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  1. My First Million
  2. 25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes
25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes

My First Million · Dec 15, 2025

To scale your business, stop being the hero. Learn to transition from player to owner by systemizing operations and removing yourself as the bottleneck.

Build a Company That Doesn't Need A-Players to Attract A-Players

Top talent isn't attracted to chaos; they are attracted to well-run systems where they can have a massive impact. Instead of trying to "hire rockstars" to fix a broken system, focus on building a systematic, efficient company. This is the kind of environment the best people want to join.

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes thumbnail

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes

My First Million·2 months ago

Simplify All Business Problems to a Single Question: Is it Supply or Demand?

Overwhelmed entrepreneurs can clarify priorities by categorizing every issue as either a supply or demand constraint. A demand constraint is needing more leads and sales. A supply constraint is being unable to fulfill existing orders. This binary focus clarifies the company's single most important priority.

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes thumbnail

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes

My First Million·2 months ago

Define Job Roles by Mapping Value Creation, Not by Interviewing Employees

Instead of asking employees what they do, map your core business processes (e.g., customer acquisition). Then, assign each step to a person. This bottom-up approach reveals who is truly driving value and who is overburdened, leading to more accurate role definitions based on business impact.

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes thumbnail

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes

My First Million·2 months ago

Founders Must Choose Between Being the Star Player or Owning the Team

Entrepreneurs often prefer being the indispensable "most valuable player" because it feels good and gives them control. However, this ego-driven desire makes the business less valuable and prevents it from scaling. To truly grow, a founder must transition from the court to the owner's box.

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes thumbnail

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes

My First Million·2 months ago

Systemize Your Business by Documenting Only What You Can't Afford to Screw Up

A common mistake when systemizing a business is trying to document every single process, which is inefficient and overwhelming. Instead, identify the few critical processes that are absolutely vital to your value delivery and focus all documentation and systemization efforts on those mission-critical areas first.

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes thumbnail

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes

My First Million·2 months ago

Hiring a 'Magical Integrator' to Run Your Business Is a Destructive Founder Fantasy

Founders often believe they can hire one "integrator" (like a COO) to handle all operational details. This is a myth. True scaling requires hiring specific, talented functional leaders (e.g., Head of Sales, Head of Product) who can solve a single, major business constraint, not a generalist helper.

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes thumbnail

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes

My First Million·2 months ago

Link Every Metric on Your Scorecard to a Step in Your Value Creation Map

Companies waste resources on "orphaned activities" that don't contribute to core goals. To fix this, ensure every metric on your scorecard corresponds directly to a step in your business process map (e.g., acquisition). If an activity isn't on the map, it shouldn't have a metric and should probably be cut.

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes thumbnail

25 Years of Business Advice in 27 Minutes

My First Million·2 months ago