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These questions might help you to identify where the focus should lie. In this article, I’ll show you how structuring your team depends on the current stage of your business.
Let us start by defining the stages of a company’s growth that exist, and afterward move to their differences and defining characteristics. And now — spoiler alert — be ready for some bits of theory. This serves as background information to better understand the approach I suggest in the second half of this article.
In the 1970s Larry Greiner, at that time a professor at Harvard Business School singled out six phases of the company’s growth:
Phase 1: growth through creativity
Here, the growth happens within a small team with informal internal communications. The team is mainly busy with the product-market fit. All decisions at this stage are taken by the founders.
Phase 2: growth through direction
The company keeps growing. New processes emerge. Founders hire new managers and they take the main decisions together.
Phase 3: growth through delegation
At this phase layers of hierarchy and new functions are added. Top management is less-involved in day-to-day operations and focuses more on long-term strategy. New managers are stepping in.
Phase 4: growth through coordination
The company becomes well-established within its industry. New policies and procedures are introduced to bring consistency to the company’s organizational scope.
Phase 5: growth through collaboration
The formal controls and bureaucracy that emerged in previous phases are replaced with a culture of trust and teamwork.
Phase 6: growth through alliances
Further growth happens through actions like partnerships, mergers, and acquisitions. During this phase existing processes are scaled to a certain degree, hence different parts of the company can end up at different development stages.
Later Dr. Ichak Kalderon Adizes, one of the most influential management thinkers, came up with a more elaborate model. In his book “Managing Corporate Lifecycles” he distinguished ten stages each company goes through, from its infancy to death.
I am only going to look at the first half of Adizes’ lifecycle as we are primarily interested in growth.
Stage 1: Courtship
All that is given at this stage is the would-be founder and his/her grandiose idea. Enthusiasm runs high, though there is no product, no company, and no team yet. To get to the next stage a founder needs to take risks and show commitment to his/her idea.
Stage 2: Infancy
Here, the founder gets a small team and shifts his focus from the idea to the tangible result. The idea’s viability is under the spotlight. There is no long-term strategy or structure yet, and no attention to the paperwork either. Decisions are mainly taken by the founder. Everyone works hard and tries to keep the business afloat. The cash flow is negative but there is a demand for the product. To get to the next stage the team should secure strong sales.
Stage 3: Go-Go
Though both the team and sales are growing, there is no profit. The company still lacks processes and hierarchy. The driving force stays with people who can react quickly to changing externals. The founder tries to chase any opportunity, this can negatively affect the product’s quality and overall effectiveness. Getting to the next stage is accompanied by the crisis that directly leads to the reorganization.
Stage 4: Adolescence
This controversial stage is marked by changes and conflicts. The company starts reaching profitability, whereas the sales growth is decreasing. Instead of following the “the more, the better” approach a company should focus more on its product’s quality and overall effectiveness. Professional managers join the company. The structure and certain rules are added. Although these rules are not always followed. At the moment, when the company finds its optimal balance between self-control and agility, the transition to a new stage takes place.
Stage 5: Prime
At this stage, everything comes together. There is finally a place for structure, clear vision, and values. Goals are clear, as well as resulting priorities and focus areas. Everyone follows a certain set of rules, sometimes even unwritten ones. Both profit and turnover are steadily growing. Decision-making is transparent. The company’s goal is to stay at this stage as long as possible whilst smoothly adjusting its internal rules depending on externals.
Stage 6: Stability
A healthy dose of stability and predictability dominates this stage. The biggest risk is to fall behind the market’s pace and get outdated. The company might be reluctant to invest in innovations. There is a comforting illusion that everything is under control. A slowdown occurs.
After that follow stages of the company’s death that we would not consider.
Idea
Everything starts with a founder’s vision, in his/her mind. At this stage, there is nothing else, only an idea.
Pre-seed
A founder gathers a small team - mainly consisting of analysts - and outlines the business plan. Next, a prototype is prepared to better demonstrate the idea to potential investors. The main goal is to secure the financing to further develop the sample product (read it as MVP, MLP, or any other concept that is closer to you).
