The Ryan Hanley Show - The Ultimate Leadership Strategy Explained | Stephen Scoggins

Episode Date: June 30, 2025

Join our community of fearless leaders in search of unreasonable outcomes... Want to become a FEARLESS entrepreneur and leader? Go here: https://www.findingpeak.com Watch on YouTube: https://link....ryanhanley.com/youtube In this engaging conversation, Ryan Hanley and Stephen Scoggins explore the critical themes of alignment, emotional intelligence, and the transition from founder to CEO. Scoggins shares his insights on the common constraints entrepreneurs face, the importance of self-awareness, and how faith and values play a significant role in effective leadership. The discussion emphasizes the need for trust, collaboration, and a culture that respects individual contributions, ultimately guiding entrepreneurs toward sustainable growth and success. Stephen Scoggins Website: https://stephenscoggins.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stephen_scoggins Unstoppable Entrepreneur Quiz: https://quiz.unstoppablesolutions.com/integrated-alignment-method Fan Favorite Episodes From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delk From One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymello Is Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9  

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Peter's on a boat, storms raging everywhere. Jesus is asleep. He's taking a nap and waking from his nap and they're all freaking out. We're gonna die, we're gonna die, we're gonna die. And he's like, ah, peace be still. You guys have little faith, right? The ability to be present and grounded in the storm
Starting point is 00:00:13 will save you millions of dollars. You weren't going to face storms. Your ability to be resilient and believe in a vision, even when everything around you seems like it's not coming or fruition the way you want it to come, will save you time, energy and resource. I was researching everything you have going on and there's so much for us to dig into. I'm so excited to have you here. You actually have this quiz on your site, which I highly recommend everyone listening go and check out.
Starting point is 00:00:50 I'll have a link in the show notes. But in how you describe the quiz, there was this sentence that I just, this is where I wanted to start. It says when hustle and strategy don't work, there is a deeper reason. And that clicked with me so much because a lot of the founders and entrepreneurs that have been hitting me up lately in like social DMs, it's this, they're like, man, I feel like I got the right strategy,
Starting point is 00:01:17 we're working hard, I got a great team. And for some reason, like we're stuck at this moment. So I'd love for you to kind of dig into this spot. Like I feel like this is a huge pain point for a lot of entrepreneurs and founders. Gosh, well, I'm gonna go down a bit of a rabbit hole because I think it's important for you to understand from a sheer place of perspective.
Starting point is 00:01:36 So one of the things that I see a lot of entrepreneurs and especially early stage founders and startups do, which obviously I'm a founder myself, I've founded multiple companies, exited, I had a four as a roll up, which is a rare event in general, right? So just to break through the seven figure ceiling, all right, so everybody knows that eight out of 10
Starting point is 00:01:53 businesses failed in the first, you know, call it five years. I mean, of those 20% that succeed, only 86% of them ever break the top line revenue of a million dollars in annual revenue, right? And of those only, I think a subset of maybe 1% of those will actually break eight figures. And it just continues to get more and more diluted as you go through the process, all the way to where you have a nine-figure company or
Starting point is 00:02:16 something like that. And essentially what happens is now you've got this rarest of the rare. And one of the things that I've seen that's been so instrumental of a lot of the entrepreneurs that I'm working with that I have broken through the seven, the eight figure and the nine figure ceilings, because a lot of my current clients and past clients are typically eight, nine figure entrepreneurs that are trying to not actually fix their businesses as much as they are trying to get what I like to refer to as alignment. And the reality is when it comes down to why businesses often fail, the economics or the statistics would tell you that it's like typically top five reasons, lack of sales, lack of product fit, poor management team, poor leadership style.
Starting point is 00:02:57 Like it's the same things over and over again. And then I had this epiphany. When I go back and look at my entrepreneurial journey that I've had over the last, got 30, call it 30 years, just around, round down, round up. I think it's 33 years in now. But when I go back and look at that journey, and I'm honest with myself, and I look at the things that really either impeded my growth or basically prevented my growth. So there's, you know, impeding the growth, making it slower, making it stall, where we naturally think that we need to hustle more and do more and have more, like,
Starting point is 00:03:31 what I call anxious activity, which is I don't believe it's healthy. I did all these things. I'm not speaking from a place of, hey, you should go do this way, and I know it all, because I'm not a guru in all sorts of means. I'm just simply someone who built businesses with my own two hands, basically.
Starting point is 00:03:46 But when you go and look at those statistics, you very quickly realize that there's something off there. So when I go and look at, okay, what impeded my growth, what prevented my growth, in almost every case, in some way, shape or form, it came down to me. It wasn't even how much knowledge I have. It wasn't even how much skill I have. It wasn't even how much skill I have. Because knowledge and skill you can develop over time. In fact, I used to tell you all the time
Starting point is 00:04:10 one of my greatest mistakes in building companies was not building myself along the way. And I mean, legitimately, intentionally focused building myself. Not you do a seminar once a year, maybe you listen to a podcast once every two months, maybe you're reading a book every two or three months. Like, I mean, like intentional, hey, it's Monday, today we're focused on my financial
Starting point is 00:04:29 wellbeing. Hey, it's Tuesday, now we're focused on my emotional wellbeing. Hey, it's Wednesday, now I'm focused on my spirituality. Hey, it's Thursday, now I'm going to focus on my relationships, right? There's no growth path that's actually planned ahead. I say all that to say that I discovered that no matter what stage of entrepreneurship you're in, if you're a founder wanting to start something, you know, desiring to make an impact, you know, and founders and entrepreneurs, I love them to death because by definition,
Starting point is 00:04:55 they create something out of thin air. Okay, they have a vision and they literally bring that vision into reality. Right? Sometimes it's an established niche, sometimes it's in a not so established niche, sometimes it's a completely new thing. We all know AI seemingly came out of nowhere. We almost spent a development for a decade. But we'll go and look at all of these things. And at the seven-figure entrepreneur, we're trying to get to eight figures and eight figures are going to get nine. It doesn't matter what the thing is. I find that there's five core constraints, five core constraints to actual growth. And it actually has more to do with the entrepreneur themselves than it does to do anything else.
