast for COO’s • Bethany Ayers & Brandon Mensinga
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In this episode we discuss: Is the COO the single source of truth? We are joined by Eric Collins, Investor, Serial Entrepreneur, CEO & Founding Member at Impact X Capital investing in underrepresented entrepreneurs; Author of We Don’t Need Permission (amzn.to/3Qp6G9d); & Host of Channel 4's The Money Maker.

Love The Operations Room? Please support us by rating and reviewing it here.

We chat about the following with Eric Collins: 

  1. What makes the COO the true "source of truth" in scaling a venture-backed company?
  2. How can COOs balance growth while CFOs maintain financial discipline—and why does this partnership make or break success?
  3. Why is succession planning not just a CEO concern, but a critical step for every COO aiming to lead?
  4. Can a COO ever match a founder's passion, or is their power found in something entirely different?
  5. What does it really take for a COO to transition into the CEO seat—and what role does backfilling play in that journey?

References 

  • https://www.linkedin.com/in/ericdcollinsba/?originalSubdomain=uk
  • www.impactxcapital.com

Biography 

Eric Collins is a serial entrepreneur, investor, and host of Channel 4's The Money Maker. He’s held leadership roles at AOL, TimeWarner, SwiftKey/Microsoft, and Touch Surgery/Medtronic.

Appointed by President Obama to the Small Business Administration’s Council on Underserved Communities, Eric now serves on the boards of Cirata, UnLtd, Crux, and Autograph ABP. A sought-after speaker and Audi brand ambassador, he’s consistently featured on The Powerlist of influential Black Britons.

His award-winning book, We Don’t Need Permission (Penguin), advocates for investing in Black and underrepresented entrepreneurs as a powerful driver of social change.

To learn more about Beth and Brandon or to find out about sponsorship opportunities click here

Summary

23:55 The unique role that the CEO plays in a scaling organisation 

28:05 The value of the COO next to the CFO

30:58 Progressing as a COO

33:11 CEO and COO Succession Planning

33:51 The Passion of Founders vs. COOs

39:56 Planning for Success as a COO

43:16 Setting the Agenda in Board Meetings



This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:

Podcorn - https://podcorn.com/privacy

Transcripts

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Hello everyone, and welcome to

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another episode of The Operations

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Room, a podcast for crows.

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I am Brandon Bensinger, joined by my

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lovely and tired co-host Bethany

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Ayres. How are things going,

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Bethany?

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I've had better weeks, to be fair.

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If I'm reflecting on this time last

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year versus this year,

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nobody has died.

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Bonus.

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So we are ahead of the death game

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right now.

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We are. But if we are like life

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stress game, definitely

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not ahead.

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I am definitely in that.

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Like remind me why I decided

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it'd be fun to go back to work mode.

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And eventually catches up to you,

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doesn't it? At some point.

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It really does.

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I woke up this morning to a flurry

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of emails that came in the night,

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and they're not even hard, you know,

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and it's just emails.

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It just happens.

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But at that moment

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of overwhelm, I was like.

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Nope, there's nothing worse.

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I'm looking at your inbox explode.

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And then you go to slack and there's

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just like a shit show of stuff going

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on there as well.

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We have a lot overwhelming.

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It is like, I'm really wishing we

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had Chris Hatfield as our guest

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today and that is like ten

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minutes. He could just talk me down.

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Give me a couple tools.

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Give me a brain dump tool or

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whatever we did last time.

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Yeah, I mean, I was seriously

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considering the brain dump tool, but

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I just haven't had time to do it

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yet.

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Wow.

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That's serious.

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You are maxed out if you can't even

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do the brain dump tool.

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Yeah, I was like a decision between

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brushing my teeth of the brain dump

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tool. And I also for brushing my

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teeth.

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And then that's literal hygiene,

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as Eric Collins talks about in our

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episode.

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Yeah.

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So, I did like,

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just as a, not a funny story, but

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just as a moment last night, I

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was coming down on the train

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from Manchester, and it

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wasn't a very full train.

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It was like 615 at night.

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So really past rush hour

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I had the entire table to

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myself. I was relaxing, it

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was great. And just before the train

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left, this just

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an asshole of a guy sat across

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from me and

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he's some sales guy.

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Sales leader.

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Super cool and

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ate his crisps.

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Ate his tuna sandwich.

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I shouting on his phone about

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like this shit employee

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and that shit person.

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And that person's not worth saving

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that they've resigned.

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And on and on and on

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with the crisps and the tuna

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sandwich and the talk it with an

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open mouth and the lip smacking.

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It's just like I can't.

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It's just such an unpleasant

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experience.

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And so I put on my noise canceling

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headphones. And I'm not actually a

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big music person, but I had put some

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music on to drown him out because

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the noise canceling on its own

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wasn't sufficient.

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He made some visual canceling

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software as well to exit him

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from your site.

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Exactly, because I was trying to be

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on my phone, but I was holding my

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phone up so that I didn't bend my

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neck to get, like, neck problems,

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you know, in later life.

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But then I could see him through my

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phone, so I just yeah, I just had to

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close my eyes and wait for it to

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finish and then luckily sometime

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in, I don't know, Stockport or

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something. He lost reception and

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finally gave up.

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But the first 20 minutes

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of the train journey was

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horrific.

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I obviously should not hate people

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and there is no reason to hate this

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mad.

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Sometimes you just want to avoid

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public transport.

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For these reasons. I think you know

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trains and busses because you get

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random people doing random shit and

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it just drives you insane.

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And he actually his behavior

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cleared out all of the surrounding

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seats from us.

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And we started with people sitting,

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you know, everywhere.

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And by the end of his journey, like

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by the end of Stockport, it was just

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me and him, the rest of the

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carriages full on the back.

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He stuck on through just like an

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operator. CAA went to the

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very end.

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I had the only reserved seat in

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the carriage that was my seat I had

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planned.

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Nice you. We're not going to give up

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here. You're much, much deserved

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and reserved seat.

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Exactly. So anyhow, that's kind of

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maybe an allegory for how my life is

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right now. Maybe I need to let go of

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things a little bit, rather than dig

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my heels in and and hate the rest of

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the world.

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I did a small talk last night,

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so I was relating this story of

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back in 2009, I was

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part of this company called Nuance

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Communications, and, I've

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been promoted five times

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in five years, if you can imagine,

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at this point. So I was the hot shot

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up and comer, as it were, running

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this business unit as a senior

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director, 200 odd people,

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as you do in these large

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organizations.

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And I was presenting my third

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CBR McAuley Business Review.

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And I got up there to, you know,

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represent the state of the business

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unit and the CEO

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and the executive was there to kind

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of grill me on performance in this,

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that and the other.

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And for these calls, you would have

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the entire business unit on the

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call. So there is like literally 200

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individuals listening.

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And so I was doing this,

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and there was some other speakers as

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well, finance and so on.

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That sounds bizarre.

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Like a live public QBR.

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Yes. Yeah.

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I mean, this is the way

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nuance for another company, very

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autocratic, very top down.

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And the CEO is quite intimidating.

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And on this particular

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QBR, he decided to

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make an example of me for whatever

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reason, I don't. To this day, I

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still don't quite understand.

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So he basically personally attacked

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me. I've kind of openly question

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like, why?

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Why? You know, why are you leading

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this? Why is this happening?

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You know, all sorts of things.

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And I left at that call

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pretty humiliated.

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I think it's easily my top

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three humiliations of all time

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in a business context,

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especially with how many people

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listening. It's all your peers and

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your entire team, right?

