Peer Effect

Becoming a Strategic CEO and Empowering Your Team, with Rob Volk

James Johnson Season 3 Episode 5

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0:00 | 24:40

This week, we’re joined by Rob Volk, founder of Foxbox Digital, a leader in tech consultancy and digital transformation. 

Rob shares profound insights on the shift from hands-on founder to strategic CEO and the crucial strategies that drive sustainable business growth.

In this episode, we explore:

  • The art of letting go of control as to empower and build trust within your team. 
  • Managing your energy as a founder for sustainable growth. 
  • Cultivating a culture of deep focus to promote productivity and autonomy.

Rob's experience illustrates the challenges and triumphs of expanding a startup into a thriving business. His strategies for fostering a culture of empowerment and focusing on scalable growth are invaluable for any entrepreneur stepping into a CEO role.

Discover more about Rob Volk’s work at Foxbox Digital or follow him on LinkedIn for more exciting insights.

More from James:

Connect with James on LinkedIn or at peer-effect.com 


Founder's Transition From Control to Empowerment

Speaker 1

Welcome to Peer Effect , the podcast that fuels you with new ideas and inspiration through interviews with founders and experts who have made it happen . I'm your host , james Johnson , and I coach Series A Plus founders to take back control , propel their businesses and live a fulfilling life . Today , we're privileged to sit down with Rob Volk , visionary founder of Foxbox Digital , a tech consultancy at the forefront of digital transformation and innovation . In this episode , he opens up about the strategies that propelled his company's growth and the pivotal lessons on leadership and adaptation . Let's dive in .

Speaker 2

So you know , in the beginning , right , we all were creating , we're doing everything and everything is in our vision . And what I found is , as you grow , you really have to learn to let go of control and you have to be okay with obviously empowering people , but then being okay with the decisions they make not exactly the thing that you would do . And that's all right , it's probably a fine decision . It's probably a better decision than what you would have done , because you've probably hired some great people to run the organization or parts of it .

Speaker 2

So , I found that really just letting go of control is critical , because you want people to be empowered they have to be . You also have to be okay with things failing , especially in the beginning beginning right , if you've recently empowered someone to take over , right , they're . They're going to make mistakes in the beginning , that's okay . Hopefully they'll be small . Hopefully you can recover , and you probably can in the beginning . So it's it's good to learn to let go of control I wonder whether you end up controlling in a different way .

Speaker 1

So sort of , there's control by how task is done and there's control by how a task is done and there's control in terms of what outcomes you're after . And I wondered you shift into that growth phase as a founder . You move away from controlling the how and a bit more into controlling the what and the outcome .

Speaker 2

Yeah , certainly that's the goal , and I'm not going to say that I'm perfect here and I want things done in a certain way . But you know , really to be an effective leader , you have to set the outcome here's where we're going and empower your team to come up with how are we going to get there ? You know I brought in our chief operating officer , rich , who's an incredibly accomplished , impressive , awesome guy , and you know I'm fortunate to work with him . So I brought him into to run the day-to-day of the organization , which includes how we're delivering for our clients .

Speaker 2

It includes how we , how we manage careers at Fox Box and growth and that would free me up on the sales front to grow the company , set the direction and grow the company at the high level . Now we're 50 clients solving problems for 12 or 15 clients , and it requires a different skill set to do that . So the infrastructure he put in place and the positions that he even created to get us there aren't things that I would have imagined , but it worked and the results are there right , our clients are happy , our attrition is very , very low , and so I'd say the results speak for themselves .

Speaker 1

But it must be quite scary as the founder to kind of go to give up that control in terms of they're your key clients , they're everything , everything you worked hard for , and someone else is going to kind of sit in between you and them make those decisions .

Speaker 2

Might do things differently , could go wrong yeah it's , it's scary for sure , and I always can step in . You know , if something actually does go way off the rails , I can , will and should step in . It's more of a trust .

Speaker 1

But hey , I'm here when , when , you need me you mentioned how these later stage founders move from like startup into growth and I think this of this sense of lack of control is quite a pain point for people moving into this phase , this feeling of being out of control , like having management in between you and your team , like management between you and your customers , so things being done differently . It's quite a difficult mental transition which requires a whole different style .

