Friday, April 10, 2026

Deciding to Go

[Editor's Note: The decision to become an extraordinary company is not coincidence or happenstance. Rather it is a conscious choice. Shouldn't you be great at what you do? Shouldn't you decide to become the company your customers can't live without? Some companies have remained defensive, chastened by the shock of the early pandemic months. I thought this article that I first published several years ago was appropriate for these times with Artemis in mid-mission -dpm]

Author and speaker Joe Calloway opens many of his presentations with a story from the movie Apollo 13: "The movie opens with a gathering of astronauts to watch Neal Armstrong who is about to become the first human being to walk on the moon. As we hear Armstrong's immortal words, 'One small step for man; one giant leap for mankind,' the mood becomes quiet, even reverential. ...Shortly after the broadcast, the party breaks up and everyone goes their separate ways, Jim Lovell, who is played by Tom Hanks, is alone with his wife, Marilyn in their backyard. Looking up at the moon, Lovell says, 'From now on, we live in a world where man has walked on the moon. It's not a miracle. We just decided to go."

Calloway makes the point that the first step that great companies make is the deliberate decision to pursue greatness. Many organizations talk about change. Sometimes companies will orchestrate management retreats, spending two or three days at some resort developing great ideas in a sea of flip chart paper and white boards. Six months later, everyone wonders, "What happened to those great ideas we had."

Strategic Planning without a "Decision to GO" is a waste of time

Decide to go... or go home. Strategic planning without a "decision to go" is a waste of time. You might think it peculiar that a company like ours would make such a statement. After all, The Mead Consulting Group helps companies develop and execute strategy. But, after more than 35 years helping companies, we have learned that it is the commitment to ACTION that determines success. "Deciding to go" is the biggest differentiator among companies.

What many people don't know (or likely are too young to remember) is that when President John F. Kennedy made the statement in May 1961 that the U.S. would put a man on the moon by the end of the decade, it was simply not another political speech. He rallied support in all sectors of government and the country. He helped us all see that this was a major commitment that was worthy of our time, resources, and commitment. He helped us "decide to go." You might say that President Kennedy created what Jim Collins ("Good to Great") calls a BHAG - a Big Hairy Audacious Goal. 

Processes Institutionalize commitment

Motivating the populace was just the start. We needed processes and plans to achieve such a feat. After all, at the time of Kennedy's statement, the U.S. space program had not even managed to orbit the earth. To speak of going to the moon struck some as an impossible task. It would have been an impossible task if significant changes were not put in place. NASA and the other key organizations worked together to put organizations, plans, people, and processes in place.

Research shows that not a day went by that at President Kennedy did not inquire about some facet of this commitment - notes to the Vice President about funding from Congress, encouraging commitment to math and science education, speeches to keep the issue in front of the American people - making us all feel proud to play a part in this journey. 

Along the way, it became OUR goal. It was the processes and daily commitment of many people - at all levels - that made it work. Kennedy was alive for only the first 1000 days of the journey. During that time he helped us make this BHAG ours. Then we took it the rest of the way.

Become the best at what you do

Organizations define themselves - set their own limits. Leadership helps paint the picture for greatness. It is too easy for small and mid-size companies to say that "we're only a small company" or "we sell undifferentiated, unglamorous products." With that attitude, why bother getting out of bed in the morning. A mentor of mine once told me, "There are no boring jobs, only boring people." What he meant was that people need to be inspired. If you have an undifferentiated product or service, whose fault is that? Do something to transform the customer experience. 

Develop a big goal. Then go make it happen. The successful companies are focused on the daily details to accomplish that big goal. Everyone wants to be part of something great.

Become the best at what you do - whatever it is. Make the Decision to Go!

Friday, April 3, 2026

Why Some Companies Grow — And Others Get Stuck

 

 Over 40 years of consulting at The Mead Consulting Group with hundreds of private companies, I've seen a clear pattern: industry, size, and the economy aren't what determine success. The real difference comes down to how companies are led and built.

 Here are 8 traits that separate growth companies from the rest:

 1. Be clear: Lifestyle or Equity Value? Are you running the business for cash flow and personal flexibility — or building something with scalable, sellable value? Neither is wrong, but straddling both guarantees you'll underperform on each. See the article Which Do You Have – a Lifestyle Business or an Equity Value Business? It’s Important to Know the Difference

 2. Empower your employees. Companies can't grow beyond a certain point if all real decisions stay with the owner. Growth companies build cultures where people can make decisions — and learn from mistakes.

 3. Hire for the next level. Don't just hire for today's needs. Bring in talent that can manage 1–2 levels higher. Paying more for top talent more than pays for itself.

 4. Develop flexible strategies you can execute well. Ditch the rigid annual plan. Some companies revisit strategy every 8–12 weeks. The best companies rehearse responses to multiple future scenarios through periodic scenario planning exercises.

 5. Build an adaptable organization. Create a culture and leadership team that can react quickly and course-correct when the market shifts.

 6. Focus on a superior customer experience. Call it "emotionally connected" clients or "under-promise, over-deliver." Growth companies build systems to wow the customer at every touchpoint.