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I went home that night, and as you

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do, you look at yourself

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in the mirror and you start asking

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yourself a bunch of existential

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questions, right?

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One of which was, you know,

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is this, how businesses operate

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and is this how successful

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businesses should operate?

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And I kind of ruminated on these

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questions for, for a few

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months and then eventually decided

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to pack it in and quit.

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On seeing this at the height the

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recession in 2009.

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So there was no jobs to be had

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anytime soon.

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So I ended up walking the streets of

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London.

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You know, going from one coffee shop

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to the next is this kind of sad,

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sad, humiliated young

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man? Not really sure.

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What's the next step was going to

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be? Fast forward two years.

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I joined a company called SwiftKey,

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and I was there for five years, and

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it was just a revelation that you

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can build, grow, and scale a

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business in a totally different way.

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That truly takes the concepts

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of empowerment for individuals and

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teams, autonomy for individuals

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and teams.

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You know the right context around

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that, the right guardrails, and

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you can get spectacular results

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based on that whereby

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the company succeeds, individuals

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succeed, the team succeed, and

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it feels good, and it feels like

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you're on some kind of journey

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together that actually matters, and

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you're invested in what's happening

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as opposed to what I experienced in

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nuance, which was much more this

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kind of autocratic kind

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of mean culture, if you want to call

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it that.

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It was a company that was acquired

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by nuance, right?

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Rather than you starting a new ones?

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Yeah, exactly.

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So I'd worked for a scale up in

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Calgary, Canada, and nuance

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bought that company.

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And actually, this kind of dovetails

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directly into our episode with Eric,

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actually, because he was the one.

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He was the one from the nuance side

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to make the acquisition happen,

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flying into Calgary.

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And as I describe in our chat with

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Eric, kind of like laying off the

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entire company.

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And there was three of us left.

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And at that point I got sucked into

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the vortex of this vicious,

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mean spirited company.

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It's an Israeli company, isn't it?

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Nuance?

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I don't think it was, really, but

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I don't even know what they were,

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actually. But they were a machine

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because their business model was to

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take patterns and litigate scale

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ups into submission and then buy

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them. So every voice recognition

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pattern, any kind of input

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technology, patent and nuance owned

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at some point.

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And of course, they powered Siri and

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so on.

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So gargantuan company bought

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by Microsoft ultimately a couple of

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years back. So all those nuance

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individuals, and that culture got

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subsumed into Microsoft.

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So I can imagine, you know, a real

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clash of culture, I suspect,

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between what nuance had built

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in and the way Microsoft runs their

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company.

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So we have a phenomenal topic

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today, which is, is the SEO

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the single source of truth?

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And we have an amazing guest for

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this. He is Eric Collins.

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He is the CEO at impact

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X capital, which is a venture

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capital company, and the author

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of a book called We Don't Need

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Permission and formerly

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host of the channel four

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TV series The Moneymaker.

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So he is a all star on all

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fronts.

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So before we get to our chat with

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Eric, just wanted to walk through a

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couple of his thoughts and see

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what we think more specifically.

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So the first thing that he had

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spoken about was this idea

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of the CEO driving the agenda

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for the board meeting and

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using the chair as a bit of a proxy

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to make that happen.

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And I was curious what you make of

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this, because I've had a couple of

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experiences around this that I'll

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share in a second. But what do you

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think?

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I think it sounds good, but

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the reality of a lot of

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conversations that we've had, both

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here and with just other CEOs

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generally, is CEOs

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don't even necessarily

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always go to the board meetings or

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understand their place in the board

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meetings, or feel like they have

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a place at the table.

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And therefore, going from

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the reality of where I think a lot

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of c o O's are

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to. And by the way, you're setting

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the agenda, it's a big step.

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I think it's a good aspirational

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step. And I think it turns you into

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like the true partner

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of the CEO.

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And it might be a nice topic

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to cover in the next one, too.

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When you're having with your CEO, if

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you're not already doing this and

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saying, I've heard

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that I should be running the agenda,

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I would like to run the agenda.

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How do we get there?

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Rather than the CEO being the one

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who's setting it?

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I guess this gets to the nature of

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the conversation, which is what is

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the actual role the CEO in these

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companies and what kind of CEO are

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you? Because the fact of the matter

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is, I think in the last two

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companies I worked and, you know, I

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was a de facto piece of that board,

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and I played a key role on those

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board meetings, and I felt that

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I should as well.

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And as part of that experience, I

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think what was very obvious to me

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was there were certain shares

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that directly reflect Eric's

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experience that he was relaying,

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which is, you know, these folks

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would, you know, sworn into these

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meetings, sworn out of these

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meetings. You would rarely see them.

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They didn't really understand what

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we're trying to accomplish.

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And they did this kind of

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peripheral, you know, circling

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the wagons of the other board

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members, the CEO and so on.

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But, you know, ultimately they were

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not very invested, I would say, in

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terms of making that board meeting

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useful and important and valuable

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for all of us.

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If I had my way with one particular

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chairman in mind, I would have got

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rid of him. He made no sense,

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basically, that he was useless

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effectively.

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So, you know, I have a particular

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opinion, I guess, in terms of,

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I think, the value of the CEO,

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that board meeting part of that

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value is to work directly with the

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chair. Have a great relationship,

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and for the two of those individuals

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to work together to drive

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and craft the right kind of board

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meetings to ensure that they're

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successful and you get what you want

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out of them.

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I think it depends on where

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you are in your investment cycle.

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As to how much is the CEO

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versus the CEO crafting that

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agenda?

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Because I still see a lot of

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investor relations sitting with the

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CEO via the CEO.

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Ultimate job is to make sure you

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don't run out of money, and

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therefore how

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you are managing

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your investors and board meetings

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for VC backed businesses is a key

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moment of how you manage your

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investors. The CEO slash

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CEO need to be very well aligned

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on what that messages, and I

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think it would probably be if you're

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truly an advisor or a secondary

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command, you would

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be working together to figure out

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agendas that get the point

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across that you want.

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Particularly if you're going for

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like a bridging round, a new round.

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Don't have good news to share?

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How are you going to be

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presenting that in a controlled

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manner that retains trust in the

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board?

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You know, I fully expect the CEO

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to be having 1 to 1 conversations

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with board members of the course of

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that quarter, doing that activity

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and making sure those relationships

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are strong.

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And for myself, I always

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read myself as not being my role,

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not my remit, so to speak.

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Right. It's his relationships, his

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investors, in that sense.

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My job was to craft a

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kind of like, as the CEO does in

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leadership meetings, right?

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My job is to craft and make sure we

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had good meetings.

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So when it came to good meetings,

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you know, the agenda is a core part

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of what constitutes a good meeting

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and being able to run those meetings

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effectively. So I think maybe in

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that sense it's no different, is it

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is kind of like the CEO holds the

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relationships, but when it comes to

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that board meeting, use my skills

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that I have to make sure we get good

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board meetings to happen.

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So the other thing Eric had spoken

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about was this question of what

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are you hiring for?

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Being the CEO.

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So are sometimes CEOs delude

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themselves in the sense of I

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want a CEO.

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But in fact, what they actually want

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is a chief of staff or I want

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to CEO, but in fact, I actually want

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a kind of a CFO or

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I want a CRO.

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His hypothesis was that

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you were clearly hiring.

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You're second in command.

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You are hiring your successor.

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You're hiring your in lieu person

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that can represent the business

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internally and externally.

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If for some reason you were hit by a

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bus, essentially, and that's the

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role of a CEO in this case, what

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do you make of that?

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I'd like that. But I also like the

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next bit that he talked about of the

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difference between a CFO and a CIO.

