Being a founder and being a CEO aren’t the same thing. While there’s no prescribed time or trigger for a founder to transition to CEO, you inevitably reach a point where you go from working in the business to working on the business.
Whether you embraced the title of CEO from day one or you’re figuring out if it’s the right fit for you now, there’s a lot to be learned from founders who have been down this path before you.
With three companies of his own – Employment Innovations, KeyPay and Employment Hero – under his belt, Ben Thompson is one of those people. Ben’s ability to consistently reinforce his vision and lead from a place of authenticity is what many founders aspire to, and we’re lucky to have him share his principles and practical how-to's for evolving yourself as a CEO.
From writing a master plan to embracing a healthy level of paranoia, Ben boils down his experiences into 4 key things that have become force multipliers of his success:
Ben wrote a business master plan around the time of Employment Hero’s Series A. This 2-page document based on first principles has served as an instruction manual for all employees and a blueprint for Employment Hero’s future.
“To sell your vision succinctly, you need to write down a master plan that anyone can read and quickly understand what the business will look like in 10 years,” says Ben.
In the early days of Employment Innovations, Ben attended a Rockefeller Habits workshop with Verne Harnish focused on instilling principles of how to run a business.
One of these principles was establishing a quarterly theme. “We run this quarterly cadence without fail, and it’s been key to our ability to scale the business, pivot quickly and stay agile,” says Ben.
Every day is a race to consume as much knowledge as possible for Ben, from podcasts to YouTube – to trying to read or listen to a book a week.
“Every week begins with paranoia and ends with a celebration,” says Ben. “I start Monday as though I’ve got a huge mountain to climb and everything’s on the line. I hope by five o’clock on Friday I feel as though I’ve done the very best I possibly could have within the week.”
Throughout his career, Ben has built his network and sought out forums where he’s found confidants, friends and a support system.
“Seeking out the perspectives of people who are far smarter and more successful than I ever will be, has categorically been one of the most important things I’ve ever done,” says Ben.
• Commit to a quarterly strategy
• Define a single success metric for the quarter
• No Milkshakes!
• Create a quarterly theme
The first couple of years of getting Employment Hero off the ground were a blur for Ben as he was still the CEO of his two other companies. Over time, he made the transition from “doer-in-chief” to “company-builder-in-chief”. The one constant throughout was that he always owned the quarterly review process.
“Every quarter, we ask ourselves the golden question of ‘What can we achieve in the next 90 days that will take us as far as possible from where we are today, towards our big, hairy, audacious goal?’” says Ben.
The process involves the leadership team coming together for a couple of days to discuss their answers to the golden question, backed with data. The answer is usually an existential threat to the business or a massive opportunity. Then, you should find one key metric that represents success or failure.
Before you take a step further, assess whether the one big thing for the quarter is a “milkshake”.
“A milkshake is a term we came up with, which is what happens when you blend many things into the one big thing to keep everybody happy,” explains Ben. “About 3 weeks into the quarter, you realise this isn’t one big thing, it’s 3 or 4 things, and there’s no way you can do them all. You have to be vigilant that you don’t create a milkshake and launch that at the start of the quarter.”
If you’re confident you’re not serving up a milkshake that quarter, move on to turning that one big thing into an engaging thematic that keeps your team laser-focused on achieving it every day.
Take Survivor Island as an example of a quarterly theme. After realising the company had become siloed and almost tribe-like, Ben and the leadership team decided to focus the quarter on breaking down those silos and encouraging collaboration. Teams wore bandanas, and by the end of the quarter, after coming together and launching and delivering new projects, they all threw their bandanas in a bucket, and started wearing the same one.
Tactics to keep the theme top of mind throughout the quarter include:
• There are areas a CEO can't delegate – go deep on those
• You can enable success through your team in other areas – go wide on those
Having some discipline about what you spend your time on starts with knowing what you don’t know and what you’re good at, and then building a team to fill those knowledge gaps and to delegate tasks to.