Speaker 2

It does . Yeah , and you know , costs require more sales , and so it's you know , you've created this beast , this machine , and you have to keep feeding it and you really have to continuously grow , um , even , even , just to maintain sometimes .

Speaker 1

How did you come to that realization that this was the right time to do this ?

Speaker 2

You know , it wasn't really by choice , I was kind of forced to . It was , uh , I realized that I was . I was in a position where we were growing like crazy and I'd never run a company this size . You know my experience with startups . Right , there's their startups . They're much smaller and so we've , you know , transitioned into a you know small business , and so there was a . You know , there's a situation where I had key leaders that were not , uh , we're not working well together , right , both incredibly talented people , but together just oil and vinegar .

Speaker 2

And I was trying to figure out how to how to get past this . So you know , I asked Rich for help and um and , and you did right . And then he came into to help and we collaborated on it . We came up with solutions together and just to some extent I said , okay , like I don't , I don't know if this is the right path , but I trust you and let's , let's do that , and I actually say that a lot .

Managing Opinions, Energy, and Focus

Speaker 1

Don't you need people's opinions . That really matter Are your customers , when they give you the money and often actually , as the founder , our opinion . Sometimes it's really valuable and sometimes it's almost worthless because we're too far away from the customer .

Speaker 2

That's a good point . I mean it just sort of depends . It depends on what it is Like as you grow . You have to reserve your decisions and opinions on the bigger things . You know things that matter more and more and as you grow the org right , you have people . We have a chief human resources officer who is awesome and she is running our people organization and so if there's a decision around that organization , I'm certainly not going to make it .

Speaker 2

I'm not qualified to make that decision , so I will , will default , you know , to , to her and the people I've uh , you , you know put in charge of various things . But there are times when I do need to step in and set , set the direction , opinion , when , when it's when it's a higher overarching , you know kind of thing , more directional and I suppose you also have that ultimate control in that you're controlling who your team is .

Speaker 1

So if you , if you believe in your team , there's a high chance they're going to do something that you would agree with . Probably it's got an outcome that you would want .

Speaker 2

Yeah , that's true , but we're all humans , we all have our opinions and we're never going to agree 100% .

Speaker 1

So if we move on to sort of the second question , sort of an external insight that you would want to share with the network , what would it be and who's it from ?

Speaker 2

One of them is from uh , from rich . So I'll just start with that one . And sometimes , when people bring him problems and when he sees this happen multiple times about the same thing , he'll just say very directly , as you'd expect from a new yorker it sounds like you're admiring the problem . Now what are you going to do about it ? And I love that , because it really snaps people out of it . Like you've identified the problem . That's good . That's the first step is awareness right Now . Let's let's actually come up with the solution . Let's not focus on the problem and dwell and ruminate in it . Let's come up with this solution , and he might help , or he might just push you to come up with the solution , which I think is simple and brilliant .

Speaker 1

That's the idea of pushing the solution back . I really like that framing of it . Yeah , yeah , it's really nice . What's the second one ?

Speaker 2

The second one is about managing energy . So I'm a big , big fan of managing energy and not like a productivity hack or anything like that . But I do realize that you got to have the right energy . You got to have positive energy to to get in the day and do this every every day . Um , it's , it's relentless . You know it's a marathon , right , and so in the beginning certainly I worked like crazy hours and stuff . But I'm six years in , like this has to be something that I can , a lifestyle that I can live , and so I read a couple of books in the topic . One is a deep focus and it's by a computer science like professor . He's really smart guy and he , uh , he's all about deep focus , deep uninterrupted focus .

Speaker 2

So , like you're getting into a big meaty problem at work , you want to shut down all notifications Slack , text message , everything right . The smallest notification could snap you right out of it . You could lose your whole train of thought and then you're back half an hour and the flip side of that is deep relaxation . So when you're off work , do not look at email , right , just give yourself a point to truly relax and recharge , because the first email is going to put you right back into it . You're going to think about that email . Then you're going to think about something else , unrelated , but it's related to work and that's not restful at all , and so you want to make sure you're managing that . And the other book is called the powerful engagement , and that's an awesome book . It goes into managing energy as well , and , you know , having amazing sleep that'll set you up for a good day .