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And the CFO is forward

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looking, and the CFO

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is backward looking.

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And I really like that division,

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because I do also think it's the way

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that our brains work.

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So as a CIO, we can understand

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the numbers and

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the model and what needs

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to be delivered.

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But then we take that information to

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plan forward, and then

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how do we align everybody to deliver

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that forward plan?

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And I think that for me,

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I just call it operational strategy.

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It's not like big, big picture

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strategy. And it's not day to

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day operations.

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It's that bridge in between the two.

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And so how do we connect the

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massively visionary, forward

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thinking CEO

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to reality.

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And then how do we translate that

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reality to something that people

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could do day to day?

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The CFO holds that financial

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plan, as it were.

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And what you're holding is the

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operational plan or the how plan as

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to how everything's going to happen

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in the business.

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And I do think in the from a

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forecasting standpoint, I don't

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think it's exactly correct, because

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at the end of the day, the CFO is

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forecasting the future, right?

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It's in the model.

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But the question of how that

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forecast comes to be

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and making sure that it actually

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represents the reality of the

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business, not just kind of

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like from a number of perspective,

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but actually connected the dots

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between the different functions and

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groups and what's happening with the

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market and the customers and so on.

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All the assumptions that go into

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that model from a forecasting point

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of view. You know, I think the CEO

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is much better place to do that than

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the CFO in this case.

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And and this is why that tandem

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between the two of them can work

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quite well, to be honest, in terms

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of bringing together the lenses of

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the operational plan combined with

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the financial plan and then

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ultimately to a point, what needs to

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happen in the future is the how,

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which is how are we going to do

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that? And that sits with the CFO.

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So a related question on the

Speaker:

successor front, do you think this

Speaker:

also applies to your job in your

Speaker:

role in terms of hiring

Speaker:

a head of operations

Speaker:

or someone that reports into

Speaker:

that you hire and ultimately is your

Speaker:

successor?

Speaker:

It's interesting. Today's preamble

Speaker:

just ties to, like so many other

Speaker:

podcasts that we've done.

Speaker:

So this ties to our conversation

Speaker:

with Cassie on leadership

Speaker:

skills and

Speaker:

how to not get fired from your exact

Speaker:

job. And it's one of the skills

Speaker:

that you need to learn early on is

Speaker:

you have to always have a

Speaker:

successor, otherwise you can't get

Speaker:

promoted.

Speaker:

So even as

Speaker:

a manager of a team of six.

Speaker:

You better figure out who is

Speaker:

your successor so that

Speaker:

that person can take your job and

Speaker:

you can take your boss's job, and

Speaker:

you really want to be your boss's

Speaker:

successor. And you always need to be

Speaker:

thinking that way.

Speaker:

And that's both

Speaker:

functionally figuring it out, but

Speaker:

also more importantly, emotionally

Speaker:

figuring it out.

Speaker:

Because there's definitely a moment

Speaker:

of if that person could do my job,

Speaker:

then they can get rid of me.

Speaker:

And you need to switch your mindset

Speaker:

from, if that person could do my

Speaker:

job, they could get rid of me too.

Speaker:

They could do my job.

Speaker:

That means I could do the next job,

Speaker:

because a lot of people get stuck

Speaker:

not being able to be promoted

Speaker:

because they're indispensable in

Speaker:

their current role.

Speaker:

So this is a question to you,

Speaker:

because at the end of the day,

Speaker:

your natural succession is to

Speaker:

the CEO role.

Speaker:

So if that role is

Speaker:

not available and will never be

Speaker:

available, does that still apply?

Speaker:

I guess it depends on your own

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ambitions.

Speaker:

That brings us back to a different

Speaker:

conversation. That brings us back to

Speaker:

the Cameron Herald.

Speaker:

Discussion on

Speaker:

our CEOs, CEOs

Speaker:

and waiting, or a unique set of

Speaker:

skills that

Speaker:

you can progress your career by

Speaker:

being a CEO at

Speaker:

increasingly large companies, rather

Speaker:

than the next step being CEO.

Speaker:

So I think that's another thing is

Speaker:

to look at yourself.

Speaker:

What are your ambitions and what are

Speaker:

your skills?

Speaker:

Are you a CEO and waiting, or are

Speaker:

you a CEO for a massive organization

Speaker:

as your next step?

Speaker:

No, that's that's a good response, I

Speaker:

think. I do think this I in

Speaker:

my last two companies that I worked

Speaker:

for, I hired a head of operations

Speaker:

twice over.

Speaker:

And both of those individuals

Speaker:

are super, super, super talented.

Speaker:

And they were good

Speaker:

at things that I was less good

Speaker:

at, I would say. And for the most

Speaker:

part, they were coming from change,

Speaker:

transformation, backgrounds

Speaker:

that change transformation,

Speaker:

background and person.

Speaker:

I found invaluable to like, execute

Speaker:

programs that we needed to get done

Speaker:

where my mind was off on two

Speaker:

more macro issues for the company.

Speaker:

From a problem solving perspective,

Speaker:

I needed her on the ground

Speaker:

to kind of like do some of the

Speaker:

blocking and tackling for me at that

Speaker:

stage.

Speaker:

So the other thing that he'd spoken

Speaker:

about was being very intentional.

Speaker:

Before you join your next

Speaker:

organization. Intentional in the

Speaker:

sense of making sure that you get

Speaker:

some early wins on the board to give

Speaker:

others around you the confidence

Speaker:

in you, to give you more space,

Speaker:

to do what you have to do for the

Speaker:

business. Number two, building

Speaker:

relationships not just in the

Speaker:

standard sense, but also making sure

Speaker:

that you're rounding out yourself in

Speaker:

terms of your back channel, that

Speaker:

people that are more boots on the

Speaker:

ground, so to speak.

Speaker:

And this third element of just

Speaker:

fundamentally as you're entering the

Speaker:

company, what do you want to get out

Speaker:

of it outcome wise, and making

Speaker:

sure that's in the back of your head

Speaker:

at all times to ensure that you're

Speaker:

focused on the right things from a

Speaker:

priority perspective.

Speaker:

So that intentionality in those

Speaker:

three elements.

Speaker:

What do you make of that?

Speaker:

I think that is one of those moments

Speaker:

of it is what's made Eric

Speaker:

successful, and therefore he thinks

Speaker:

it will make everybody successful.

Speaker:

Where we can go back to luck and

Speaker:

timing.

Speaker:

So I have done none of

Speaker:

those things ever.

Speaker:

Like, I am much more

Speaker:

on the hunt for fun

Speaker:

and joy and what

Speaker:

feels right.

Speaker:

And then going into an organization,

Speaker:

not knowing what needs to get done,

Speaker:

and not having a sense

Speaker:

of this is my plan

Speaker:

before I go in.

Speaker:

And very much being open to

Speaker:

ideas, observing,

Speaker:

formulating my hypotheses

Speaker:

and then creating an action plan

Speaker:

after that.

Speaker:

But one of the first things that I

Speaker:

do, and I ask every single new

Speaker:

hire when they join the

Speaker:

company to do, is to

Speaker:

write on the very first piece of

Speaker:

paper in their notebook.

Speaker:

All of the

Speaker:

obvious things that should change

Speaker:

that. You're just like, shocked that

Speaker:

the business is doing.

Speaker:

In the first like 30 days or

Speaker:

something, or.

Speaker:

Probably even in the first week,

Speaker:

just all of your initial

Speaker:

observations of like, oh my

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God, there's no expense policy.

Speaker:

Oh my God, why do

Speaker:

we have 70 people meeting together

Speaker:

for 15 minutes every day?

