The CEO role is not a joyful or fun job; it's a high-pressure, problem-solving position. Founders who love their craft, like software engineering, often take the CEO title out of necessity to solve a larger problem and bring a vision to life, not because they desire the job itself.

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True entrepreneurship often stems from a 'compulsion' to solve a problem, rather than a conscious decision to adopt a job title. This internal drive is what fuels founders through the difficult decisions, particularly when forced to choose between short-term financial engineering and long-term adherence to a mission of creating real value.

Contrary to conventional wisdom about delegation, the best management style for a small business founder is to be "all over fucking everything all the time." This means maintaining granular involvement in every aspect of the company—from client happiness to legal spending—to relentlessly drive daily improvements and maintain operational control.

Contrary to the common ambition of top executives, Snowflake's sales and marketing leaders found fulfillment by mastering their specific domains. They had no desire to become CEO, allowing them to shed their egos and focus purely on the craft of their functions, a rare and refreshing mindset in Silicon Valley.

Founders often equate constant hustle with progress, saying yes to every opportunity. This leads to burnout. The critical mindset shift is recognizing that every professional "yes" is an implicit "no" to personal life. True success can mean choosing less income to regain time, a decision that can change a business's trajectory.

An employee can be 'fearless' knowing they can find another job. A founder loses this safety net. The psychological burden shifts to a deeply personal responsibility for employees' livelihoods, investors' money, and the vision, making the stakes feel infinitely higher.

Many entrepreneurs love their core business but lose motivation as their role expands to include responsibilities they dislike (e.g., finance, operations). The solution is to reinvest early profits into hiring employees to handle these tasks, freeing the founder to focus on their strengths and passions.

Successor CEOs cannot replicate the founder's all-encompassing "working memory" of the company and its products. Recognizing this is key. The role must shift from knowing everything to building a cohesive team and focusing on the few strategic decisions only the CEO can make.

The ambition to be a CEO isn't just about leadership; it's a practical blend of ego, a need for control, and financial motivation. Critically, it stems from a deep-seated belief in one's own judgment and risk appetite, especially during pivotal market shifts that require bold, swift action.