Seed
A seed round that is also known as going from 0 to 1 as per Thiel (Peter Thiel, an entrepreneur, and investor who co-founded PayPal). The main goal is to find the product-market fit or in other words to convince the public of the product’s viability and secure first orders/payment transactions. The team is actively growing, there are people joining who have all the necessary skills to perform the first launch. There is not enough time for planning, and all decisions are taken immediately and in situ, by a close group of people. The idea is not to create the ideal product, but rather to test a hypothesis ASAP. At this stage, a team can pivot a business model several times - most importantly, do it quickly.
Death valley curve
A project is launched, and first sales have been recorded, though no sufficient revenue has been generated. The team can’t grow further as it does not have enough resources. The main goal here is to prove the viability of the business model. This is the most dangerous phase of new ventures, so many projects die at this point. Sometimes the company needs to roll one step back and make a new pivot.
Launch
A phase where you go from 1 to 10: your business model is working and investments are obtained. The company mainly focuses on product promotion. At this point, sales are essential. The company does not shift its focus toward the long-term strategy yet. As the team expands, bits of structure and business operations emerge.
Scale
A phase where you go from 10 to n: your business is growing rapidly. At this stage, we deal with the working business model. The company already has some users that speak for the product’s demand. The main goal is to look for breakeven results. The company obtains more managers. The organizational structure gets more clear and we can see a fully-fledged development strategy.
Maturity
Here, we see a mature business that offers us several growth scenarios:
Why did we do all that? Firstly, to embrace the scope and variety of business goals. Secondly, to see how those vary depending on a particular stage of business development. Now let us move to the main bit.
In my opinion, a product team is rather a function. It takes market demand as input and later comes up with a solution that can meet this demand.
I further consider all things from the perspective of a venture market as for the majority it is more common. Moreover, I’ve summarized all the models and it should be easy for you to switch from one to another.
Idea and pre-seed
At this stage everything is relatively easy: there is no actual product or team.
Now imagine the following: you join a project that has a raw idea - no clear financial mechanism or a first business plan draft - but it already has a product team (even if it only has one person). I have to warn you, you might waste your time testing some random off-base theories.
Seed
At the point when the idea is shaped and financing is obtained, a company transfers to a seed stage. It is now that a full product team enters the stage. When I refer to “full” I do not necessarily mean the number of actual specialists, but rather all competencies you might need to release the product. Saying that, it is still possible to work with one person only, who is just wearing several hats. If you have such a handyman around, lucky you!
What do Greiner, Adizes, and the venture market have in common?
Right, they all agree that at this stage creativity, speed, and flexibility are crucial. The main goal is to get a result, i.e. to prove the viability of the business model and to find a product-market fit. The visibility of the founder at the seed stage is still fairly immense, so if he/she possesses the necessary skills, he/she can also perform the role of a product manager. If it is not an option, then hiring the first and only one product manager won’t hurt.
Death valley curve
For me, this stage is about getting from 0 to 1. From the product-team perspective, there are no big changes here. Try also not to do extra hires if possible. Instead, stick to that energetic all-rounder who can help you to move fast towards the working business model.
Launch
As soon as you get the first sales and financing for further development, your product team starts growing fast. Oh well, because as it turns out many things were supposed to be done already yesterday, not today. But we remember that at this stage the main goal is still to get more sales by any price. Speed is key. The work is still built up around those several energetic guys who wear several hats.
As the team grows, you might need to lay out the first processes. If two guys could easily come to an agreement, ten people might start a ruleless discussion. In my opinion, when you need to organize the processes, try to focus on the current pains your team is facing. If we consider that you also should stay fast on top of it, the good solution here would be running some regular retrospectives.
Scale
Your product has started to bring in some profit. You actively look for breakeven results. Hence, you entered the stage of adolescence or went from 10 to n. According to Adizes, this stage is the most controversial one, full of conflicts. The team gets so big that there is a place for professional management, several formal rules, and first experiments with the organizational structure.
Whilst expanding, I suggest you keep an eye on successful product managers. These are key people in your team who can define the further success of this whole transition.
Maturity
So, you made it. Your company is steadily growing, it has a clear vision, coherent strategy, agreed goals, and transparent structure. You are not a start-up anymore, but rather a full-time business.
What happens now with the product team?
“You are as big as the problems you can handle”.