Speaker:

Oh my God, why does

Speaker:

Salesforce not have

Speaker:

a lead object like just you know,

Speaker:

those? How can that be moments.

Speaker:

And write it down on your very first

Speaker:

page because

Speaker:

you'll get some of that done.

Speaker:

But very quickly you get sucked into

Speaker:

the organization and you become

Speaker:

blind to the obvious.

Speaker:

And if you can keep flipping back to

Speaker:

that first page and remind yourself

Speaker:

that these are things that

Speaker:

need to change and are

Speaker:

still obvious, it makes

Speaker:

a huge difference. So I do that, and

Speaker:

I ask every new new

Speaker:

hire to do that.

Speaker:

And then for like the first

Speaker:

six months of having chats with that

Speaker:

new hire, we flip back to that

Speaker:

page and see

Speaker:

what still needs to happen.

Speaker:

And actually, maybe there is a

Speaker:

reason why something that was an oh

Speaker:

my God moment is fine.

Speaker:

I think that's fantastic.

Speaker:

That makes tremendous sense because

Speaker:

I think you're exactly right.

Speaker:

Especially people with like, any

Speaker:

level of experience from other

Speaker:

companies that have seen other

Speaker:

things when they joined the company.

Speaker:

This should be like standard

Speaker:

practice, which is there is an

Speaker:

expectation at the end of the week

Speaker:

that you're going to create an OMG

Speaker:

list, something like that, and boom,

Speaker:

you're going to list out those

Speaker:

observations that didn't make sense

Speaker:

to you.

Speaker:

And so that's kind of counter to

Speaker:

Eric's is like, I have my plan

Speaker:

before I start.

Speaker:

Like I very much have a plan after I

Speaker:

start.

Speaker:

And then what I think I'm

Speaker:

going to get out of it.

Speaker:

This is hard for me because I can

Speaker:

definitely have like my fantasy I

Speaker:

like this is going to be the job

Speaker:

that does this and it's going to

Speaker:

enable that skill.

Speaker:

And this is amazing.

Speaker:

But I try not to hold on to my

Speaker:

fantasies because the world

Speaker:

unfolds in lots of ways, and I don't

Speaker:

want to be massively disappointed if

Speaker:

the fantasy doesn't turn into

Speaker:

reality.

Speaker:

So maybe I like look at it

Speaker:

loosely as this makes

Speaker:

sense for my career and as a piece

Speaker:

of the puzzle, but

Speaker:

also okay if it doesn't turn

Speaker:

out that way. But then at a certain

Speaker:

point it's like, okay,

Speaker:

I need to let go of this fantasy

Speaker:

and this job because it's not

Speaker:

serving me or

Speaker:

it's not what I imagined, but it's

Speaker:

really good.

Speaker:

But I've never had.

Speaker:

It's exactly how I've imagined.

Speaker:

That doesn't happen.

Speaker:

That is true. Do you think there's

Speaker:

like, a mix of both?

Speaker:

Like, I feel like I'm within myself.

Speaker:

I'm like, okay, so part of it for

Speaker:

sure is walk in.

Speaker:

And to your point, observing

Speaker:

and listening very deeply across

Speaker:

everyone in terms of why,

Speaker:

why are they doing what they're

Speaker:

doing? What does it look like, why

Speaker:

does it look like it does, and so

Speaker:

on. So there's that part of the on

Speaker:

the ground information across the

Speaker:

entire company.

Speaker:

The second part is with

Speaker:

our level of experience.

Speaker:

Walk into the company with all those

Speaker:

OMG moments of like, okay, what

Speaker:

is going on here? Why are they doing

Speaker:

this? Why are they doing that?

Speaker:

And then there's a third part of

Speaker:

information, which is the CEO

Speaker:

has expectations of you from the get

Speaker:

go in terms of what they want very

Speaker:

specifically, typically, and

Speaker:

being able to think through

Speaker:

those three parts of information

Speaker:

and ultimately at some stage

Speaker:

being able to share your

Speaker:

observations back and draw a

Speaker:

hypothesis back to the leadership

Speaker:

team and to the CEO saying, look,

Speaker:

based on what I've heard from you

Speaker:

and based on what I've heard from

Speaker:

the entire organization and based on

Speaker:

my background and experience, you

Speaker:

know, here's a set of hypotheses

Speaker:

that I want to push forward in terms

Speaker:

of what I think needs to get done

Speaker:

over the next 12, 18 months of the

Speaker:

parties that I think make the most

Speaker:

sense.

Speaker:

What do you think of that?

Speaker:

I agree, and like my first time

Speaker:

joining Peac as Chro,

Speaker:

I attended my first board meeting in

Speaker:

either week one or week two and

Speaker:

presented my plan for

Speaker:

the next year.

Speaker:

Wow. Within two weeks.

Speaker:

That's amazing.

Speaker:

Possibly one week.

Speaker:

It was really early on.

Speaker:

Yeah. But there were so many

Speaker:

OMG moments that like,

Speaker:

it was very clear what had to get

Speaker:

done. And then I did those

Speaker:

things and it helped.

Speaker:

But this might also just be the fact

Speaker:

that that we've talked about in the

Speaker:

past that my brain works very

Speaker:

quickly.

Speaker:

And so, yeah, just

Speaker:

my superpower of being able to see

Speaker:

it. So maybe that's why I'm also

Speaker:

relaxed doing it when once I'm in

Speaker:

rather than before.

Speaker:

All right, so why don't we park it

Speaker:

here and let's get on to our

Speaker:

conversation with Mr. Eric Collins.

Speaker:

What is the value of a CEO and a

Speaker:

skill a company from your

Speaker:

perspective? As a as a VC.

Speaker:

I believe that there

Speaker:

is a unique role

Speaker:

that the CEO plays in

Speaker:

a scaling organization, particularly

Speaker:

one which is venture backed,

Speaker:

and where a venture capitalist has

Speaker:

gone through the process of

Speaker:

diligence thing and choosing

Speaker:

that organization among many to

Speaker:

put money into and then will

Speaker:

be on a tenure journey

Speaker:

together.

Speaker:

The question of who is going to be

Speaker:

on the journey and who is going to

Speaker:

be the single source of truth

Speaker:

going forward.

Speaker:

You know, there's a data room which

Speaker:

starts things out, and that

Speaker:

is sort of the source of truth.

Speaker:

That's sort of a Bible that everyone

Speaker:

uses in order to say sort of what's

Speaker:

happened in the past, and what's

Speaker:

your expectation about what's going

Speaker:

to happen in the future.

Speaker:

Now we're into the future, that

Speaker:

future that have been predicted.

Speaker:

And I need to know as a venture

Speaker:

capitalist, what is going on

Speaker:

often? CEOs and

Speaker:

founders are individuals

Speaker:

who spend a lot of time spinning and

Speaker:

in an interesting and very

Speaker:

productive narrative.

Speaker:

And its CEOs who tell

Speaker:

me exactly what's happening along

Speaker:

with the CFO.

Speaker:

So that was my first question,

Speaker:

actually. Or as soon as you're

Speaker:

talking about your relationship with

Speaker:

the CEO and the CFO being

Speaker:

the single source of truth.

Speaker:

I was just like, well, what's the

Speaker:

cfo's job then?

Speaker:

Like, I always think the CFO is the

Speaker:

single source of truth.

Speaker:

And you all have probably

Speaker:

seen in terms of your

Speaker:

work.

Speaker:

And both of you as CEOs

Speaker:

is that there are a variety of CEOs,

Speaker:

right? There's some that are heavily

Speaker:

skewed toward the finance side.

