Issue #16 · July 2026
This Week's Topic
The Founders Who Scale Are Not the Hardest Working.
They are the ones who figured out what only they can do, and then built everything else around protecting that work. Most founders never ask this question seriously enough.
6 minute read · Every Wednesday
Why I Am Writing This

There is a particular kind of exhaustion that comes not from working too much but from working on the wrong things. Most founders know this feeling. They are busy all day, every day, and still feel like the most important work is not getting done.

The founders who eventually scale past this are not the ones who find more hours. They are the ones who get ruthlessly clear on the one question that changes everything: what is the work that only I can do?

This week: Why that question is harder than it sounds, what gets in the way of answering it honestly, and what changes when you finally do.

She was working twelve hours a day and could not point to a single thing she had built that week. Not one decision that moved the company forward. She had spent the week in meetings, reviewing work, answering questions her team should have been able to answer without her.

When I asked her what she thought only she could do in her company, she paused for a long time. Then she listed six things. All six were things her team could have done with the right systems and the right level of trust. She had never actually identified the one or two things where her specific thinking, relationships, or vision genuinely could not be replaced.

This is the pattern I see most often. Founders stay involved in everything not because they are needed in everything, but because they have never done the uncomfortable work of deciding where they are truly irreplaceable and letting everything else go.

Why This Is Hard

Staying in the work feels productive. It looks like involvement. It feels like caring about the company. And in the early days, it was the right thing to do. The problem is that many founders never update the model. They keep doing what worked at ten employees when they have forty, because the habit of being involved in everything was rewarded for so long that stopping feels like failure.

There is also something deeper at work. For many founders, the work is the identity. If they let go of the operational work, who are they? This is not a practical question. It is a psychological one. And it is the real reason most founders hold on longer than they should.

Scaling a company requires a founder to go through a series of identity shifts. Each one involves giving up work they are good at, to make room for work only they can do.

Most founders resist each shift because they are comfortable with what they already know how to do. The things only they can do are usually harder, less defined, and more exposed. Staying busy with execution is easier than sitting with the uncertainty of vision, culture, or decisions that have no clear right answer.

From My Own Journey
The Work I Was Protecting That Was Not Worth Protecting

There was a period at VisionVoyage where I was doing work I was comfortable with and calling it necessary. Writing copy that someone else could write. Reviewing designs that did not need my eye. Sitting in calls that did not need my presence.

I told myself it was because quality mattered. What was actually happening was that this work felt safe. It had clear outcomes. I could do it well and feel productive. The work that only I could do, building the methodology, having the difficult conversations with clients, deciding what VisionVoyage actually stood for, was harder to measure and easier to postpone.

When I finally sat down and asked myself honestly what would break if I stepped away from each thing I was doing, the answer was almost nothing. Almost nothing required me. That was uncomfortable to face. It was also the most useful thing I had done in months.

Three Questions That Help
This Week's Tools
How to Find What Only You Can Do
1
If I disappeared for two weeks, what would actually break?
Not what would slow down or feel uncomfortable. What would genuinely break in a way that only your presence could prevent. Most founders are surprised to find that the list is shorter than they expected. The things that would break are usually the things that have never been properly handed over, not the things that actually require the founder. Those are different problems with different solutions.
2
What work do I do that no one in my team could do even with time and training?
This is a stricter test than it sounds. Most skills are learnable. Most relationships are transferable. Most decisions have frameworks that can be taught. When you apply this filter honestly, you are usually left with two or three things: your specific vision for what the company is becoming, the relationships that exist because of who you are personally, and the judgment calls that require your particular experience of this specific company. Everything else can be systematised or delegated.
3
What am I doing that I am holding onto for comfort rather than necessity?
This is the most important question and the hardest to answer honestly. Comfort work is the work you keep doing because you are good at it, because it gives you clear feedback, and because it feels productive even when it is not the highest use of your time. Every founder has it. Identifying it is not a criticism. It is the first step to making room for the work that actually moves the company forward.
This in Practice

Nithin Kamath built Zerodha into India's largest stockbroker without external funding and with a relatively small team. One of the things he has spoken about consistently is staying focused on the things that genuinely needed his attention, and building systems around everything else. The company did not scale because Nithin worked harder than every other founder in the space. It scaled because he was disciplined about where his attention actually created value.

This is not a story about working less. It is a story about working on the right things. The founders who scale are not the ones who figured out how to do more. They are the ones who got honest about what only they could do and protected that work fiercely, even when staying involved in everything else felt more comfortable.

This Week's Reflection

Write down everything you did this week. Against each item, ask: could someone else in my team have done this with the right support? Be honest. The items that are left after that filter are close to what only you can do. The rest is work worth handing over.

The hardest part of this is not finding what to let go of. It is accepting that letting go is not the same as not caring. The founders who scale are not less committed than the ones who do not. They are more honest about where their commitment actually creates value.

See you Wednesday.
Riddhi
Founder, VisionVoyage

Work Directly With Riddhi
Ready to go deeper than a newsletter?
The Resilient Founder · 12-week program for founders
The Bold You · 5-week program for professionals
Book a Discovery Call
₹99 for professionals · ₹499 for founders & senior leaders
Subscriber Perk
As a member of The Founder Within community, you will receive exclusive early access and a 5 to 10% discount on all VisionVoyage programs and products. Your spot in this newsletter is your membership.