Insights / Business Growth & Advisory
6 Things Founders Should Stop Doing by Year 2
Why founder leadership must change before Year 2 forces it to
Year 1 selects for a very specific kind of leader: someone who moves fast, decides alone, tolerates chaos, and personally holds the entire operation together. That person built your business. That same person, unchanged, will be the reason it stops growing. The behaviours that create a company are not the same ones that scale it — and the founders who understand this early enough are the ones still running meaningful organisations by Year 5.
There is a pattern I observe consistently in my work with founders and growth-stage organisations. The person who built the business in Year 1 is extraordinary. They work 16-hour days, make every decision, know every client by name, and hold the whole thing together through sheer force of will. That tenacity is not just admirable — it is essential. Without it, most businesses would never get past the first six months.
But Year 2 is a different environment requiring a different leader. By Year 2, you are no longer trying to survive — you are trying to build something that can grow without being entirely dependent on you. That requires structures, not just instincts. It requires people, not just presence. It requires a set of leadership behaviours that are, in many ways, the direct opposite of what worked in Year 1.
The hard truth is that most founders do not make this transition consciously. They carry their Year 1 habits into a Year 2 environment and wonder why momentum slows, why good people keep leaving, and why the business feels harder to run the bigger it gets. This piece is about the six specific behaviours that need to stop — and what must replace each one. It draws on the same framework that underpins the People-First Growth Model — the idea that the ceiling of your organisation is always set by the quality of its leadership, starting with yours.
This is not a piece about working less or caring less. It is about redirecting exactly the same energy and commitment that built your business into the behaviours that will scale it. The distinction matters, because the founders who misread this transition think they are being asked to step back. They are not. They are being asked to step up — into a harder, more demanding, and ultimately more consequential version of their role.
Why Year 2 Is the Critical Inflection Point for Founders
Most of the advice available to founders focuses on the earliest stage — how to validate an idea, find product-market fit, raise initial capital, and survive the first year. The Year 2 transition receives far less attention, which is precisely why it is the stage at which so many promising businesses stall or break.
Year 1 is a selection environment. It selects for speed, tolerance for ambiguity, personal resilience, and the willingness to do everything yourself. These are genuine and rare qualities. But they create habits — and habits are extraordinarily difficult to examine when you are in the middle of the conditions that made them necessary. The founder who personally approved every hire, every client proposal, and every financial decision in Year 1 did not do so out of ego. They did so because speed and control were the right tools for that moment.
Year 2 changes the game. You now have people — which means you have a responsibility to lead them, not just direct them. You have clients who expect the same quality as the business scales. You have processes that need to function without your constant personal intervention. Harvard Business Review’s landmark research on the Founder’s Dilemma identified this transition as the single most consequential leadership challenge in a business’s early life — and found that most founders fail it not because they lack skill, but because they lack awareness that the transition is even happening.
The six behaviours below are not failures of character. They were assets. The problem is that they have not been updated to match the environment the business now operates in. Identifying them is the first act of genuine leadership maturity — which is why the most capable founders are also, without exception, the most willing to examine them honestly.
“The habits that got you through Year 1 are not failures. They are outdated assets. The founder who cannot tell the difference will spend Year 2 and Year 3 working harder to achieve less.”
— Refiloe MokgalakaThe Growth Lab — Founder Series
6 Founder Leadership Habits That Must Stop by Year 2
In Year 1, your judgment was the organisation’s most important asset. Every decision passed through you because you were the only one who had the full picture, the client relationships, the product instincts, and the risk tolerance to move fast. That made sense. In Year 2, continuing to make every decision is not a sign of high standards — it is a bottleneck wearing the mask of leadership. Every decision that only you can make is a decision that cannot be made when you are unavailable. It is a decision that no one else ever learns to make. It is a single point of failure dressed up as quality control.
The people who joined you in Year 1 took a genuine risk. They believed in you before the evidence was clear. That loyalty is real, and it deserves to be honoured. But honouring loyalty is not the same as promoting people beyond their capability or hiring friends and early believers into roles that require skills they do not have. By Year 2, the business needs people who are genuinely excellent at specific things — not people who are willing to try everything. The two are not the same person. When you conflate them, you build a team that is devoted but not capable of what the next stage of growth demands.
Your ability to build deeply personal client relationships was one of your most powerful competitive advantages in Year 1. Clients chose you — specifically you — because of that relationship. The problem is that this model does not scale. By Year 2, you cannot maintain deep personal relationships with every client while also building the organisation, developing the team, and doing the strategic work that the business now needs from you. When you try, something suffers — usually the team, because they never get your full attention, and ultimately the clients, because they get an exhausted, distracted version of you rather than the focused, energetic version they originally signed up for.
Most founders are extraordinarily good at resilience, resourcefulness, and moving fast. Very few are naturally comfortable with the direct, structured, uncomfortable conversation that tells someone their performance is not meeting the standard — and explains what the consequence will be if it does not improve. In Year 1, these conversations could be avoided because the team was small enough that poor performance could be worked around. By Year 2, avoidance is not a kindness. It is a management failure with compounding consequences. The person whose performance is not addressed receives a false signal that things are acceptable. The rest of the team watches you not address it and draws their own conclusions about your standards and your credibility as a leader.