Speaker:

There's some that are skewed toward

Speaker:

the sales side.

Speaker:

There's some that are skewed toward

Speaker:

the legal side and some that are

Speaker:

able to do the entire the full

Speaker:

breadth of activities that are

Speaker:

associated with the CFO, at least

Speaker:

a well-functioning CFO, on whom

Speaker:

you can build an organization that's

Speaker:

going to scale.

Speaker:

So I would say that I

Speaker:

do love the CFO

Speaker:

in terms of the individual who is

Speaker:

going to be able to report the

Speaker:

data.

Speaker:

And in a fast growth organization,

Speaker:

that data is coming in from all

Speaker:

sides, is coming often from

Speaker:

different territories.

Speaker:

We're often consolidating balance

Speaker:

sheets. And so I think of them as

Speaker:

certainly having that kind of a

Speaker:

view. And that view is

Speaker:

one that is backward looking.

Speaker:

A little bit of forecast oriented

Speaker:

but backward looking at sort of said

Speaker:

what just happened.

Speaker:

It is the CFO who then has

Speaker:

responsibility with that data

Speaker:

to say to me, here are the

Speaker:

ways in which, based

Speaker:

on where we are now and the future,

Speaker:

that we anticipate that we plan

Speaker:

to build on what we have,

Speaker:

correct what went wrong,

Speaker:

try and innovate our way to

Speaker:

something new, and the way that we

Speaker:

are sure that that can happen is

Speaker:

because of these next things.

Speaker:

And this is the plan.

Speaker:

So I think the CFO

Speaker:

is taking care of almost the

Speaker:

financial plan.

Speaker:

And I think of the CEO is taking

Speaker:

care of the operational plan,

Speaker:

and one is hygiene

Speaker:

and the other one is

Speaker:

growth for me.

Speaker:

And so that's what I want to hear.

Speaker:

But I don't want to spend so much

Speaker:

that that's a CEO role.

Speaker:

And of course these are all stereotypes.

Speaker:

And there's a wide range that goes

Speaker:

along with this.

Speaker:

But what I really love is I really

Speaker:

love an operating that goes

Speaker:

down to the idea

Speaker:

of, how are we going to actually

Speaker:

make all of this magic happen

Speaker:

with the ingredients we have?

Speaker:

What do we put in the cauldron?

Speaker:

Mix up the cauldron, and it actually

Speaker:

is going to deliver in a reasonable

Speaker:

way in a reasonable amount of time.

Speaker:

And I actually think that that's a

Speaker:

much more than what I have seen in

Speaker:

terms of my CFOs who

Speaker:

are extremely compliance,

Speaker:

regulatory, reporting oriented,

Speaker:

and CEOs utilize that

Speaker:

in leveraging, but they do something

Speaker:

a little bit different.

Speaker:

I find that really helpful because

Speaker:

I'm always struggling.

Speaker:

I'm an accidental CFO.

Speaker:

I still don't always know what it

Speaker:

is.

Speaker:

And every single CEO that you meet

Speaker:

is a little bit different.

Speaker:

And then I think that we do have

Speaker:

some identity crises.

Speaker:

And so often I think our CFO

Speaker:

is a real job.

Speaker:

A CEO maybe isn't.

Speaker:

So what's my value when we

Speaker:

get bigger and a CFO exists?

Speaker:

And so I really like your answer

Speaker:

because I think then I can go around

Speaker:

and say, no, what I am is I

Speaker:

focus on growth.

Speaker:

You look at the rearview mirror and

Speaker:

you make sure we have enough money.

Speaker:

But then my plan is to figure out

Speaker:

how to most effectively land that

Speaker:

money and keep the CEO

Speaker:

from, I was going to say, go into

Speaker:

jail, but maybe I shouldn't say

Speaker:

that, but it keeps the CEO

Speaker:

on the right side of reality.

Speaker:

One of the things that I would say

Speaker:

about the CFO role is,

Speaker:

I think a podcast like this is

Speaker:

very important, not for necessarily

Speaker:

just the CFO, but also

Speaker:

the CEO, and then the founders

Speaker:

and the board of organizations

Speaker:

to try and delineate when

Speaker:

and what is necessary in

Speaker:

their stage of growth and scaling.

Speaker:

Because I often believe that

Speaker:

probably what you fat one hypothesis

Speaker:

not I often believe, but one

Speaker:

hypothesis is that in fact,

Speaker:

what we're finding is these

Speaker:

descriptions that are given to you

Speaker:

when you first come in.

Speaker:

People think, I want to see,

Speaker:

oh, because, you know, other

Speaker:

organizations have a SEO.

Speaker:

But what I really want is a chief of

Speaker:

staff. I want a SEO,

Speaker:

but really, I want a CFO.

Speaker:

I want SEO, but really, I want

Speaker:

someone who's going to be a CRO.

Speaker:

And so the question of what is the

Speaker:

expectation?

Speaker:

And quite frankly, I often think

Speaker:

of my SEO as a successor to

Speaker:

me. It's either the CFO, the CFO

Speaker:

or someone else and that person

Speaker:

being able to be my surrogate.

Speaker:

If I'm a founder and a CEO.

Speaker:

I want that person to have that

Speaker:

kind of skill. So they need not

Speaker:

enter being able to do all those

Speaker:

sorts of things, but they need to

Speaker:

actually be able to eventually own

Speaker:

most of that.

Speaker:

And I think that that is when you

Speaker:

get real magic

Speaker:

and that you get not just magic, but

Speaker:

you also get the science.

Speaker:

So the Ministry of Science, Ministry

Speaker:

of Magic, it's both of those two

Speaker:

ministries if we borrow from Harry

Speaker:

Potter. And then I'd like to see

Speaker:

more and more organizations

Speaker:

really contend and really wrestle

Speaker:

with, we think we should hire

Speaker:

someone, because our CEO

Speaker:

is not necessarily growing

Speaker:

in lockstep with what the future

Speaker:

needs of the organization or will

Speaker:

bring in a seasoned operator.

Speaker:

And what do we really want that

Speaker:

seasoned operator to do today?

Speaker:

But do we want to grow that seasoned

Speaker:

operator into the individual who is

Speaker:

going to be able to take us once we

Speaker:

have gotten past the capabilities of

Speaker:

some founder group to the next

Speaker:

level? That's the kind of

Speaker:

conversation that I love to

Speaker:

hear. And I like to think through

Speaker:

with our founders

Speaker:

and CEOs who are saying that

Speaker:

we want to expand our

Speaker:

mature bench.

Speaker:

And that's often when you're talking

Speaker:

about CEOs.

Speaker:

So I think that there are a lot of

Speaker:

skills a CEO has that

Speaker:

can be transferable into a CEO

Speaker:

or keeping a business

Speaker:

organized, connected

Speaker:

on message, moving in the right

Speaker:

direction.

Speaker:

But there's something special about

Speaker:

a founder, CEO and that vision

Speaker:

and that belief and the ability

Speaker:

to run through walls

Speaker:

and no matter what anybody tells

Speaker:

them, they know they're right.

Speaker:

Often you see that they'll leave and

Speaker:

you have a successful replacement,

Speaker:

but then you also have those

Speaker:

examples where the CEO leaves

Speaker:

and the business just won't.

Speaker:

The founder CEO leaves, the business

Speaker:

just fails.

Speaker:

Apple is one.

Speaker:

Salesforce is another.

Speaker:

As an investor, how do

Speaker:

you know or why are you willing

Speaker:

to take that risk?

Speaker:

And does it pay off or is it always

Speaker:

ends up being the wrong decision?

