『The CEO Trap: Why Founders Either Check Out or Can't Let Go with Matt Nelson | Ep #899』のカバーアート

The CEO Trap: Why Founders Either Check Out or Can't Let Go with Matt Nelson | Ep #899

The CEO Trap: Why Founders Either Check Out or Can't Let Go with Matt Nelson | Ep #899

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Would you like access to our advanced agency training for FREE? https://www.agencymastery360.com/training Does growth break agencies or does it expose underlying issues? It happens more often that founders expect. Even with momentum, scrappy decisions, loose roles, and unspoken agreements eventually become the very thing that holds the business back. And by the time it's visible, it's no longer a small fix. It's structural. Today's featured guest pulls back the curtain on that transition. He dives into the messy reality of starting an agency, navigating partner exits, building leadership layers, and the constant internal battle founders face when trying to let go. This isn't about tactics, it's about identity, structure, and the discipline required to stop being the bottleneck. Matt Nelson is the owner of First Tracks Marketing, an agency specializing in e-commerce, web development, and digital marketing programs. Unlike many agencies that niche down aggressively, Matt has built his firm around a repeatable process that adapts across industries. Over the years, he transitioned from being an employee to the sole owner, buying out partners, rebuilding the company's structure, and installing a leadership team that allows him to step back from day-to-day operations. In this episode, we'll discuss: How he learned to create a proper framework for a partner exit The lack of vision in his agency's early days The most significant shift: A leadership layer Two CEO traps that mess with the agency's growth Subscribe Apple | Spotify | iHeart Radio Sponsors and Resources E2M Solutions: Today's episode of the Smart Agency Masterclass is sponsored by E2M Solutions, a web design and development agency that has provided white-label services for the past 10 years to agencies all over the world. Check out e2msolutions.com/smartagency and get 10% off for the first three months of service. Toggl: Most agencies are losing 15–30% of their profit every year: lack of time tracking, messy manual timesheets, scope creep, untracked revisions, and all those "quick" client requests that never get billed. Toggl has created a fast, interactive way to uncover exactly where your margins are leaking. Start your investigation now at toggl.com/smartagency and use the code SMARTAGENCY10 at checkout for a 10% off annual plans. A Reactive Start That Created Complexity Down the Line Matt didn't start his agency with a grand strategy. Like many founders, it began out of frustration, leaving a poorly run agency and deciding to "figure it out" on his own. In his case, he worked at an agency that resisted change. In 2008, they still regarded digital work as a fad they would outlast. This frustrated Matt, who sensed this technology was the future of agencies. He wasn't the only one who felt this way, so he joined a couple of co-workers who decided to leave, rented an office across the street, and started their own business. This group had the vision but lacked structure, and this was evident early on. There were no operating agreements, unclear roles, and partners bringing in uneven value. At the time, it worked because momentum masked the problems. But as the business grew, those gaps became liabilities. This is where most founders get caught. They assume early success equals a solid foundation. In reality, early-stage growth often hides structural weaknesses, until scale forces those issues to the surface. If you don't build structure early, you'll pay for it later, either in painful partner exits, stalled growth, or both. Partner Misalignment Is a Structural Risk, Not a Personal Issue As the current sole owner, Matt has had to navigate multiple partner exits in the years since joining the business as an employee. These mostly happened not because of conflict, but because of misalignment. Different timelines. Different expectations. Different levels of contribution. The first exit was messy because there was no framework. There was no agreement or predefined process. Just emotion and negotiation. The second exit was different. By then, they had implemented an operating agreement, defined terms, and created a clear path for transition. That structure turned what could have been chaos into a controlled process. Most founders avoid these conversations early because things feel "fine." But without clear agreements, you're building risk into the business from day one. Why Lack of Vision Breaks Agencies Before Matt became the sole owner, the agency lacked a clear direction. They were doing good work and clients were happy. But there was no defined trajectory. That's a dangerous place to be. When there's no vision, the business defaults to activity. Projects get done. Revenue comes in. But nothing compounds. Matt's turning point came when he pushed for a strategic shift, relocating the agency to access better talent and reduce costs. He was thinking beyond execution and into positioning, hiring, and scalability. This is where founders ...
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