『S1/E11: Dr. Diane Dye and Michael Buzinski - Get Out of Your Own Way: How to Build a Business That Doesn't Need You』のカバーアート

S1/E11: Dr. Diane Dye and Michael Buzinski - Get Out of Your Own Way: How to Build a Business That Doesn't Need You

S1/E11: Dr. Diane Dye and Michael Buzinski - Get Out of Your Own Way: How to Build a Business That Doesn't Need You

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What You'll Discover in This Episode Why a useful owner has a useless company — and what to do about itThe five founder masks that keep you trapped and away from your visionWhy ego and imposter syndrome are the same problem wearing different facesThe Founder Quadrant: which of the four roles are you actually playing right now?How to reverse-engineer yourself out of your own company — one task at a timeThe 80% rule: why "good enough" from your team is better than perfect from youWhat psychological safety has to do with your revenue ceilingThe one 30-minute practice that unlocks what truly drives your people Episode Highlights [03:14] Dr. Diane opens with a sharp distinction: bravery puts you at personal risk. Business does that every single day. [06:30] Buzz drops his core thesis immediately: "A useful owner has a useless company." If everything passes through you, you are the bottleneck — and the ceiling. [07:56] The revenue wall. Most service-based businesses hit $2–3M and stall. Why? The founder is still the main gear in the revenue engine. [12:03] The emotional trap. Older founders especially feel threatened by "letting go" — as if delegation means irrelevance. Buzz reframes it: every minute on tasks others could own is time stolen from your real vision. [15:14] Dr. Diane introduces the BRAVER Innovation™ Framework, starting with B: Belief and Bias. The masks founders wear — Driver, Hero, Perfectionist, Protector, Visionary — all share one fatal flaw: the belief that only you can do it well enough. [18:47] The 80% rule. Your team will do things 80% as well as you — until you actually let them own it. Then they'll exceed you. Hovering guarantees they never will. [22:26] Ego and imposter syndrome are mirror images of the same trap. One says I know best. The other says they'll find out I don't. Both lead to identical behavior: you never let go. [28:52] The Founder Quadrant exercise. Draw a 2x2. Label the boxes: Employee, Self-Employed, Owner, Investor. Be honest about which box you actually live in — then start emptying the ones below you. [33:11] Buzz's book: Build a Founder Free Revenue Engine. The stats are sobering: 98% of businesses between $1M–$3M never break $3M. Only 1% of those who do will reach $10M. The culprit is almost always the same. [36:54] Dr. Diane brings her dissertation research into the conversation: psychological safety is the unlock. One-to-one, judgment-free, two-way — not a performance review, not a check-in. Just presence. [39:17] Buzz's 30-minute practice: give each direct report 30 unstructured minutes. They control it entirely. No agenda, no questions from you. When they run out of work topics, they'll start talking about what actually drives them. That's your roadmap. [44:24] Buzz references The Five Languages of Appreciation in the Workplace — the business translation of the five love languages. Time, words of affirmation, acts of service — knowing which one your people speak changes everything. [49:38] Closing frame: you don't eat the elephant in one bite. One step at a time gets you there faster than trying to change everything at once. Resources Mentioned Michael "Buzz" Bazinski — Founder, Buzzworthy; top 12 marketing podcast host; American Marketing Association "Visionary Marketer"Build a Founder Free Revenue Engine by Michael Bazinski — free PDF, no credit card requiredTraction by Gino Wickman — EOS framework (Visionary + Integrator model)The Five Languages of Appreciation in the Workplace by Gary Chapman & Paul WhiteBrave Business Mastercast — Live every Monday at 11 AM Eastern on LinkedIn, YouTube, X, and Instagram The BRAVER Innovation™ Framework — B: Belief & Bias Your beliefs are the operating system running underneath every business decision you make. Before any strategy, system, or hire — you have to look at what you believe to be true about yourself, your company, and who is capable of carrying it forward. The Five Founder Masks The Driver — Gets you to seven figures. Becomes the ceiling that keeps you there. High output, high control, high cost. The Hero — Steps in when things go wrong. Creates a team that stops solving problems and starts waiting to be rescued. The Perfectionist — Maintains standards. Kills delegation. Nothing is ever good enough to hand off. The Protector — Guards the company, the people, the legacy. Unintentionally guards it from the very growth it needs. The Visionary (misapplied) — Powerful when freed up. Destructive when used as an excuse to stay involved in everything. The question: which mask are you wearing — and what are you protecting yourself from by keeping it on? The Founder Quadrant Draw a 2x2 grid. Label the four boxes: Employee (top left) — You're executing tasks. You have a job inside your own company. Self-Employed (bottom left) — You guide the ship, but it can't move without you. Owner (top right) — You have systems and people, but your approval is still the ...
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