Speaker:

Just to be clear, we're in fact X

Speaker:

Capital Partners. We invest

Speaker:

at the series a

Speaker:

seed extension and a little bit of

Speaker:

seed so we don't do pre-seed.

Speaker:

By the time we come in

Speaker:

organizations, the youngest

Speaker:

organization we have is probably

Speaker:

three years old,

Speaker:

which means they've gone through a

Speaker:

number of business activities

Speaker:

and cycles.

Speaker:

Gotten over the notion, sort of

Speaker:

moving the organization along.

Speaker:

And we're really looking for about a

Speaker:

million in revenue the

Speaker:

previous year, revenue not forward

Speaker:

looking revenue, but the previous

Speaker:

year revenue.

Speaker:

And so because of that, you have

Speaker:

people who have really put in a lot

Speaker:

of blood, sweat and tears.

Speaker:

Those people who never heard the

Speaker:

word no and can't.

Speaker:

These are the sort of people who

Speaker:

who've moved the organization to

Speaker:

that particular point.

Speaker:

At some point, I actually

Speaker:

see a kind of exhaustion,

Speaker:

but I also tend to see,

Speaker:

because those people have had to

Speaker:

focus really on the

Speaker:

care and watering of an infant.

Speaker:

That those people are extremely

Speaker:

good at the birthing process

Speaker:

and the nurturing process early on,

Speaker:

and to get the community a village

Speaker:

to help raise that child, that's

Speaker:

what they're very, very good at.

Speaker:

As the child gets to the

Speaker:

point that they have, they're

Speaker:

deciding on sort of what their own

Speaker:

interests are and which is,

Speaker:

say, a scaling opportunity.

Speaker:

Should we actually diversify

Speaker:

product? Should we diversify our

Speaker:

geographies? What should we be

Speaker:

doing? That's when I

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think you often see organizations

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and founders and founding

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teams struggling to make those

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sorts of decisions.

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How do you get money?

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Is one kind of a decision in

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persuading people to give you money

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for whatever the vision is you have.

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But how do you actually get that to

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grow?

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And most organizations will pivot,

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pivot, pivot, pivot.

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So they find problem problem,

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problem.

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And even as they seek to scale,

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even as they seek to move forward,

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they're not going to it's not going

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to be a linear progression up

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into the right. They're going to

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have to sort of retrench.

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You're going to have to rethink.

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They're going to actually especially

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in the market we see today, this

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market fundraising takes much longer

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than it did the standards by which

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you are given credit for milestones

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and therefore, given a valuation

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commensurate with what you as your

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aspirations are much, much

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different. If you are exhausted

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from the first part of those three

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years that you've had, if you don't

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actually have a vision for how to do

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the next part.

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If around the table you are not

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being nurtured and sort of developed

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by the venture capitalists and other

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and your advisors, then

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that's a situation where

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you will need to think about

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succession.

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Any of those things could be a

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rationale and a trigger for us

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to say we might

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need to think about succession.

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And do we have within the

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organization the right sort of

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person? That's what are people.

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And that's why I think it's so

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important to have the right CEO

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and the right type of CEO who has

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the right mandate and understands

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the purpose for which they're there.

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And if it is to be succession

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oriented, then it's very important

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that they understand it for

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business, but that they also that's

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the technical side.

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But they also become impassioned

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about a vision.

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And they take ownership of a vision,

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which is what you're saying exist

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and why founders are so seductive.

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Because they are passionate about

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something.

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You know, we people come in second.

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It's like, well, it's a nice baby.

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It's not a cute baby.

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And I think we should change some

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things about the baby.

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And so that then is an

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entirely different sort of an

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approach to this thing that we're

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then being put in charge of and

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over which we have stewardship as

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CEOs progressing into

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CEO roles.

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Sometimes when I look at some of the

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founders that I've worked with,

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they've had, inordinate amount

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of passion and, and

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I guess the question at hand

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for individuals that are in that

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see a role that have that broad

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scope that you talked about, are

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they in a position where they can

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tap into that at a level that

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is necessary, passion wise,

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to be able to take it to its next

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phase, I guess, is kind of the

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question.

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Both of you have been CEOs,

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but when you're sitting in that CEO

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role, you have got a lot

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of blocking and tackling that you

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have to do every day.

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The opportunity for you to become

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impassioned about the business

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and for you to then sort of

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because you're a problem solver

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also, and to see all potential

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and not a bunch of problems behind,

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because you're responsible for

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solving the problems and making sure

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that those problems don't become

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poison and that those poisons

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don't kill the organism.

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That is, it's hard to

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I think both do that and then

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to look toward the future and

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very frequently what we are asked

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to do as CEOs and organization

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to get now not a CEO.

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And I haven't been there for a

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number of years, almost a decade

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now. But what we've been

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asked to do is we've been asked to

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supplement what other people don't

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do. Well, quite often that's a

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mandate.

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This is your brief.

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The CEO does this great, the CFO

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does this great.

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There's all this stuff in between

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that doesn't happen. Well do it.

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And so you do it.

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Solve the problem.

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Solve the communication issues, the

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relationship issues. Because they're

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always going to be all of those.

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And the market issues that

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we have in terms of our customers,

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some are upset, you know, things

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haven't necessarily gone because we

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have a paid pilot didn't really

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work. You would solve all of that

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and at the same time get ready to

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take it all over.

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So that is a hard thing to do.

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I think probably both of you are

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highly skilled at doing that.

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You don't get credit for it,

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though, in terms of

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is this part of what

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makes you an effective

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successor?

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That is your hygiene.

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You don't get credit for hygiene.

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It's just like showing up.

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You don't get credit for.

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Something extraordinary has to

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happen from those sorts of things.

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On top of that, what do you do?

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And possibly from there you're

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actually creating then a passion

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for this next thing.

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You've. You've cleaned up.

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You've invested a lot.

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You have. Energy has been expanded.

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So now I'm really interested in what

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can happen next. So that's where the

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passion will come from. It might not

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be that original vision.

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You might not be the evangelist that

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those but those people are

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those original founders aren't CEOs.

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But what you probably will be

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is that you will be a not

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only a very good steward, but you

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will be evangelists for the new

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reality.

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And then that's going to be what

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you're going to be selling, and

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that's going to be what you're going

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to be managing. I think that's what

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best CEOs who then transition

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in to CEO roles.

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And also backfilling themselves,

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actually, you have to be able

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to free yourself up to do a new

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role.

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And so you need to backfill

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yourself.

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And so again you need to have

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your successor.

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Have you ever hired to call yourself

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Bethany or have you brand and have

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you ever hired to.

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Well.

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I've hired, the head of operations

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twice that of both

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became VP of ops as their second

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steps.

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I don't know that I've hired many,

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but I actually think about

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Brandon as being a

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CEO for

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the organization that we ran.

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So when we were at

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SwiftKey, SwiftKey had a consumer

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portion of the organization and also

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had an enterprise portion of the

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organization within the enterprise

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organization. I felt though that was

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my organization. I got to run it the

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way I thought I wanted to.

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And now that we have shared

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resources like engineering or sales,

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engineering or other things that we

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actually control and marketing,

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etc.. And then Brandon

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was an individual who had been on

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the product side and eventually took

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over the entire organization in

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terms of the operations of it, in

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terms of forecasting, in terms of

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pipeline management, in terms of

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sales strategy.

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All of that became his.

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And so, Brandon, I think of myself

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as actually having hired you for

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that role of CFO.

