Outlasting the Founder Companies have managed to thrive after an unplanned separation from the founder by following these rules

By Srinivasa Addepalli

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Shutterstock

The fall from grace of WeWork's Adam Neumann after the company failed to find takers for its public share issue added to the list of founders ousted from their companies, in part due to their inappropriate behaviour. Media reports provided unflattering accounts of Neumann's brushes with illegality, unethical transactions and messianic delusions. The jury is out on whether WeWork will be able to survive, both on account of its unprofitable business model and as an organisation that has been orphaned from its raison d'être, but few companies have managed to thrive after an unplanned separation from the founder. Here's how to navigate these periods.

Don't get fired

This might appear blindingly obvious, but obviously it isn't. An enterprise has many other stakeholders than its financial owners. The greed for maximising value for shareholders (including oneself) can be in conflict with doing the right thing. Being aggressive and contrarian are desirable features in an entrepreneur but in the long run, investors and history seek conformity with generally accepted ethics and values. Every shortcut that we take today is an exception that has to be justified later.

Hire people you might dislike

A strong feature of early-stage organisation cultures is high levels of solidarity among the founders and everyone else. It feels like a family, with the entrepreneur playing the parent-figure. While this relationship-orientation ensures a great degree of alignment and energy, this clannish culture brooks no dissent. Everyone is in awe of or in love with the founder, they can see no wrong. If you want to break out of the clan trap, you need to bring strong leaders from outside; those with proven track record of building teams, those with the courage to speak their mind. Not only should you hire them but also make them part of the "inner circle"…your role should be like that of a sports captain: clearly the team leader, but not the karta of the family.

Shape your culture voluntarily

Most start-ups operate in extreme fluidity in their early days; organisation culture is a far thought, not on the radar of the founder. However, as business strategy becomes clearer, it is also the time to shape the culture. Mind you, organisation culture will develop, whether you want it or not. Therefore, it is prudent to proactively work on its design. It is an exercise led by leaders but not limited to them. Through a process of discovery and dialogue, you can systematically define the culture that you seek to build, and prepare a roadmap to developing it. Whether it is structure, people policies, rituals or communication, all need to be aligned to strategy and culture. It is not science, but neither is it all mumbo-jumbo.

Hire a personal coach

Every leader, however capable or experienced, needs a coach. More so, first-time entrepreneurs who may or may not have significant organisational experience. Often, we mistake our investors or board members or other business consultants as coaches. They may be well-wishers but cannot play the objective and forceful role that a good coach can. For instance, Neumann's closest adviser was a board member and an investment banker. Nobody could be more conflicted. A coach (one or more) should be "hired", that is engaged with clear terms of reference and treated formally, even if no commercials are involved. And a clear inclusion in that mandate should be the idea of creating an organisation that will outlive the founder.

The joy of entrepreneurship is in new product creation, innovation, exceeding customer expectations, energising and motivating colleagues and partners, and of course, in wealth creation. The real satisfaction for entrepreneurs is when they turn institution builders, creating an organisation that can outlast not just them but all their successors. Creating such an organisation requires systematic effort, as much as building products or platforms does. And you can start working on it, now.

Srinivasa Addepalli

Founder and CEO of GlobalGyan

Srinivasa Addepalli is the founder and CEO of GlobalGyan, an edtech firm that provides learning, mentoring and consulting services to organisations.

 

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Growing a Business

How Building Tech With No Tech Background Taught Me the Most Valuable Skill in Business

The most valuable skill in business today is translation — the power to bridge vision and execution, clarity and complexity, strategy and reality.

Business News

Anthropic Is Now One of the Most Valuable Startups of All Time: 'Exponential Growth'

In a new funding round earlier this week, AI startup Anthropic raised $13 billion at a $183 billion valuation.

Business News

Google's Antitrust Penalty Has Been Determined. Here's What the Tech Giant Has Been Ordered to Give Up.

The judge denied the DOJ's request for Google to sell its Chrome web browser to resolve allegations of anticompetitive behavior.

News and Trends

How Lab-Grown Diamonds are Reshaping Jewellery Market

As sustainability takes the centre stage shaping the luxury market, lab grown diamonds (LGDs) are leading the way and not merely following the latest trends, says Ishendra Agarwal, Founder, Giva