Starting point is 00:05:28 All right. I'll give you some examples after I break these down. But the first one is arrogance. Okay. The entrepreneurial vision a lot of times, and I see this a lot with founders specifically, there's an element of fear attached to it. But a lot of times founders, they don't understand that having the skill set of a CEO is very different than having the chutzpah, if you will, of the founder. The founder is absolutely needed and should be honored for their impact. But unless they want to go through the personal growth journey of becoming a CEO, they will impede or prevent their business growth by not bringing in a professional CEO that has
Starting point is 00:06:04 been trained with the skill sets of a CEO, for example. Yeah. So that's a form of arrogance. The next one is ignorance, right? Ignorance and having major blind spots that you're not willing to look at, that you're not willing to get. What I would like, again, I'd like to refer to as alignment, right? When you have these kinds of issues, what happens is, is this ignorance is now preventing you from learning the things you need to do or preventing you from developing the relationships
Starting point is 00:06:28 you need to develop or simply just allowing other additional levels of fear to creep in. So we got arrogance, ignorance. Now we got the one thing that I see every single entrepreneur on the planet share. This is one common thing that we all share. We all think we should be further along than we actually are.
Starting point is 00:06:45 All of us, I don't care if you just busted through $100 million and you did it in three years, which would be unimaginable for most people, right? You still think, well, I should be at 150. I should have a team of 300 people, or I should have this over here, I should be doing this over here. True entrepreneurship, I'll come back to this in a second, operate from a place of alignment. The most successful entrepreneurs that I see that really
Starting point is 00:07:08 have it all, right? They have a successful company, they have a successful relationship, they have a successful family, they have a successful wellness program for them, they have a successful level of fulfillment, right? They all have achieved what I, again, I like to refer to as alignment. Now, if we go to the fourth one, the fourth one is called insecurity, right? So insecurity will prevent you from taking action when you need to take action. Or, you know, activating a certain segment of your business or firing that team member
Starting point is 00:07:38 because they've been with you for 10 years. Or there's a whole number of different things that if you have a low sense of self-worth, which you'd be surprised of the percentages years or there's a whole number of different things that if you have a low sense of self-worth, which you'd be surprised of the percentages of founders and entrepreneurs that honestly, part of the reason that they build something from scratch is to prove to the world that they're worth something. Right?
Starting point is 00:07:55 So, this is some of these things I want to eradicate and kind of flip on their head because I discovered that I had a significant intrinsic worth long before I ever built the first company, let alone all the things that happened along the way. I actually tell entrepreneurs all the time, I prefer you not celebrate the success. I prefer you celebrate the sacrifice, the things that you're willing to do that no one else is willing to do right now. Because most entrepreneurs that do become successful, as my old man, my first mentor, who used to tell me all the time, he's like, hey, you have to be willing to do today what others
Starting point is 00:08:28 won't so you can have tomorrow what others don't. And he wasn't talking about the haves as far as houses and cars and planes and stuff like that. He meant the entire wellness of life, right? So that leads us to the fifth and final constraint, which is fear. Fear of success and fear of failure. Fear of firing, which is fear. Fear of success and fear of failure, fear of firing, fear of hiring, fear of partnering. One of the biggest transitions that I had to do, Ryan, was this. I had to come to a point when we were about a $60 million company with the company
Starting point is 00:08:58 that I exited a couple of years ago, where I had to decide, do I actually want to develop the skill sets of a CEO, or is it more important for me to bring in a CEO? And I say that loosely because I feared that somehow if I brought in a CEO, that ultimately what was going to happen in my life is I was not going to not just lose control, but the vision, the thing that I spent the last 15, 20 years putting together was going to be so radically altered that it wouldn't even resemble me in the process. Right? So fortunately for me, my specific self, I had a lot of great counselors and mentors and coaches along the way. And I to this day still have coaches in a lot of different
Starting point is 00:09:39 domains of life, business included. Right? I was able to understand, okay, I do have what it takes to develop these skills, but at the same time, part of the reason I entered in my company is because I didn't want to take it to $200 million, right? So what I did was I went out and found a management team, partnered them with my existing management team and created a roadmap for wealth for all of them because I knew I didn't want to do it.
Starting point is 00:10:04 I knew I didn't have the skillsets at that time to go from 100 million to 200 million. That's a whole other leap. It's just a leap, right? So those five constraints create a certain level of anxiousness, burnout, and overwhelm consistently. So if you have an entrepreneur and I said, what does burnout feel like? Okay, burnout feels like I wake up tired every day, that I can't get to all the places I want to get to, hug all the people I wanna hug,
Starting point is 00:10:32 care and love all the people I wanna love. And instead I feel like that I'm just exhausted all the time, okay. Overwhelm on the other hand, feels like you have a constant weight of the world on your shoulders. Like if you don't make this decision just right, the whole thing's going to fall apart. Or if you don't partner with this person just right, the whole thing's going to fall apart. So I say all of that to say, and I know it's a long way to answer to your first question,
Starting point is 00:10:56 but I want to give a complete picture to the entrepreneurs to understand there's true empathy coming from me to them because I, I've walked this journey out. But if I could summarize it all in one statement, is this, you cannot scale dysfunction. You can't scale a dysfunctional sales team, you can't scale a dysfunctional leadership team, you can't scale a dysfunctional financial pipeline, you can't scale dysfunction,
Starting point is 00:11:20 you can only scale out of alignment. And that is at the root cause of what I've seen that has to change in the founder, the CEO, and the entrepreneur and the executive leaders of every single business is they have to get out of their own way and learn to collaborate and learn to align with the vision, align with their actual skill sets.