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And I found it interesting and and

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quite frankly, since then, in

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our overlaps in the world of

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venture backed businesses in London,

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and you have been CFO in two

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companies I know very well

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that has been a recommendation

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Commendation of you into those

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organizations in that role.

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And so. Although not

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necessarily hiring

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you in those sorts of spaces, I do

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believe that. But, you know, you

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show the attributes of my intention

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has always been for you to take over

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those organizations.

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That's my intention.

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So it's been it's interesting to

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try and find someone with

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the certain basket

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of skills, basket of proclivities,

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but is also a person

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who has an ambition

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and both the passion as well as

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technical skills, because I like

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that combination.

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I was just looking at your book.

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We don't need permission.

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And it's this kind of quote around

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small thinking and

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having, more imagination

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around your career and the impact

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that you can make.

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And the question that was occurring

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to me is quite similar to this

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conversation, which is, you know,

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sometimes as CEO, you're caught up

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in the, the, the blocking and

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tackling the hard stuff.

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And this thought around

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thinking more more about

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yourself, more about your career,

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more about what's possible within

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Brandon in terms of being able to

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reach into that passion pot, or

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to have a stronger vision of the

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future and to be able to express

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that. I'm just running from a

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mindset standpoint.

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Is there anything that you could

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talk about from,

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tips point of view, I guess for

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other CEOs in terms of how to

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galvanize that mindset that

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there is something bigger and better

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out there for me that I need

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to really consider.

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Think about creative imagination

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around and really be able to, you

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know, express both to myself

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but also to others.

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It is really intended to say

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that there are ways

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in which our complete mindset

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keeps us on a particular kind of a

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path, and if we don't work

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on that in a business context in

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particular, we will end up sort of

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repeating mistakes of the past.

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That's really what it is and how you

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as an individual or how you as an

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organization can actually

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battle this.

Speaker:

I would say if I go all the way back

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to my law school experience, and it

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goes to a little bit of what Bethany

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said and what you've just asked.

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One of the things that's very clear

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is you are not going to wander your

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way and wind your way

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through to an outcome.

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Some people are very lucky and can

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sort of get there, but most people

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have to do some planning

Speaker:

and that planning is absolutely

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imperative.

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When I think about the CEO,

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most CEOs are coming from another

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role. There's a period during which

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is some sort of garden leave, or

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some time at least when they're

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ramping down what they're doing and

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then they're going into another

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organization.

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And my point is, if you do, just

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one thing is to think about

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how you're planning that time.

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Go on vacation, spend

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some money that you've made in this

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in a in a transaction.

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Oh that's fantastic.

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But I think you also need to be

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planning your

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journey in the next organization.

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What are you going to be doing?

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And I think in three categories.

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One is substantively, what are you

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going to be doing early on to get

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some wins on the board, which is

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going to give you a lot of breathing

Speaker:

space to do some other sorts of

Speaker:

things.

Speaker:

Lots of analysis and that sort of

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thing I think is good.

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But to get some wins on the board

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and how are you going to get those

Speaker:

wins measurable? Think about that in

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advance.

Speaker:

The other thing is going to be sort

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of your communication relationship

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building with the key stakeholders

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within the organization.

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How are you going to do that?

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What is that going to look like and

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what are you going to proactively

Speaker:

do. And it's not going to be just

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I'm going to put in a series of

Speaker:

weekly check ins.

Speaker:

It's like, what am I actually going

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to do to build relationships,

Speaker:

backchannel communications and other

Speaker:

things which are necessary for the

Speaker:

sophisticated and high functioning

Speaker:

CEOs to get where they need to be.

Speaker:

And then the third thing is, and

Speaker:

what do I really want to get out of

Speaker:

this, the narrative at the end of

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this role, because there will be an

Speaker:

end of the role one way or another.

Speaker:

You are aware of the role.

Speaker:

The rollout grows you, the company

Speaker:

gets exited in some sort of a

Speaker:

fashion, you die, but it's

Speaker:

going to end right.

Speaker:

Let's not hope for the last one.

Speaker:

But in terms of that,

Speaker:

what do you actually what is your

Speaker:

goal? What is the outcome.

Speaker:

And that's what I get. Go all the

Speaker:

way back to law school. Math

Speaker:

professor. My name Roger Fisher.

Speaker:

The most people go into

Speaker:

conversations and activities without

Speaker:

having thinking about how they would

Speaker:

define success in some future

Speaker:

state, and success would look like

Speaker:

it does have to be a long and broad

Speaker:

list. It doesn't have to be very

Speaker:

specific, but it needs to be

Speaker:

that success could be measured by

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these types of things.

Speaker:

And if one of those is to actually

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transition and get into the

Speaker:

CEO role is one is to be able

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to, you know, get a reputation

Speaker:

that's associated with this

Speaker:

experience that I've just had at

Speaker:

this organization that is then going

Speaker:

to lead to bigger things.

Speaker:

So I'm I'm used to being in series B

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companies. I want to be in series C

Speaker:

companies are to IPO

Speaker:

all of that. Is that a plan?

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And I would be doing that in the

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time I'd be using to do it is before

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I actually arrive and not just

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planning, you know, sort of my

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commute, which is obviously

Speaker:

important, but I would be planning

Speaker:

how it is that those three

Speaker:

things are going to happen.

Speaker:

A practical question in a board

Speaker:

meeting for the kind of CEO

Speaker:

that we're talking about, what do

Speaker:

you want to see from that person

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in that meeting?

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So I think we'll go back

Speaker:

all the way to the beginning of this

Speaker:

conversation.

Speaker:

My c o o is

Speaker:

the single source

Speaker:

of truth.

Speaker:

So in the board meeting from the

Speaker:

CFO, who is normally

Speaker:

the person, at least when I've been

Speaker:

a CFO, I have always controlled the

Speaker:

agenda.

Speaker:

So I get to decide what we're going

Speaker:

to talk about. There are certain

Speaker:

things that have to happen.

Speaker:

Every meeting.

Speaker:

Right. We need to talk about sort of

Speaker:

how we're doing with respect to our

Speaker:

revenue forecast over the last

Speaker:

quarter or in a relatively

Speaker:

early organization the last month.

Speaker:

How is all that going?

Speaker:

What does your forecast look like,

Speaker:

how things change?

Speaker:

How are things shaping up?

Speaker:

Are there key employees coming out

Speaker:

or coming in?

Speaker:

Those sorts of things.

Speaker:

Beyond that, I want to make

Speaker:

sure that I'm then leveraging

Speaker:

the expertise around the table

Speaker:

for something more than just

Speaker:

reporting.

Speaker:

They've read the memo ahead of time,

Speaker:

they've read the presentation,

Speaker:

they've gotten all of the reporting

Speaker:

that they need. And what I need you

Speaker:

to do is focus on the following.

Speaker:

And generally a very good

Speaker:

and I think an excellent CFO

Speaker:

is not really playing defense that

Speaker:

much, sort of trying to make sure

Speaker:

that they've answered all the

Speaker:

questions that might possibly come

Speaker:

up and being so prepared for that.

Speaker:

It is putting in front of the

Speaker:

board the kinds of questions

Speaker:

that are imperative for the

Speaker:

organization to answer

Speaker:

in order to be successful, and

Speaker:

then to make demands

Speaker:

of that group.

Speaker:

And that demand is like this kind of

Speaker:

an introduction.

Speaker:

I'd like this sort of an indication

Speaker:

or sort of an internal conversation

Speaker:

with your team trying to activate

Speaker:

them almost as if they were your

Speaker:

own resources and your own

Speaker:

employees.

