Issue #05 · April 2026
This Week's Topic
Why Brilliant Founders Lose Their Best People
It's rarely about money. It's rarely about the role. Here's what's actually happening when your best hire starts pulling away.
7 minute read · Every Wednesday
Why I Am Writing This

The founders I work with are not, on the whole, difficult people. They are smart, driven, and deeply committed to what they're building. And yet, some of the most capable ones have watched their best hires walk out the door without fully understanding why it happened.

The Founder Within exists to surface the inner dynamics that drive outer outcomes. And this one, the pattern of how founders lose the people who could have helped them build something great, is one I see more often than any other.

This week: What is actually behind early attrition among high performers, why founder behaviour is almost always a factor, and three things you can shift right now.

He was describing his team to me with genuine pride. Eight people, all strong, most overqualified for what they'd joined to do. Then, almost as an aside: three of them had left last quarter. He still couldn't figure out why.

Two of the three had gone quiet about four months before they left. Not dramatically, just quieter in meetings, slower to volunteer. Each gave a different reason when they resigned. The real reason was simpler and harder to hear: the environment around the work had stopped feeling safe enough to do it well.

But before we get to why people leave, there is a question that does not get asked often enough: were they the right hire for a startup in the first place? Hiring for a startup and hiring for a corporate are genuinely different exercises. A corporate needs professionalism and the ability to operate within defined structures. A startup needs ownership by default, people who figure things out without a playbook, who stay curious when the answer is uncomfortable, and who take initiative before anyone asks. That is not a bonus in a startup. It is the baseline.

The fit has to be right before the leadership can matter. When someone built for certainty lands in a startup, no amount of good management fully compensates. And when the right person lands in the right startup, they grow faster than they ever would have elsewhere.

What's Actually Happening

But assume you got the hire right. The person is a natural fit for the pace, the ambiguity, the ownership the role demands. They join energised. And then, somewhere in the first few months, something starts to shift. People don't leave jobs. They leave managers, and more specifically, they leave the experience of not knowing what version of their manager they're going to get today. For a high performer, that unpredictability is more costly than a salary gap. It consumes energy. It creates hesitation where there should be momentum.

Founders are prone to this, not because they're poor leaders, but because the startup environment is high-pressure and under pressure most people narrow. They become more reactive, less generous with information, more focused on the problem in front of them and less present to the people around them. That's not a character flaw. It's a stress response. But your team experiences it as a signal: this person is not steady enough to follow right now.

The hire who seemed so motivated in month one doesn't suddenly lose ambition. They lose confidence that this particular place, with this particular leader in this particular state, is worth their best effort.

High performers don't leave bad companies. They leave unpredictable environments.

The most capable people on your team have options. They are not staying because they can't leave. They are staying because something about this place, this work, this leader, is worth the uncertainty. The moment that calculation shifts, they start looking. And they rarely tell you until they've already decided.

The Startup Reality

Startups are not for everyone, and there is nothing wrong with saying that clearly. The pace is real. The pressure is real. There are weeks where priorities shift mid-stride, where the thing you were hired to build gets deprioritised, where the comfort of a clear job description feels very far away. If someone needs structure and predictability to do their best work, a startup is probably not the right environment for them right now. That is not a judgment. It is just honest.

But here is what that same environment offers, and what I think too few people in early careers are told plainly: the learning curve at a good startup is unlike anything a large company can give you. You get your hands into everything. You see how decisions get made, how products get built, how a company navigates the gap between vision and reality. You contribute to something from the ground up, and that contribution is visible in a way it rarely is inside a large organisation. The skills and instincts you develop in two years at the right startup can take ten years to accumulate inside a structured corporate environment.

As a career coach, this is something I feel strongly about. The founders and professionals I have worked with who grew the fastest were almost always the ones who, at some point, chose a startup or mid-size company over a bigger name. The role was larger than the title suggested. The responsibility arrived before they felt ready. And that gap, between readiness and responsibility, is where real growth lives.

