Case Study
How a founder-led firm built systems that removed the founder from daily execution
A strategic systems redesign case showing how operating discipline, role clarity, and process architecture freed the founder from being the bottleneck.
Founder-led professional services firm, 15+ staff, growing but fragile
Every escalation, quality issue, and client problem routed back to the founder
Operating system design, delegation infrastructure, and COO function creation
Measurable Outcomes
Daily decisions requiring founder
Decision authority levels created
Founder absence without disruption
What was actually going wrong
The founder was the default answer to every question. Quality checks, client calls, hiring decisions, pricing exceptions, and team conflicts all routed through one person. The firm could not grow because its operating model was the founder.
Why common fixes would have failed
Hiring a COO or operations manager without building the underlying systems would have created a new bottleneck instead of removing the old one. Delegation without infrastructure is just misdirection.
Redesign logic
- Audit all founder-dependent decisions and categorize by type
- Build SOPs for recurring decisions (pricing exceptions, escalations, quality gates)
- Design role-level ownership so the right people own the right problems
- Create a COO function before hiring a COO person
- Implement the Transferability Test: can this work move without the founder?
Strategic lessons
- Founder dependence is a systems problem, not a personality problem
- You need a COO function before you need a COO person
- The test of a well-designed firm: can it run for two weeks without the founder touching execution?