Allspring CEO Kate Burke implemented a "Return on Invested Time" framework as Chief Talent Officer. This principle ensures that any time requested from employees for internal initiatives provides a clear return, preventing wasted effort on fads and focusing on high-impact development.
The primary purpose of hiring is not to add capacity for growth, but to free up the founder's time from low-value tasks. This allows the founder to reinvest their unique talents into activities that truly drive the business forward, making growth an outcome of strategic time reallocation.
In ROI-focused cultures like financial services, protect innovation by dedicating a formal budget (e.g., 20% of team bandwidth) to experiments. These initiatives are explicitly exempt from the rigorous ROI calculations applied to the rest of the roadmap, which fosters necessary risk-taking.
Treat your product and engineering teams as stewards of the company's most precious capital: their time. A capital allocation framework forces leadership to ask if this "investment" is being spent on the initiatives with the highest strategic return, not just fulfilling requests.
To get buy-in for developer experience initiatives, don't use generic metrics. First, identify leadership's primary concerns—be it market share, profit margin, or velocity. Then, frame your measurements and impact using that specific language to ensure your work resonates.
Using Six Sigma principles, the ROI of investing in people is the reduction of waste—specifically, the "waste of human potential." Disengaged, unsafe, and burnt-out employees cannot innovate or make good decisions. This frames "soft skills" in a language of efficiency and financial return.
Managers often spend disproportionate energy on low-performing employees. The highest-leverage activity is to actively invest in your top performers. Don't just leave them alone because they're doing well; run experiments by giving them bigger, more visible projects to unlock their full potential and create future leaders.
The primary goal of hiring should be to reclaim the founder's time from low-value tasks. This frees up the business's most valuable asset—the founder—to focus on high-leverage activities that truly drive growth, rather than simply adding capacity.
Jacobs's team uses the acronym WOTWOM—Waste Of Time, Waste Of Money—as a rapid check on new ideas. Any suggestion can be challenged with this label if it doesn't clearly contribute to organic revenue growth or margin expansion. This simple tool creates a culture focused on high-leverage activities.
Sebastian Thrun views time, not money, as the ultimate currency. He believes a leader's primary responsibility is to be a steward of their team's time. When someone joins his company, he sees it as his "royal duty" to ensure they spend their most valuable asset on meaningful, impactful work.
To get executive buy-in for long-term "human infrastructure" projects, frame the investment in terms of hard financial ROI. Show how upskilling internal talent directly reduces reliance on expensive external consultants, with every dollar invested saving multiple dollars in return.