 7. Play offense, not defense. Years of cost-cutting creates a culture of "NO." Growth companies replace it with "HOW" - constantly testing new models, products, and projects.

 8. Develop a Board of Advisors to help you think through key decisions.

 The bottom line: Examine your company honestly. Are you living these traits — or just surviving?

 ________________________

 

 The Mead Consulting Group helps dozens of companies and organizations -like yours - every year with both strategic planning & execution, strategic business coaching, and preparing to maximize value in an exit. Clients that utilize these processes consistently outperform their competition.

 If you would like to discuss your situation, please contact me to set up a complimentary meeting. Dave Mead at (303)660-8135 or meaddp@meadconsultinggroup.com.

 

Best regards,

Dave Mead

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Which Do You Have – a Lifestyle Business or an Equity Value Business?

 It’s Important to Know the Difference

In speaking to a group of business owners recently about defining their business vision, I suggested that they be clear about whether they want an "equity value business" or a "lifestyle business", because the way they approach building a business would be very different depending on how they will define success. 

 The Lifestyle Business. The term “lifestyle entrepreneur” was coined in 1987 by William Wetzel, a director emeritus of the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire. Mr. Wetzel was using it then to describe ventures unlikely to generate economic returns robust enough to interest outside investors. In financial jargon, “there's no upside potential for creating wealth," he explains.

 "Lifestyle ventures are usually ventures that are run by people who like being their own bosses," Wetzel says. "But they're in it for the income as well. Indeed, lifestyle entrepreneurs offer a different...view of success than those who are mainly focused on longer-term wealth accumulation.

 Lifestyle businesses are businesses that are set up and run by their founders primarily with the aim of sustaining a particular level of income and little more; or to provide a foundation from which to enjoy a particular lifestyle. Some types of enterprises are more accessible than others to the would-be lifestyle business person. Those requiring extensive capital are difficult to launch and sustain on a lifestyle basis; others such as small “creative” businesses are more practical for sole practitioners or small groups such as husband-and-wife teams.

 Lifestyle businesses typically have limited scalability and potential for growthIn conventional business terms, lifestyle businesses typically have limited scalability and potential for growth because such growth would impair the lifestyle for which their owner-managers set them up. However, a lifestyle business can and do win awards and provide satisfaction to its owners and customers. These are firms that depend heavily on founder skills, personality, energy, and contacts. Often their founders create them to exercise personal talent or skills, achieve a flexible schedule, work with other family members, remain in a desired geographic area, or simply to express themselves. But without the founder’s deep personal involvement, such businesses are likely to, well, founder. Professional investors therefore rarely get involved with lifestyle businesses. A lifestyle business is also one that can allow the owner to call his/her own shots and to move at his/her own pace. It’s a business that fits his/her current way of living rather than dictating how things ought to be done. For millions of people, these sorts of small ventures are an excellent way to “do what you love.”

 The Equity or Value Business. Equity can be defined as: A company's assets, less its liabilities, which are the property of the owner or shareholders.  Popularly, equities are stocks and shares which do not pay interest at fixed rates but pay dividends based on the company's performance. The value of equities tends to rise over the long term, but in the short term they are a risk investment because prices can fall as well as rise.

 An equity or value business is one where the owner intends to build real assets with a grow-able, tangible value that can be bought and sold - either as shares or the entire business. Success would be defined as the increase in value of the business over time. These businesses by definition will be built to succeed without the presence of the owner(s). In many cases, current lifestyle of the founder/owner is sacrificed in order to build significant long term value. In equity value businesses, owners focus more on building value as seen by potential buyers: sustained improvements in revenue/EBITDA, strong management team that can operate and grow the business without the owner’s constant involvement,


By contrast, a lifestyle business is one where the entrepreneur seeks to generate an "adequate" income while living where s/he wants, doing what s/he loves, or having the flexibility to be around when the kids or grandkids come home from school or take long weekends in the winter to go skiing. Success would be defined as an increase in satisfaction with one's life over time.

It’s imperative to decide which one you are. These are very different scenarios. "Equity value or lifestyle" is one of those fundamental decisions you should make early in your company’s history. If you're contemplating going into business with a partner, determine if you both would answer the same way. So why is it important to decide? Businesses that do not have a clear understanding of the type of business they want – and are prepared to suffer inferior returns. Going down a path that straddles both lifestyle and equity value camps is sure to generate both lower current cash (compensation for the owners) as well as lower growth and value potential (lower equity value). Consider one company with an innovative product in the education products space. The founder had a stated goal of building a value business. However, actions demonstrated to key employees and managers that the true motives of the founder were to facilitate lifestyle. A confused culture prevailed. Top employees and managers interested in growth left the company, leaving a cadre of lower performers, interested in maintaining the status quo. The company growth and profitability lagged and the company ceded its leadership position to more aggressive competitors. In the end this company accomplished neither growth in value nor an exceptional lifestyle for the owners.

 Be honest with yourself about your appetite for risk, your need for autonomy, your desire for current compensation. In the end, neither is good or bad. It's just, which one is for you?