Starting point is 00:11:38 And if the skill sets and the vision don't align directly over top of each other, you look for the, the swive person looks for the piece, brings that piece in and lets that piece operate in fulfillment and fullness. And then you can scale a company. To me, founder is a mindset, CEO is a job. And I love the way that you broke that down.
Starting point is 00:11:57 Do you have a filtering system or method that, and even maybe talk about your own personal journey? And cause I know a lot of founders deal with this issue and they just there's this assumption. You founded the business, you become the CEO. There's just this assumption. And if somehow you take a different path, right, maybe your peers, your colleagues are in again, going back to insecurity and fear, you start creating all these things that don't exist where people are going to judge me because I founded the company. I should become the CEO, you're feeling that pressure.
Starting point is 00:12:28 How do you think through this process? How do you remove some of the emotion attached to this or deal with the emotion might be a better way because it's going to be there. But think through logically, am I the right person to go for a founder to see? Because I might be the best CTO in the company. I might be the best revenue generator in the company. Cause CEO is a job, not a mindset. Founder is a mindset, CEO is a job. If you, one, if you believe with that kind of categorization and two, I'd love to know your filtering system for that because man, I know so many people are struggling,
Starting point is 00:13:01 especially as, and I apologize for the long question, but you said something that I think is very important. I think today more than ever, founders and CEO, founders considering this transition to CEO are thinking about their life sacrifices, right? I think there's less founders who are willing to go, Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, I'm gonna live on on a cot 24-7, you know, not see my family for months to get this thing off the ground, right?
Starting point is 00:13:30 I think there's a lot more founders are saying, I don't want that life, respect and appreciation that that's the decision they made. But that's not the life that I want. So maybe with that understanding, how do we think through this decision? Yeah, I think so when it comes down to filtering, first of all, you have to understand the complete stages of building a business, right? Well, I would call it the drivers, actually. So in my world, I can take these five drivers, lay them over top of any business, doesn't matter what niche it's in. And because each niche allows for flexibility and for each of the, you know, the areas of a company. So ideation is the number one niche.
Starting point is 00:14:05 And I'll come back to ideation super fast because that's where I want to spend the bulk of the time to answer your question. The second thing is sales, right? So you've got ideation, sales, fulfillment, finance, and you have a raving fan retention model, okay? We'll come, we can discuss those later, but ideation, okay? Ideation in so many cases is essentially
Starting point is 00:14:24 the overall complete vision of the company. When I say vision, it's not just the pie in the sky statement that we look out on a wall every now and again. It's legitimately, this is who we are. This is who we're not. This is what we stand for. This is what we stand against. Okay. So that's filter number one. Does anyone that I'm considering bringing into the business or am I operating? And this is a good question for leaders, right? Am I actually operating as if I am actually embodying this set vision? Because I find that a lot of us, especially early days, we don't do that.
Starting point is 00:14:57 We don't do that. We say these things, but we're not embodying those things. But in the grand scheme of things, the ideation process is obviously your mission, your vision, and core values. It's roles, responsibilities, and strategies of implementation. Okay? So it's laying the groundwork of the other drivers, sales, finance, the finance, raving family, attention, so on and so forth, fulfillment, and everything else. The reason that's important is because for me, there was one time in my business career where I should have gotten an outside person in and put them through a proper vetting process. Okay.
Starting point is 00:15:33 Now the vetting process for me is a little bit based on Patrick Glienzioni and one of your elements. So he has this phrase called hungry, humble, smart. Okay. They have to be hungry, they got to be humble and they got to be smart. Right? I think the third one is that they have to fit the culture. Okay, now I'll come back to culture in a second. Now, when it comes down to actually filtering these people through, I'm going to sit down with them and say, okay, how hungry are they? How humble are they? How smart are they? How they fit the culture? Now, when founders are
Starting point is 00:16:02 looking at CEOs, CEOs naturally, especially train ones, people that have already been CEOs with other enterprises and stuff like that, have a natural level of experience that you don't have, like early stage as a founder. When I was a founder, perfect example was as I promoted a senior level accountant into a controller role, that cost me, that one one mistake cost me millions of dollars. Okay. Because what they did do their end, they look, they were, they were a great human being, they didn't possess the skillset needed to operate an eight, a high figure
Starting point is 00:16:38 company at the time. Okay. So what happened was that they literally created a hot mess that I had to spend about $200,000 of actual cash to come in and clean up on top of all the erosion that happened through margin of profitability. Right? So the founder has to be honest with themselves and say, do I have the skillset and the experience? And after they've done it one time, so let's say that, let's say this is the first time the founders created something from scratch, right?
Starting point is 00:17:07 They've got a profitable enterprise, they've worked their ass off, they've sacrificed nights, holidays, weekends, they put the work in, they built the team, they put their own money in continuously, they haven't paid themselves, they don't sleep at nights. Like all of that's all the stuff that they're carrying when they're trying to make this decision about whether or not to bring an outside party in as a partner in many respects to this organization. So what happens is, is they're doing one of the things that I used to do very poorly all the time until I got better at this one.