Speaker:

That's an excellent CEO,

Speaker:

and I think most CEOs go in really

Speaker:

defensively, so they go in with

Speaker:

their sense of the Australian Open

Speaker:

just ended up a little obsessed with

Speaker:

tennis at the moment.

Speaker:

So but they're great defensive

Speaker:

players. They can hit everything

Speaker:

back and everything back.

Speaker:

You need to also be able to attack

Speaker:

your job.

Speaker:

In my opinion, along with the CFO,

Speaker:

long CFO, is to make sure that

Speaker:

all of your hygiene is taken care of

Speaker:

so that that's not in question and

Speaker:

that you're putting the critical

Speaker:

questions in front of the group, and

Speaker:

you continue to put those critical

Speaker:

questions in front of the group in a

Speaker:

timely and interesting fashion.

Speaker:

So it's interesting to have the CEOs

Speaker:

setting the agenda

Speaker:

rather than the chair.

Speaker:

Well, I guess the chair circulates

Speaker:

it for the CEOs working closely

Speaker:

with the chair to align the agenda.

Speaker:

That does sound familiar.

Speaker:

Tell me about the chairs.

Speaker:

Well, you don't have to name them

Speaker:

specifically because they probably

Speaker:

watch. You know who we're talking

Speaker:

about. But you know, these are

Speaker:

non-executive chairs, right?

Speaker:

Who are coming in.

Speaker:

They sort of float in. They float

Speaker:

out. And in the UK, all the chairs

Speaker:

are sold.

Speaker:

I mean, it's like you're from a

Speaker:

different generation.

Speaker:

They're not digital natives.

Speaker:

They're generally not individuals

Speaker:

who have spent much time scaling

Speaker:

companies and then trying to

Speaker:

trying to go for worldwide

Speaker:

dominance.

Speaker:

And so you're sort of sitting here

Speaker:

saying that person is actually

Speaker:

setting the agenda for exit,

Speaker:

because ultimately this what we're

Speaker:

looking for, right? We're looking

Speaker:

for sensational growth and then a

Speaker:

fabulous exit.

Speaker:

And so I sometimes

Speaker:

think with my chairs that

Speaker:

I have to direct

Speaker:

them for what I'm looking

Speaker:

for. That goal that I set in my

Speaker:

garden leave period is that

Speaker:

I want to exit at some point.

Speaker:

I don't want this organization just

Speaker:

to operate forever.

Speaker:

Now, I might want to go public

Speaker:

and then continue to operate in it,

Speaker:

but I'd really like to exit.

Speaker:

And so in order to do that, we got

Speaker:

to meet these milestone and metrics.

Speaker:

And I'm the one who's driving.

Speaker:

I got your money already.

Speaker:

And you as the chair, are being

Speaker:

asked to be a governance overlay

Speaker:

on top of everything.

Speaker:

But it's me who's the operating

Speaker:

person. It's me who sees on day to

Speaker:

day basis. It's me who is asking

Speaker:

questions of what I need.

Speaker:

It's not you who gets to say, this

Speaker:

is Eric, okay?

Speaker:

And let me let me give a big caveat

Speaker:

because and Brandon, I'm sure

Speaker:

afterward we'll sort of have to sort

Speaker:

of apologize for everything that I

Speaker:

say. But my thing

Speaker:

is, I don't want to be on the bus

Speaker:

that someone is driving who's not

Speaker:

invested in the business.

Speaker:

And when I say invest in the

Speaker:

business, not financially, invest in

Speaker:

business on a day to day basis.

Speaker:

I've got other things.

Speaker:

I've got a portfolio.

Speaker:

I got one thing, I got one kid,

Speaker:

they got many kids.

Speaker:

And so I need to make sure that my

Speaker:

kid gets what it needs.

Speaker:

And it's a negotiation.

Speaker:

I say it as if I can impose,

Speaker:

but it is a negotiation.

Speaker:

And I do think it is very much

Speaker:

up to us.

Speaker:

Bethany.

Speaker:

And you tell me if you disagree,

Speaker:

because you can absolutely disagree

Speaker:

with this. But if it is up to us

Speaker:

to say that this is what I need from

Speaker:

you, it's just like in a

Speaker:

relationship, right?

Speaker:

I need this from you.

Speaker:

We're married, but I need this from

Speaker:

you.

Speaker:

Yeah, and I think that works as long

Speaker:

as the business is performing

Speaker:

and there's trust in the

Speaker:

organization.

Speaker:

It becomes a very different

Speaker:

relationship. If you're not

Speaker:

performing or you're not showing up.

Speaker:

If you lose the trust of the board,

Speaker:

then you're going to have a

Speaker:

completely different conversation,

Speaker:

and the board will be telling you

Speaker:

what the agenda items are and

Speaker:

over scrutinizing.

Speaker:

Well, I think what happens in those

Speaker:

situations is, quite frankly, their

Speaker:

conversations. That's happened to me

Speaker:

before. It's always been the most

Speaker:

successful call that the board

Speaker:

will have conversations about you,

Speaker:

and those conversations will be

Speaker:

about what to do, because you are

Speaker:

now part of the problem.

Speaker:

So I'm assuming, though,

Speaker:

and based on sort of my experience

Speaker:

with Brandon, having watched the

Speaker:

progress of his organizations and

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with you, and knowing your

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reputation that you have been

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successful in doing these sorts of

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things and the reason you've been

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successful is you have watched the

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hygiene and you've made sure that

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that's primary, but that you're

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looking toward the future.

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And that future focus is where I

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think you should be having your

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board spend time.

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When I've had the most successful

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boards, that is what they have been,

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and they have been our best

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advocates. They become evangelists

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and they become excited about what

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we're doing also.

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And that's part of that relationship

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building communication.

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I am also on a few boards,

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like my experiences are not

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necessarily as the

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CIO or I have seen these

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moments of losing trust in

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leaders or in the

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ability of the business to execute,

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because companies can grow very

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quickly and the company can

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outgrow a person within

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months.

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It can be quite shocking at times if

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things are going well.

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Isn't that a great problem?

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And hopefully I would love

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to be the kind of person who could

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say, you know what?

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I was here for the part

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that made sense for me to do, and

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I'm part of why things went so well

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and it's time for me to exit.

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Generally, I'm not that kind of

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person. Generally, I'm not looking

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to see if I'm the right person, and

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generally someone else has to help

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me to see that I'm not the right

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person anymore.

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So, Eric, it's been

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a lovely, fascinating

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conversation. We've covered

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quite a few SEO type

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lessons.

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So if our listeners can only

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take away one thing

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from this episode with you,

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what should they remember?

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For your listeners

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who are aspiring to be SEOs,

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our current SEOs, I

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would say the one piece

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of advice that I would give

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is that you are

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the single source

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of truth for the organization,

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and that you should actually,

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with venture capitalists or your

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other funders, be it a bank, be the

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debt provider, whomever it is

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that you want to be able to

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manage that relationship.

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And that one is one that you want to

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have built on trust and confidence.

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So think of yourself as a single

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source of truth. That is not some

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things from the CFO, some things

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from the CEO, but were combined

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into a single sort of

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page or songbook.

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And we're all singing from that same

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songbook to the external world.

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I think that's the most important

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thing, and that your role

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is as much a role can

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really talk about this.

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Your role is as much a role of the

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alignment of a variety of

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stakeholders as it is

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a problem solver

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or purveyor of

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solutions for

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nitty gritty stuff.

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So on that hymnbook note, we

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will close this conversation.

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So thank you, Eric Collins, for

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joining us on the operations Room.

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If you like what you hear, please

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subscribe or leave us a comment and

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we will see you next week.

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