Delegation is a superpower that takes a lot of practice, and it’s not always easy for a founder to relinquish control. For Ben, it’s all about reminding himself of what he is uniquely positioned to do as the CEO and going deep on those tasks. The rest he goes wide on. Here’s what that looks like:
• Stage 1: trust yourself and commit to building something
• Stage 2: SaaS is expensive; there's no going back
• Stage 3: Obsess over your metrics
• Stage 4: Scale with experts
• Stage 5: Bringing four pillars into one platform
To achieve your company’s business goals and milestones, you need to be ready to switch gears at any time as you grow. In hindsight, Ben can see 5 distinct gear changes in his journey, each with their own lesson.
After reading Clayton Christensen’s book The Innovator’s Dilemma and Marc Andreessen’s article Why Software is Eating the World, Ben was convinced he needed to create a digital platform.
Stage 1 involved taking a team out of Employment Innovations and committing all of the working capital from there and Power2Motivate, to building Employment Hero. In the first three years of the business, Ben was the CEO of all three companies, which he says is not advisable in hindsight!
Juggling multiple businesses meant Ben was burning time, energy and money. Something had to give.
“As we started to find product-market fit, I was investing every dollar into Employment Hero, but that wasn’t enough to get the business to breakeven. We needed a lot of cash to grow as fast as possible,” says Ben.
After realising the options were either go bust or raise capital, Ben had a “burn the boats” moment before raising the Series A, which involved appointing CEOs to his other businesses and committing 110% of his time exclusively to Employment Hero.
As Employment Hero emerged as its own distinct business, it was all about achieving Escape Velocity, a term Ben borrows from the book of the same name on “overcoming the pull of the past and reorienting the organisation to meet the new era of competition”.
During this stage, the priority was scaling Employment Hero as a SaaS business, which meant a hardcore focus on metrics.
“John Henderson [Partner at AirTree] was obsessed with our metrics – breaking them up, looking at them in different ways. It felt like a fair bit of hand-wringing, but it was an important lesson because once we got our core unit economics and capital efficiency right, we knew that we could grow the business and raise capital,” says Ben.
With their unit economics down pat, Employment Hero began scaling quickly, but the leadership team weren’t scaling themselves at the same pace.
“Every 6 weeks, someone would come to me and say, ‘We’ve got a big problem. We can’t solve it. Everyone’s too busy,’” says Ben. “If you’re going to double or triple your growth every year, you need to be planning well ahead to get out of your own way.”
While generalists were integral to building Employment Hero, it needed experts to bring it to full scale in key roles that none of the existing team knew how to do well.
8 years on, and Employment Hero is now a unicorn with its first-ever acquisition – KeyPay – locked in. Now, driving the overall company strategy and narrative is Ben's most important work.
“My role is to make sure our strategy is sound and keep everyone focused on our narrative. We’ve got 4 pillars to the business, and we’re bringing them all together in the platform. When we achieve that, which we are, we’re in a strong position,” says Ben.
• Invert your org chart
• Over-communicate
• Give recognition
• Make sure you're having fun!
There are seemingly endless demands on your time as a founder-CEO. It’s all about finding ways to maintain visibility, accessibility and accountability between you and your team, so you can stay connected and focus on your time on what matters.
One of the key pieces of advice Ben has, is to invert your org chart so that the people who service your customers are the ones that get all of your support.
“As soon as I saw that [inverted org chart], it made complete sense. The CEO is typically furthest away from the customer, so it’s my job to serve the people at the top in sales and support roles, as they’re the most important people in the business,” says Ben.
Ben believes the only time you’ve communicated your strategy, values and principles enough is when somebody says to you, “Can you please shut up?”. Let people know what’s coming, so they can figure out how to prepare for it.
“I spend more time talking about what we’re going to look like in 3 years from now than I do about what’s happening tomorrow,” says Ben.
The job of the CEO is to be a cheerleader, and Ben believes you can never provide enough recognition.
“We’re just big kids. We love the gold stars, celebrations and rewards. Just because we left primary school 30 years ago doesn’t mean that those principles aren’t relevant to us today in the workplace,” says Ben.
Inspirational quotes about the startup grind splashed across stock photos aside, when you’re doing your life’s work, it’s essential to have fun at the same time.
“There are times when I’m not having fun. I have to stop and restructure what I’m doing to make it more enjoyable,” says Ben. “When you’re having fun and having a laugh, people find you much easier to talk to and engage with than if you’re just a grumpy old bugger!”.