Starting point is 00:17:37 Again, where alignment comes into play is I used to make emotional driven decisions. Okay. If you're going to be a seven figure entrepreneur, an eight figure entrepreneur, a nine figure and beyond, you are going to learn to make decisions on data and radical honesty. The filtering process is this is who we are, this is what we stand for, this is what we stand against. Now let's get down to radical honesty. Here's the vision.
Starting point is 00:18:02 Do I actually possess the current experience level to take this thing to the next level? At least 90%. The other 10% you can learn, right? Most founders, okay, and there's no dig on founders, because again, I am one, right? Most founders struggle with this because what they remember is the past five years, the past year, the past 12 months, the past six years. They have all this history of what they've done. So how a successful CEO would integrate that is a couple different things.
Starting point is 00:18:33 So if we know the culture is a specific piece, when they go to interview CEOs, they're gonna take their time, okay? The more important the decision, the more time that needs to be taken. However, I might spend 90 days evaluating separate CEOs to see who's going to be the best fit. Now, a quality CEO is going to do two things very well. First of all, they're going to come into the
Starting point is 00:18:55 business and know how to optimize it. If the business has a desire or need to raise capital, the CEO is going to have the ability to raise capital, monetize efficiencies, read data that somebody has a COO, the CTO and the CFO, right? And then translate that back to the founder. Because typically a founder will slide over to a visionary officer or something like that to keep the business growing.
Starting point is 00:19:17 And that's putting people in their sweet spots. A great CEO is also gonna do another thing which I think is super important. They're gonna regularly honor the founder publicly. They're going to come up when they have their meetings with their team. It's like, hey, just like Jane used to say all the time when she was building this thing or Joe used to was building this thing from his card table at his kitchen table or whatever, we would do this, this, and this.
Starting point is 00:19:40 This is what we stand for. When you have that aspect, what happens is the founder now feels like, all right, I'm seen, I'm heard, I'm valued. And then they will actually go do what they do best, which is go create, right? So the founder creates, the CEO optimizes, right? And both of those things are important and is very, very rare that a founder truly becomes a CEO.
Starting point is 00:20:06 You can take, let's look all the way back at Uber. The young man that started Uber, founder, gritty, tenacious, because he wasn't a trained executive as the CEO, it took a while. They had a lot of growth pains early on in getting Uber off the ground and getting, he had, he got a bad rap a few times. They made movies about it, right? Because he wasn't operating from alignment, right? Great CEOs, and the difference is,
Starting point is 00:20:30 is operating from emotion versus operating from essentially data, okay? If you operate from emotion, you're gonna blow stuff up by accident. You're not gonna mean to, right? And if you hire a CEO from emotion, you're gonna mess yourself up. What does the data say?
Starting point is 00:20:46 What do we need? The data is the important piece. If entrepreneurs can move from the emotional side of their brain to the intellectual side of their brain and make data-driven decisions on a regular basis, they're going to be much stronger in the end. So I would use those types of methodologies to filter in. So one, who are we, what do we stand for, what do we stand against?
Starting point is 00:21:06 Make sure that's clear, because that CEO also has to believe heavily in that same thing. They got to really believe it, right? The second thing is, okay, what is the culture, right? So is this a culture of honor and respect? Because I found that if the founder has any level of emotional maturity
Starting point is 00:21:26 as their honor, they also honor the CEO back. Right. And honor has to be established with the leadership team. A dysfunctional leadership team will create a hot freaking mess amongst hundreds of team members. Ask me how I know. Like I've lived it. You see what I'm saying? All right. And the third and final thing is like, okay, well, how do we move from emotional behaviors and decision making to basically data intellectual decision making? I think those three are the core filters because, and this will be for the CEOs that are coming in for founders, not just the honor piece, but also understanding that that founder probably has unique instinct to a degree, right? And
Starting point is 00:22:07 be able to respect that instinct and be able to sit down and say, hey, John, look, I respect your instincts. Your instincts are awesome. Here's what I see. Help me understand more about your vision. Because a lot of founders have a really hard time really communicating the next level of vision. So being able to have that dialogue, right, founder and the CEO is vitally important, vitally important. Those are probably my top braves. The third one is the one that maybe I love to just ask, like, because a lot of founders, right, it was their gut, it was their intuition that gave them the idea to create the thing, right? So now, so to your point, because of that, they tend to over index on gut feeling emotion. Yep. But,
Starting point is 00:22:54 so, but I completely agree with you, right? We have to live in reality. And this is a big part of what I talk about in the show. I talk about like my own leadership style, I call a reality based operating system. Like you can't, you can't build your business on a fantasy or some sort of utopian version of how businesses become real. So we have to work off data. So how do we marry the, or finally better put, how do we find harmony between the gut instincts
Starting point is 00:23:21 of a founder or even a CEO or even other founding team members with the data that's coming out that we see on a day to day basis. And because sometimes the data might not show exactly what we want, but a gut call gets us over the hurdle and then the opposite can also be true. So how do we start to find harmony between those two things? Well, first of all, the management team of the business will only scale to speed of trust. Okay. And trust is built through experience and over time. Right. So if I'm sitting there with an executive team member and my gut says X. Now I'm one of those weird people that my gut has to be more right than wrong when it comes to business. Now that might be kind of how I managed to get
Starting point is 00:24:05 to where I'm at or played a role in that. At the same time, I'll use the CFO example. So CEO to CFO, let's say the founder became the CEO, the CEO is now working with a CFO, the CFO has been trained, trained to be a CFO. The founder has not necessarily been trained to be a CEO. So there's automatically, like this guy's coming out, this guy or lady's coming at it from this angle. He's coming out from this angle. What I've discovered is, is a very simple phrase.