Founders are, almost universally, extremely busy people. The problem is that by Year 2, a significant portion of that busyness is activity that feels urgent but is not important — responding to every email personally, attending every meeting, solving every operational problem that crosses their desk. This is the trap that HBR’s classic management research on “management time” identified decades ago: the founder who solves their team’s problems rather than building a team that can solve problems. The result is a founder who is permanently overloaded and a team that is permanently dependent.
Founders invest heavily in product, in team, in clients. They invest almost nothing in their own leadership development — because in Year 1, there is no time, and because the founder identity is often bound up in the belief that they already know what they are doing. By Year 2, this is no longer tenable. The organisation needs a different version of its leader than Year 1 required. That version does not emerge automatically. It has to be built — through honest feedback, structured development, exposure to how other leaders have navigated similar transitions, and the willingness to be genuinely uncomfortable in the process of growing. The Vision to Velocity programme is built specifically for this moment — when a founder needs to become a leader capable of running the organisation they have built, not just the one they started.
Why Founders Find These Behaviours So Hard to Stop
Understanding what to stop is necessary but not sufficient. The harder question is why these behaviours are so persistent — and what makes them so difficult to examine and change even when the founder can clearly see their cost.
The answer, in almost every case, is identity. The behaviours above are not just habits — they are deeply embedded parts of how the founder understands themselves. Making every decision is not just a behaviour; it is an expression of the belief that their judgment is the most reliable thing in the organisation. Treating every client relationship as personal is not just a habit; it is an expression of the pride and genuine care that made the business good in the first place. Conflating busyness with progress is not just inefficiency; it is a way of managing the anxiety that comes with not being entirely in control of every outcome.
This is why the transition is a leadership identity shift, not just a behaviour change. It requires the founder to hold a different story about what makes them valuable to the organisation — one in which their highest contribution is not their personal execution but their capacity to build, develop, and lead others who execute. That is a harder and more rewarding thing to be. It is also the only kind of leader capable of running a company that genuinely compounds over time.
The founder who builds a business that depends entirely on them has not built a business. They have built a job — for themselves — with a very complicated org chart attached to it. The transition from founder to leader is the transition from building something you run to building something that runs.
What the Founder Leadership Transition Actually Looks Like
The Founder-to-Leader Shift in Practice
Making this transition is not a single moment. It is a series of deliberate, often uncomfortable decisions made over six to twelve months. It looks like the meeting you chose not to attend, trusting your team to handle it — and resisting the urge to ask for a full debrief immediately after. It looks like the hire you made based on capability rather than comfort, and the honest conversation it took to onboard them in a way that respected what your early team had built.
It looks like the performance conversation you had that you had been avoiding for four months — and the relief you felt, and the respect you gained, when you finally had it clearly and fairly. It looks like the first week you protected two days of strategic thinking time and did not fill them with operational firefighting. It looks like enrolling in a leadership development programme and discovering that the most valuable thing it gave you was not a framework but a mirror.
The founders I most respect are those who made this transition early, deliberately, and with genuine humility about what they did not yet know. They did not stop being founders — they became something more capable: leaders who could build an organisation that outlasted any single person’s presence in it. That is the standard worth aiming for. And it begins with being honest about which of the six behaviours above you are still carrying — and deciding that Year 2 is the year you put them down.
If you are navigating this transition and want a structured leadership development pathway designed specifically for this moment, explore the Vision to Velocity programme. And if the people dimension of scaling — building a team and culture that can carry the organisation’s ambition — is your most pressing challenge, the People-First Growth Model offers the structural framework for doing exactly that.
Founder Self-Assessment
Which of These Founder Habits Still Apply to You?
In the last month, how many decisions were made in your business that could only have been made by you — and how many of those should have been made without you?
Is there someone on your team whose performance is not meeting the standard — and have you told them clearly, specifically, and with a timeline for what needs to change?
If you were unavailable for two weeks, which parts of your business would stop — and is that a number you are comfortable with?
What structured investment have you made in your own leadership development in the past 12 months — not reading, not podcasts, but structured development with accountability?
Is your most important client relationship dependent on you personally — and what would happen to that relationship if you were no longer the person responsible for it?
At the end of a typical week, can you point to the three things that only you could have done — or is your week a list of things you happened to do?
The Compounding Cost of Founders Waiting Too Long
Every month a founder carries a Year 1 behaviour into a Year 2 environment, the cost compounds. The team that never develops real decision-making capability becomes a team that cannot be trusted with it. The client relationships that were never systematised become dependencies that cannot survive a team change. The performance conversations that were avoided become a culture where mediocrity is tacitly accepted. None of these costs show up on a balance sheet — until they show up all at once in a scaling crisis, a key departure, or a missed opportunity that the organisation was not structured to capture.
The good news is that the transition is available to any founder willing to make it. It does not require a different personality. It requires a different set of choices, made consistently, over a period of months. The leaders who make those choices early enough build organisations that outlast their own constant presence. The ones who delay discover — usually at significant cost — that the business they built was always more dependent on them than it needed to be.
Year 2 is not a threat. It is an invitation — to become the kind of leader your organisation needs for what comes next. The question is whether you accept it now, on your own terms, or whether the business eventually forces the transition on its own, at a moment of its choosing rather than yours. That is a choice worth making deliberately.
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If any of the six behaviours in this piece landed — and you are ready to work on them deliberately, with structure and accountability — this is the conversation worth having.
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