Part 1 of 7:
The 7 Systems Every Founder Must Build
Most businesses start with a simple reality: the founder is the salesperson.
In the early stages of a company, especially when revenue is under a couple of million dollars, the founder usually has to drive sales personally. Cash flow has to come in, and there isn’t a team yet to carry that responsibility. So the founder sells.
At first, this works.
But eventually, it becomes the biggest barrier to growth.
Many founders reach a point where the business depends almost entirely on them to bring in revenue. They are the rainmaker. They know the customers. They know how to close deals. They are the ones prospects want to talk to.
The problem is simple. When the founder stops selling, the pipeline slows down or stops entirely.
That is what I call wearing the sales hat. And most founders wear it much longer than they should.
Through the years, I’ve noticed there are generally two types of owners.
Neither situation is scalable:
In both cases, the company becomes dependent on one person.
I once worked with an owner running a chemical distribution company. He had around 15 to 20 employees and about $3 million in revenue.
On paper, the business looked healthy. But behind the scenes, he was doing all the sales.
His wife helped with the accounting. His daughter had dance recitals he often missed because he was out selling. He had big dreams for the company, but couldn’t move forward because every new deal depended on him.
This story is incredibly common. The founder wants to grow, but they can’t step away from selling long enough to lead the company strategically. They are trapped in the very role that built the business.
A founder-dependent business is really just a job.
If revenue stops when the owner stops selling, then the business hasn’t become a scalable organization yet.
True companies operate differently.
They have:
In those businesses, revenue does not rely on one individual.
That’s when the founder can finally shift roles, from salesperson to CEO.
When founders remove themselves from daily selling, two important things happen.
First, the company becomes capable of growing faster. A team can produce far more revenue than a single individual.
Second, the business becomes a real asset.
When a company runs independently, with systems, managers, and teams, it becomes far more attractive to buyers, investors, or future successors.
Instead of buying a job, someone is buying a functioning company.
That distinction changes everything.
The purpose of systemizing sales is not to eliminate the founder’s influence.
It’s to make the business repeatable.
That means taking what currently lives inside the founder’s head and turning it into processes others can follow.
Once that happens, employees or contractors can run the system.
Sales becomes a department instead of a person.
And the founder can finally step into the role they should have been in all along, leading the business instead of carrying it.
Removing the sales hat doesn’t happen overnight.
There is a clear sequence required to make it work.
In the next article, we’ll walk through the first and most important step in the process:
Documenting the sales process and building a sales playbook that others can follow.
Without that foundation, hiring salespeople rarely works.
With it, a company can finally start scaling.