Starting point is 00:24:38 Can you help me understand? Help me understand your perspective. Just help me understand. I want to see it clearly. Because my goal, Jane, as the CFO to the CEO is I want to make sure your vision becomes reality. That's why I'm here. Right? I also have an obligation to you to make sure we get there in the healthiest possible way, period. Which means once each party has had the chance to share openly without defense, again, this is where freaking alignment comes into play because only emotional mature people can actually be grounded in the moment actually to listen. There's a difference in hearing and listening, right? If you can't regurgitate, sorry for the bad word, but it's kind of a joke-type word, but if you can't regurgitate the words back to the person, you didn't listen. If you can't physically say,
Starting point is 00:25:29 well here's what I heard you say, okay? Because a lot of times you say, well here's what I heard you, well I didn't say that at all. I actually, I was trying to say this, well why don't you say, you know, it's like, so that's how you avoid that complex nature. Once each party has had a chance to listen, how do we allow the visionary to create the stretch? So let's say the data says we can go from A to M by doing things this way, right? Sequential order, this is how we build up cashflow. This is how we build up a sales pipeline.
Starting point is 00:26:02 This is how we optimize our fulfillment. This is how we do it this way, right? Then you can go back to the founder and say, okay, this is the strategy that I see to make your dream a reality or our dream a reality on top of I want to learn to be in the stretch. Here's where the founder gets to be in the stretch. The founder gets to set the stretch goal.
Starting point is 00:26:24 You see what I'm saying? And it's within reason. Hey, we're gonna agree that we'll strive be in the stretch. The founding is to set the stretch goal. You see what I'm saying? And it's within reason. Hey, we're gonna agree that we'll strive for a 20% stretch. So if you were gonna be involved in the fulfillment process, how would you see it differently? And what's that 20% stretch?
Starting point is 00:26:38 What you're looking for is you're building a collaboration of communication. Or I'm sorry, communication of collaboration. As you build a collaboration of collaboration, what happens is you build trust. And pretty soon you're gonna find that the founders release more and more and more and more because trust has been built, but trust is only built by actually working together and actually operating in the tension. Here's the crazy part is trust is built in the tension. In reality, here's the crazy part, is trust is built in the tension. Right?
Starting point is 00:27:08 That's when Jane and John are like, hey, you know what? We tried your idea, right? And it worked, fantastic. Yeah, let's high five. Hey, Jane had this great idea. She helped us with the stretch, right? Or if it didn't work, hey, this is cool.
Starting point is 00:27:23 We learned a valuable lesson. Now let's see what the data now supports, right? Or if it didn't work, hey, this is cool. We learned a valuable lesson. Now let's see what the data now supports, right? It may seem like in the moment you're slowing the business down from growth, but what you're really doing is you're really setting up a firm foundation. Because when trust is established, now the CEO can execute with excellence because the founders now trust. Right? And the founders is, the founder is getting honored regularly by repeatedly bringing back in the story of creation to the company. So as you bring on another value, let's say the, about the, normally about the time a transition can happen from a founder to a CEO is typically around the $10 million mark. Sometimes a little before depending on the industry, it's absolutely in place by the
Starting point is 00:28:09 time you're at 50, 100. You can't get there unless, again, the founders will to do the work to become a CEO. That is a very, very not difficult thing, but pretty stinking difficult in some respects. Let's say all that happens. When all of that happens, now you've got this new level of team members constantly coming into the business. The CEO, part of what the CEO will do is they'll put a strategy in place with the HR department or whoever's actually operating in the HR area to say, hey, part of our onboarding process
Starting point is 00:28:42 is to talk about how Jane built this business. She helped us get going. How much we value her insight and her instincts and how she sees things differently. Right? So basically, you put in the culture that supports the honor of the founder, and the founder is going to end up releasing more trust to the CEO because the CEO is already honoring the founder. Yeah. It's again, it's all communication, it's all trust, and it's all honor and respect. That's my opinion. I know, I completely agree with you. I think, I also think there is a skill for the founder
Starting point is 00:29:15 to strategically give their executive team opportunities to sink or swim, right? Like you don't wanna give them an opportunity maybe, especially early on, that's like a bet the farm decision, but hey, on some of these tactical decisions where you might feel you know the answer, right? But you want to see how does he handle it? How does she handle this particular decision
Starting point is 00:29:41 and let them go and sometimes, and you have to be okay with, they might take a path that I know is not gonna work and let them go down that path, be unsuccessful, learn the lesson themselves. And then you get to see how do they handle failure, right? I mean, this is one of the things that if you don't provide slack to your team,
Starting point is 00:30:00 if you're one of these helicopter founders, right? Helicopter managers, if you don't provide your team some slack to make some mistakes occasionally, right? As long as they're pushing in the right direction with the engines and all that kind of stuff. Then you don't know when the shit really hits the fan, you have no idea how they're gonna react. And now when in your worst day,
Starting point is 00:30:20 you're getting your first experience with how someone has a negative situation, which is the absolute opposite thing that you want, right? So, no, I love that. I'd like to transition a little bit to, I wanna talk about faith and faith in your life. You wear a cross, I do too. It's funny where actually opposites.
Starting point is 00:30:41 I have a black shirt, you got the black shirt, like silver cloth. Yin and yang today. But like, what role does does God and your faith play in how you operate your life and how? And then I'm particularly interested in how you've utilized that aspect of who you are in your business life and what role that plays and how it manifests? Yeah. So man, I think the simple question is what role does it not play? I operate all, I'll tell you this. So my vision, my mission, core values, all the things that I've talked about in the aggregation stage of building a business. And I look at those stages every 12 to
Starting point is 00:31:22 18 months, by the way. That's how you scale that same system. But I look at that as that's how I'm going to conduct myself. So it starts with embodying the examples. Elements of faith are honesty, integrity, compassion, empathy, boldness, right? So I sell that to say that my grandfather told me in 2016 before he passed away, just before I started speaking and writing books and then doing the things I do in the world now, at the time I was like, because my first company was a roll-up of a bunch of construction companies basically.
