7 Things to Consider When Distributing Leadership Roles Among Founders

Make sure you play to your co-founders’ strengths.

Question: What's the most important consideration when deciding, among founders, who should take on which leadership role?

Play to Your Strengths

"I have been involved in multiple partnerships at the founder level and have learned through experience it is always best to play to your strengths. While one person may have initially come up with the product or model, another may be more suited to lead the company as the CEO. Every role at the founder level is equally important, so assign them with the company's best interest in mind."


Look at Team Dynamics

"In every team, there are dynamics that should be taken under consideration when distributing roles. In the very early stage, everyone wants to be a C-Level, but as time goes by people should be willing to drop the CxO title and take over what they can handle best."


Look at Various Life Stages

"Most entrepreneurs never weigh their personal life and the overwhelming power it has over their business. Marriage, kids, grandkids and health concerns should all be factored in when deciding on leadership positions. They should also be re-evaluated as your business and you grow and evolve. The pace you worked at two years ago may not be the pace you're at now with differing factors in place."


Look at Proven Expertise

"If you have to ask yourselves which role each co-founder should have, it means that the team is likely not balanced to begin with. The co-founding team should be chosen so that the expertise of each one covers a certain aspect of the business: tech development, business development and management. It's not about what one wants -- it's about what one brings to the table."


Think About What You Want Most

"As an entrepreneur, you have the opportunity to build toward the future you want to create. When deciding who should take on what role, play to each other's strengths, but also think about what it is that you all really want to be doing. Strive to create a team and an environment where you can make that happen. You founded a company to do more of the work you love."


Divide and Conquer, Then Trust

"Most founding teams already have complimentary skill sets (someone technical becomes the CTO, someone more business oriented becomes the CEO, etc.). The most important things is to have a delineation of roles so the founding team can get the most done, and then leave space for the other(s) to do work without micromanaging."


Look to Performance as the Primary Consideration

"Founders spend a lot of time thinking in the abstract about who will be the CEO, COO, etc. Ultimately, it's all guesswork. You just have no idea until you've tried it. At InGenius, we gave all the founders projects typically done by the CEO, and the person who performed best took that role. It takes a little longer than just choosing, but it dramatically reduced the chance of error."


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7 Things to Consider When Distributing Leadership Roles Among Founders

Make sure you play to your co-founders’ strengths.

Question: What's the most important consideration when deciding, among founders, who should take on which leadership role?

Play to Your Strengths

"I have been involved in multiple partnerships at the founder level and have learned through experience it is always best to play to your strengths. While one person may have initially come up with the product or model, another may be more suited to lead the company as the CEO. Every role at the founder level is equally important, so assign them with the company's best interest in mind."


Look at Team Dynamics

"In every team, there are dynamics that should be taken under consideration when distributing roles. In the very early stage, everyone wants to be a C-Level, but as time goes by people should be willing to drop the CxO title and take over what they can handle best."


Look at Various Life Stages

"Most entrepreneurs never weigh their personal life and the overwhelming power it has over their business. Marriage, kids, grandkids and health concerns should all be factored in when deciding on leadership positions. They should also be re-evaluated as your business and you grow and evolve. The pace you worked at two years ago may not be the pace you're at now with differing factors in place."


Look at Proven Expertise

"If you have to ask yourselves which role each co-founder should have, it means that the team is likely not balanced to begin with. The co-founding team should be chosen so that the expertise of each one covers a certain aspect of the business: tech development, business development and management. It's not about what one wants -- it's about what one brings to the table."


Think About What You Want Most

"As an entrepreneur, you have the opportunity to build toward the future you want to create. When deciding who should take on what role, play to each other's strengths, but also think about what it is that you all really want to be doing. Strive to create a team and an environment where you can make that happen. You founded a company to do more of the work you love."


Divide and Conquer, Then Trust

"Most founding teams already have complimentary skill sets (someone technical becomes the CTO, someone more business oriented becomes the CEO, etc.). The most important things is to have a delineation of roles so the founding team can get the most done, and then leave space for the other(s) to do work without micromanaging."


Look to Performance as the Primary Consideration

"Founders spend a lot of time thinking in the abstract about who will be the CEO, COO, etc. Ultimately, it's all guesswork. You just have no idea until you've tried it. At InGenius, we gave all the founders projects typically done by the CEO, and the person who performed best took that role. It takes a little longer than just choosing, but it dramatically reduced the chance of error."


See Also: Meet Alexander Mistakidis, CEO at Gamelynx

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