So if you are a founder reading this: be honest with candidates about what the environment is. The right person will not be put off by it. They will lean in. And if you are someone considering a startup role: do not let the uncertainty be the thing that stops you. Let it be the thing that tells you whether you are the right fit.

From My Own Journey
What I Had to Unlearn Before I Could Lead

When you spend years building something as a solopreneur, you get very good at doing everything yourself. That self-sufficiency feels like a strength, and in many ways it is. But when you start bringing people in, that same instinct becomes a problem. Delegation does not occur to you, not because you are consciously resisting it, but because the habit of doing is so deep that it does not even register as a choice.

It took me longer than I would like to admit to understand that delegation was not just about distributing tasks. It was about deciding which things only I could do, and trusting others with everything else. The first few times I tried it did not go well. I hired people, gave them work, and then quietly redid parts of it because I was not sure they had what the situation needed. Which meant I had not actually delegated anything. I had just created a more complicated way of doing it myself.

What I learned, slowly and through a fair amount of trial, was that the problem was not the people I was hiring. It was that I had not been clear enough about where we were going. A leader's primary job is to hold a clear vision. When the vision is clear, people know what good looks like without being told every time. They can make decisions independently because they understand the direction, not just the task. When the vision is unclear or keeps shifting, even excellent people cannot perform well, because they are spending their energy second-guessing rather than building.

The hires that worked out were the ones I brought in after I had done that internal work. Not after I had perfect systems or a complete roadmap, but after I had a clear enough picture of where I was taking the company that I could communicate it simply. Once that existed, I could see clearly what I needed in the people around me, what to give them, and how to create conditions where they could actually grow. The focus shifted from getting things done to making sure that every person I hired was growing alongside the company. That shift changed everything.

Three Things Worth Shifting
This Week's Tools
What High Performers Actually Need from a Founder
1
Consistency over intensity
High performers don't need a founder who is always on. They need one who is reliably present. Intensity spikes and disappears, and the team spends energy tracking your state rather than doing their work. Same feedback style whether it's a good week or a hard one. Same availability whether a big deal just closed or just fell through. That steadiness is not weakness. It is the foundation people build confidence on.
2
Give context, not just direction
Talented people need to understand why, not just what. When a founder gives direction without context, capable hires start to feel like executors rather than contributors. You don't need to share everything. But you do need to share enough that the people doing the work understand how it connects to what you're building. That context is what converts a job into a stake in something.
3
Have the conversation before it becomes a resignation
Most founders wait for the exit interview to understand what went wrong. By then, the decision is made. The real conversation happens six months earlier, when someone starts going quiet in meetings, when a usually engaged person stops asking questions, when the energy shifts in a way you notice but don't address. That moment is the window. Not to fix everything. Just to ask, honestly: how are you finding this? What's working? What isn't? The founders who hold onto great people are the ones who don't wait to have that conversation.

None of this is about being a softer leader or lowering expectations. The best teams run on high expectations and high trust together. The expectation without the trust is where people burn out. The trust without the expectation is where people coast. The founder sets the tone for both, and that tone starts long before any conversation about performance.

This Week's Reflection

Think of the strongest person on your team right now. Do they know, concretely, that you see what they're contributing? And when did you last have a conversation with them that wasn't about a task?

The cost of losing a great hire is rarely calculated honestly. It's not just the time to replace them. It's the momentum that leaves with them, the institutional knowledge, the relationships they'd built, the trust the rest of the team had placed in seeing someone good stay.

Retention is not an HR problem. It is a leadership problem. And leadership, at the founder stage, starts with what you do with your own internal state before you walk into a room with your team.

Next week, we get into something that trips up even the most self-aware founders: how to make a good decision when you have almost no time, almost no data, and a lot riding on getting it right.

See you Wednesday.
Riddhi
Founder, VisionVoyage

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