Starting point is 00:31:57 I was having a really hard time making the mental and emotional leap. Again, I'm facing those same constraints I'm telling you about in this transition. As I'm talking to my grandfather, he's like, he said, here's the thing you need about leadership and business, life, love, everything. You have to become one part lion and one part lamb. And when we started talking about the lion and the lamb, all right, so the lion is bold and courageous, protects its own, hunts on a regular basis. And you've got the lamb, you know, in theory
Starting point is 00:32:25 that is empathetic and compassionate and caring. Because there will be times when you, yourself, or your team need a kick of the butt, which is the lion, there'll be other times they actually need a hug, which is the lamb. The tricky part is developing the wisdom to operate in the blank space. Be able to be having enough situational awareness. So the way I see situational awareness is I studied the life of Jesus. I studied how he operated with his disciples, right? Most of the time he ended up giving Peter a bit of a hug because Peter was in his own way a lot. Few times he challenged Peter. He gave him the lion. Get behind me, get behind me Satan.
Starting point is 00:33:05 I mean, I don't know about you, but if my mentor told me that, I'd be like, oh, I got a shock, right? And to me, faith is what happens in the quiet moments. If I go back to the alignment piece, I discovered when I woke up each morning and I just went straight into my phone, straight into my computer, straight into my activities. And I've been hitting the gym for a long time. So the gym was my, you know, I'll be going to the gym, but I'd be thinking about my day. I'd be thinking about the client. I'd be thinking about all these different things. That created the embodiment of overwhelm. Contrast that with, as I guarantee myself, the first 30 to 40 minutes of every day
Starting point is 00:33:42 was some sort of grounding or presence practice. Okay, I have a journaling practice that I use from time to time. That's because what I hear you say is, I grab my journal, I sit in quiet, what I hear you say is, and I write down whatever I hear. And lo and behold, sometimes it's three or four pages. Sometimes it's a few quotes, right?
Starting point is 00:34:00 I'll go touch the grass. I'll go put my feet on the grass nowadays, right? I'll go sit out in the first sunlight of the day. I wake up almost every morning. I'm healthy. I'm wealthy. I'm wise. I'm a steward of the most high.
Starting point is 00:34:10 And I love you, Steven. That last one, I've discovered that nine out of 10 entrepreneurs that I work with can't even say that to themselves in the mirror. And by getting those things in place, I become more grounded. And because I become more grounded. And because I become more grounded, all I'm doing is mimicking what my Lord did. That's all I'm doing.
Starting point is 00:34:30 How many times did Jesus go off a way by himself and go, quote unquote, be with the Father? Be in a state of presentness. He walked into a room and had presence consistently because he spent so much time being present in every moment. When he was with Peter or when he was with John or anything, he was very focused on being present with them. If I model that in my business, that means when I'm meeting with one of my executives, I'm very present with them.
Starting point is 00:34:59 I'm not thinking about the other things. I got my phone off, turned over, don't have any dinghans going on. We started this podcast, first thing I did was hit do not disturb so we wouldn't be disturbed, right? These are types of ways of becoming more present. So presentness is a piece of it. Being grounded is a piece of it.
Starting point is 00:35:15 Being more emotionally calm in times of stress. It's Peter's on a boat, storms raging everywhere. Jesus is asleep. He's taking a nap. And they wake him from his nap and they're all freaking out. We're gonna die, we're gonna die, we're gonna die. And he's like, ah, peace be still.
Starting point is 00:35:32 You guys have little faith, right? The ability to be present and grounded in the storm will cost, will save you millions of dollars. It'll advance you twice as fast. But on top of that, then you also have the resilience piece. Right? I don't care who you are in business in general, I don't care if you're a C-suite professional,
Starting point is 00:35:53 I don't care if you're the founder, I don't care if you're thinking about being a founder, you're going to face storms. Period. Your ability to be resilient and believe in a vision, even when everything around you seems like it's not coming to come to fruition the way you want it to come,
Starting point is 00:36:11 will save you time, energy and resource. Because again, you're gonna come back to alignment, come back to being grounded, come back to being rooted and being present. When you're present is when you make the best decisions. Almost every dumb decision I made. And I keep in mind, I'm saying this from a place of experience and empathy in that I have lost millions of dollars
Starting point is 00:36:32 because of the dumb things that I did. Putting the wrong people in the wrong seats on the bus, not paying attention to the financials, like literally just trying to be sheer instinct, right? Every one of those dumb decisions came from a place, and what's known in the marketplace now is what's called emotional dysregulation. It's being in the mind, this is why I'm not a fan of hustle culture. When I say hustle culture, I don't mean, you don't have to wake up at 4 a.m. and go out for a run and pump a bunch of iron.
Starting point is 00:37:01 And then, you see what I'm saying? It's actually better if you can start present. There's a difference between working hard and working to work. Yeah. There's a different difference. Yeah, exactly. So I say alignment leads to intentional focus. Intentional focus leads to diligence,
Starting point is 00:37:18 diligence leads to positive outcomes, right? If you're emotionally dysregulated, I mean, you wake up in fear, and emotional dysregulation is nothing more than being in fight or flight. Right? You can build your businesses in fight or flight, you're gonna scare a lot of people, you're gonna scare yourself, you're gonna make dumb decisions, or you can start now from someone who's lived it, who doesn't want you to go through all those extra suffering moments. Because there's already gonna be tension. Right? There's a whole nother level if you're operating
Starting point is 00:37:46 from emotional dysregulation, which again, is just nothing more than operating from fear of flight. So I say all of that to say that my faith is what grounds me, my faith is what's true. It doesn't mean that I have to have every team member that comes in the door, we have to share the same faith or the same values. Right?
