180 Degree Turn

I’ve said this more times than I can count—on LinkedIn, in newsletters, on coaching calls:

“Fire bad clients.”
“Don’t work 16-hour days.”
“Systemize, don’t improvise.”
“Founders should work more ON the business, and less IN it.

But last week, I said the opposite. 

I flipped. 180 degree turn.

Because, every piece of advice — even mine — is only useful if it matches the phase you’re in.

On a clarity call last week, I had an interesting conversation. The founder was reading all the tips and techniques online. But when he tried applying them, he kept hitting a wall.

He wasn’t doing anything wrong.

He was just hearing the right advice—at the wrong time.

First You BUILD, then You OPTIMIZE

Every founder goes through two phases.

Build -> Scale

Here’s the difference that matters.

The BUILD Phase

  • You’re still validating offers and figuring out your USP.
  • Revenue is lumpy and mostly founder-driven.
  • Most clients come from hustle, referrals, or your connections.
  • You say yes to almost everything — you have to.
  • Processes and systems feel pointless—because the way you work keeps changing every week.
  • Cash is inconsistent; you plan month to month.
  • You’re still figuring out what works.

This is the messy, learn-fast, build-fast phase.
Speed > structure. Sales > systems. Survival > scalability.

The SCALE Phase

  • You know what you sell — and why people buy.
  • You have a clear product/market or offer/market fit.
  • Client work follows a repeatable structure.
  • You can afford to say no — because you know what’s profitable.
  • You have a team (even small) owning delivery or ops.
  • Cash collection is predictable and reliable.
  • Cash reserves give you breathing room.

If you’re in Build → hustle with intention.
If you’re in Scale → optimize to grow.

What works in Build breaks in Scale—and vice versa. 

Each phase demands a completely different playbook.
Transitioning from Build to Scale needs a 180 degree turn in the way you operate.

Build vs. Scale: Which Game Are You Playing?

Here’s how I define the two phases that every founder passes through:

Take This 3-Second Poll, and Tell Me..

Which Phase Are You in Right Now?

  • BUILD — Validating. Scrappy. Fast.
  • SCALE — Refining. Optimizing. Growing.

I will go deeper into whichever phase gets the most response. Your vote counts!

The Mistake First-Time Founders Make

They try to optimize a business that’s not fully built yet

They hear “fire bad clients” — but they’ve only got two.
They hear “delegate ops” — but haven’t figured out repeatable delivery.
They hear “don’t hustle” — but haven’t built enough momentum to slow down.

Advice that’s true at one stage…is dangerous at another.

You don’t systematize chaos.
You don’t “buy back your time” before your offer prints cash.
You don’t scale what doesn’t exist yet.

What To Do Instead

Know your phase. And play that game, well.

If you’re in Build Mode:

  • Say yes more often (even to difficult clients — for now)
  • Work harder than feels sustainable (this is your sprint)
  • Treat every project as feedback to refine your offer

If you’re in Scale Mode:

  • Say no with clarity.
  • Guard your calendar. Protect your energy.
  • Build systems. Reduce founder dependency.
  • Double down on your USP. Make it unforgettable.

The systems, habits, and mindset that fuel growth in Build often become bottlenecks in Scale. 

Each phase requires you to be a different kind of leader.
And if you don’t evolve —your business can’t either.

The Hardest Part?

Most founders don’t realize which phase they’re in—until they’re stuck.
Or they try to leap into Scale using Build-mode instincts… and burn out.

If you’re navigating this transition—the messy middle—
That’s where I help.

📚 From My Bookshelf:

Actionable insights from books that transformed me and how I built.

Book: Building a Story Brand

Most founders struggle to position their product.

  • Their websites talk about their journey.
  • Their decks highlight their process.
  • Their offers emphasize their features.

But customers don’t care about your story.
They care about solving their problem.

In this article, I talk about how to clarify your core brand message and build your one-liner that sells. 

Read the article here →

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