Adolescent growth plateau
Eight personal tips for avoiding the adolescent growth plateau
Many many businesses fail to get beyond small – however you define small. They plateau or even fail rather than keep growing. So why is that?
Having done some research (actually some googling) I haven’t found a massive amount on the leadership behaviours that make the difference. Having spent my own business leadership career turning around plateauing (or declining) post-start-up, pre-corporate businesses and over the last twelve years, guiding over 200 business leaders through business growth pains, I thought I’d put my own non-academic and pragmatic mind to work.
These are my own thoughts on what I see as the differences between the small businesses that successfully grow through adolescence and those that stumble in some way. I don’t apologise for focusing on the leadership behaviours that seem to me to distinguish between the adolescent businesses that will continue to grow into adulthood and those that will plateau. I think at this stage of development, successful and sustained growth is more about the calibre of the leadership than about the great idea or the level of backing. I see great ideas with potential fail as an adolescent business and I see many well-funded start-ups fail too. The difference that makes the difference is in my view the leader and the way they behave.
In this article I summarise for those leading an adolescent business, some of my thoughts on what leadership behaviours get an business through that critical adolescent phase. I use the format of eight key tips nervously as I don’t like formulaic solutions. Please note then that all my comments interact and so my division is an arbitrary simplification for the purpose of communication.
Recruit the right people
Growth businesses need managers who are capable drivers of business success in their own right. It is tempting to recruit people who are less capable than yourself so you can stay a directive top dog. Long term success requires you to recruit more expensive people that are better than you and who challenge you constructively to bring the best out of you. Give them clear objectives and reasonable autonomy to make mistakes and learn whilst being open and accountable.