Starting point is 00:38:05 But we do have to share the same core values of honesty, integrity, diligence, compassion, collaboration, autonomy. Like we have to share those things. And it just so happens over course of time, if you embody this behavior, you embody this presentness from faith, not only will you attract others that are kind of that
Starting point is 00:38:25 way, that kind of operate that way, so there's less chaos itself, because there's less chaos in the business. Like every position is based on someone who's like emotionally grounded in a regulator or can get there. So there's a peace and a safety into that. But on top of that, you will also become a little bit of an inspirational light to others who are trying to figure that part out. I've had this situation happen before where I had a team member with me for seven or eight
Starting point is 00:38:50 years, rock star, and he got an unexpectedly divorce. Their spouse did something that created a catastrophic event in their relationship. Obviously, there's always two sides that things and how relationships play out. But that person really, it really rocked that person for a year. So what do you do? Do you fire them? Because all of a sudden their performance
Starting point is 00:39:13 is completely tank? Or do you find a way to bring this faith element around them and compassion of the team members to say, hey, we got you right now. We know you're not gonna be your best self right now. And we see you, we love you, we got you. I find that that culture structure creates a level of lift that most businesses can never find.
Starting point is 00:39:34 That's why you can have a billion dollar business and have turnover like it's going out of style. There's a really well known digital marketplace business, really well-known, billions of dollars. And if you were to actually look at the statistics of how they churn their team, they are literally part of their major line item on their billion-dollar budget is headhunting constantly. They can't keep a position, and they can't keep a position because there's no compassion. There's no seeing the person. Everybody wants to feel seen, valued, heard and appreciated. I learned all of that from Jesus. All of it. Everything in my business,
Starting point is 00:40:18 the skill set He gave me with my hands. Okay, so my dad taught me how to use my hands and my heart, right? That's great, but my faith is what taught me resilience, it's what taught me compassion, it's what taught me boldness in the face of storms, it's what taught me all these different elements that are intangibles that if entrepreneurs can really tap into that, they can do some pretty unstoppable things. And I think you made the point in there that I completely agree with and have been talking about for a long time, which is the values, the belief structures, the opinions of the founder of leadership. Like, these things have to be shared in public domains. And the reason is not to build an audience or a personal brand or
Starting point is 00:41:00 whatever. You know, it goes much deeper than that, in my opinion. It signals, as you said, to the individuals who align with or aspire to those values, that this is a place that I can call home. And what it also does, and this is what I think a lot of the founders, business owners that I talked to that struggle with hiring. They struggle with hiring because one, they've never shared their value structure. Or if they have, they've shared it in a very corporatized PR paid branding kind of way. So what they get is people coming to the business who don't actually align with their actual values.
Starting point is 00:41:43 So it acts as a dual filtering system. You get people who align with or aspire with to your values, and the people who disagree with your values, they never show up. And, and you know, it's what you know, I thankfully in all the businesses that I've ever run at a top level have never had a problem hiring. And it's because I'm so vocal with what I believe, how I lead, you know, out front. So someone could go to my LinkedIn and be like, I want to work for this guy or I don't want to work for this guy. Exactly. Very obvious. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. And so maybe
Starting point is 00:42:19 how do you, how would you coach a founder, a CEO, etc. through the maybe if they have some emotional turmoil around being truly public, right? Like, I have no problem telling people I have conservative values. I believe in the American Constitution and I believe in the Bible, right? So most of my value structure is the Bible with the original intent of the US Constitution sitting on top of it, right? Like that's kind of my value structure. If you don't align with that, right? Yeah. That's great, but that's mine. So how do you walk them? But I get a lot of crap for that. People will be like, oh, you know, you know, well, you don't, you know, why would you tell people you're a conservative?
Starting point is 00:43:00 You know, you're going to turn off everyone who'd buy from you who's a liberal. And like, that's fine. I'm like, that doesn't bother me. Now, one, I don't think that's actually true because I, you know, but two, I think like, how do you become okay with that? Because a lot of people struggle with this. Well, I don't know, I'm, I'm known for being a little too, a little too transparent. Just in general, I just I wear my heart on my sleeve. I am who I am. And I've discovered that I like who I am. I am who I am and I've discovered that I like who I am when I am who I am. I discovered I don't like who I am when I'm not being who I am. Some close to me never refer to it as ego man versus spirit man. I like being spirit man. Spirit man's solid, grounded, rooted.
Starting point is 00:43:39 Ego man is concerned about scarcity and fear and all these types of things. The first thing I want to tell the founder is there's a big difference in filling a seat and filling a role. If you have a really well executed strategy, it's gonna define a role. That role then defines responsibilities. That is responsibilities then define the key KPIs
Starting point is 00:44:01 or key performance indicators, the metrics that are gonna be held to. Now, the one thing that I think is really interesting is I personally am like you, I would rather hire well than not. And you hire well based on culture fit. So yes, you're gonna attract people that share similar core values, things of that nature.
Starting point is 00:44:21 But let's say in this instance, let's say that there is a, at least in the political world, there's a disparity between one or the other. Okay. Okay, great. I use Jesus again. Jesus never forced himself on anybody. He also never shirked back from declaring this is what I believe the kingdom is heaven is like, right? Calling the Pharisees out, right? Like, like? Like helping everyone to come in contact with those actually in need. First one to say, I came for the sick, not the healthy, right? So if we just model that behavior, you can have an environment where there's
Starting point is 00:44:57 mutual respect, which is that's at the core of why there's no bridge built between multiple different disparities of various people groups is because no one's willing to just build a bridge. You build a bridge by modeling Jesus. Jesus accepted them for exactly who they are and then asked them point blankly, do your values align with mine? At least I think they, well, I think he uses process because he went around and said, oh, Peter, I want you. Andrew, I want you. Hey, John, I want you. Matthew, I know everybody else in the world hates you,
Starting point is 00:45:29 but I want you. Right. And he went around and uses the, he used that, that element. And I think you can do that in the workplace. Right. I had people working at my companies that didn't share my world values, but they shared my core values. My core values, honesty, respect, honor, collaboration, autonomy, integrity. If we could agree on the core values, then our worldviews may not have to match as much, because the core values actually built the bridge between the two worldviews. It actually allowed for collaborative conversation later on after some relationships built, some trust has been built.
Starting point is 00:46:12 Hey, I'm curious. Help me understand, how did you get to your position? What happened in your life that inspired you? You could start seeing how certain patterns of belief systems are formed when you're not so resistant to everybody else's and that's how you build bridges. I actually feel like part of my calling in this next season of life is to figure out a way to build bridges between different areas like I'm I historic I mean if it's biblical that's typically what I'm at, you know, kind of thing.
Starting point is 00:46:45 So up at the same time, I also realized that others have had different traumas of different circumstances and different influences. So much of what most of us believe was, was taught to us way early on. Very few of us go through the architecture or the deep dive of the rabbit holes. I chose to, because I found my faith through a process of compression as well as discovery. Like I can articulate how I got to where I got to, right? Most people can't do that, right? So how can you have a collaborative conversation to open that up? But you're not going to have that happen unless you can build
Starting point is 00:47:21 a bridge between core values, right? So honesty, respect, you start looking for those. And then you can bring you can still bring a team member in even though they may not share your worldview. Steven, this has been wonderful. I have enjoyed this conversation. And man, I mean, I, I take so I take notes, just for my own well being. And for those of you watch, my entire page is filled. I got lines and all kinds of stuff. This has been a masterclass, man. I feel like the hell out of you. So I am positive that people are gonna wanna get deeper into your world who are listening or watching the show. How do they do that? What's the best place?
Starting point is 00:47:57 You know, again, I'm so passionate about people becoming aligned so they can see with alignment, they have a better behavior set. Right. But the first piece of getting aligned is becoming truly self-aware. We created a tool and assessment. We call it the integrated alignment method. It's exactly how I got from point A to point, well, hopefully it's not Z yet,
Starting point is 00:48:20 like at least point M now, right. And, and how I now grow and scale companies and leaders based on integrated alignment, like actually being fully in. So I would invite them to go to stevenscoggins.com backslash alignment. They can take the assessment for free. It takes about six or seven minutes. It's not even super long. And best part is, I don't sell you anything. If you want to book a call after that, you can, but I don't sell you anything. This is strictly for you to become self-aware to start your journey. I'm on all the platforms of course but if you want to like engage with me through DMs on Instagrams I'm probably my best there it's just steven underscore scoggins so those are the two ways and dude thank you for let me share with your audience man I really appreciate it it's I know it's it's a process of selection like I'm highly selective with who I let on my
Starting point is 00:49:04 show as well. And I'm just super grateful that you allowed me to share today. Thank you. It was wonderful. It was absolutely wonderful. I mean that in the truest sense. And I just, I love the way you've actually, you know,
Starting point is 00:49:16 so, you know, I've been doing, I've been doing 400 plus episodes of the show. I, you know, if you go back to when I started podcasting, I've done like more than 2,000 interviews Which is a story for another day Talk about bad decisions made I had a show dude so so and guys you're listening to this you've probably heard it before but So I actually started a podcast in 2012 And grew it in two years to 2014
Starting point is 00:49:47 I was the number ninth overall show in all of Apple. I have a screenshot of Ed Mylett two ahead of me and Gary Vaynerchuk all of Apple, right? So this is like, and at the time I was doing 47,000 downloads a month. You can tell how much podcasting has grown in that time, right? Back then, I was the number nine overall show. And then I got, I took a job as a chief marketing officer, making more money than I'd ever made in my life for this company. And when they initially hired me,
Starting point is 00:50:11 they told me I could keep the podcast. And I was like, fucking great, this is awesome. And then two months in, all of a sudden that story changed and it was like, podcast has got to go or you got to go. And, you know, for a whole bunch of reasons, I wasn't making any money out of the podcast at that time, advertisers, whatever. So I let it go. And I think back and I'm like, holy crap, like, where would the show have been? I just kept it going. But that's a
Starting point is 00:50:35 story for a different day. That means you got to keep going now. That's all. Yeah, no. And all that being said, I love the way you framed some of these topics. And, and I just this this idea of alignment I've I've never had I've never had anyone on the show who spent so much time and an emphasis on this idea and really broken it down the way you did so guys I hope you picked that up I will have the links to everything Stephen just described whether you're watching on YouTube listening wherever you listen just scroll down you'll find the links highly recommend you connect as genuine a dude as I've connected with on the show. I just appreciate
Starting point is 00:51:08 a lot of you man. I appreciate it again I can't think enough for let me share with myself with you in the audience. It's an honor to be able to do this work now and I don't take it lightly and I try to offer value every single time I pop on somewhere and hopefully I left some stuff today some people changed. Definitely did bud.

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