Speaker 2

I try to not use alarms as much as possible . I don't schedule early meetings for that reason , so that I can just sleep when my body is ready to wake up . Otherwise , you know you're relying on coffee . You're not , um , you're not thinking clear . I think there's a lot of science that has shown that when you're lacking rest , you make poor decisions . Right , you might focus on the administrative stuff email , just easy things like that . Right , you're going to eat worse food , which then has another effect on how you perform . So you got to think about you know , your body like you're . You're like we're corporate athletes , right , and some of us actual athletes too .

Speaker 1

So you got to treat yourself like one and it sounds like those two books fit together quite nicely in terms of just that theme of like deep focus , deep relaxation . So one's how you protect that state once you're in it and one is just like how you live your life so that you're operating at peak capacity anyway .

Speaker 2

Yeah , yeah , certainly . You know , like , imagine you go out for drinks , right , and then you get poor sleep because the alcohol and you wake up and you're more irritable . And then you have an argument with someone on your team and now they're pissed off and then maybe they take it out on someone else . It has this ripple effect . You got to think about how your decisions kind of affect you , because it's not just you , right , it's a whole team together .

Speaker 1

And particularly as the founder . I think that you can dramatically impact the environment in a very short time , positively or negatively .

Speaker 2

Absolutely . Yeah , I feel like when I'm in a good mood , I feel like the company's behind me and we're all marked in the same direction , and if I'm not , I feel like the opposite . It's kind of strange , but I think there's some truth to it .

Speaker 1

So , let's say , staying in that deep focus , is there anything else apart from just removing sort of the intrusions around notifications ? Is there anything else that kind of really helps you stay in that state ?

Speaker 2

first you have to figure out , okay , how long do I actually need ? Right for everyone . It's different . For every problem it's different . So if I'm trying to , you know , write a , write my quarterly update , or um , you know , come up with some kind of strategy . Right , there might be a different amount of time that I need to to to focus , um , and then it's it's the discipline too , right , it's ?

Speaker 2

Uh , it's easy for us to get distracted and distract ourselves , especially with how phones are training us to kind of be all over the place , um , so you have to exercise some , some discipline to stay on topic . And you know , something I do is I come up with just things pop in my head all the time and you can't stop them from happening , but you can control what you do after that , and so I try to write things down . It's like , oh yeah , do that , do that , do that . I write it down on you know , my little bullet journal and um , and then that gives me a chance of letting it go for the moment and then I can get back to it later . So it's like you have to set yourself up to be in deep focus , but then you have to actually work to stay in it I went to an event a long time ago .

Speaker 1

This month we're talking about mindfulness and you're saying everyone thinks of meditation as trying to like clear your mind and actually it's not . It's just acknowledged like controlling what it's thinking about . And so I think this idea of just acknowledging a thought , jotting it down , kind of allows you to to put it to one side , then refocus back on on what you do , because the idea that you're not going to think about anything else apart from what you're thinking about for two hours , one hour , three hours , four , however long it is , if that is your success metric , you're bound to fail .

Speaker 2

I would have thought yeah , yeah , that's a good point . I didn't think of that . But , um , if you're trying to meditate , right , they , they , they teach you like you can't stop thoughts from going into your mind . That's's not the point . As you said , I read an interesting thing . It's like if you imagine you're looking at a river , right , and maybe there's like a log , you know floating through in the river , you can't stop that log from being there , but you can decide are you going to , like try to pull it on shore or are you just going to kind of watch it go go past and that's like what , the thoughts that come up ? Yeah , if you're , you're getting into meditation or maybe deep focus , right , just acknowledge those thoughts are coming up .

Speaker 1

Okay , great , let's just watch it , you know , float past on the river and then get back on task because I think I mean a lot of founders end up doing a lot of the deep focus work in the evenings , at weekends because it feels like distractions are minimized by opportunity , so team don't reach out so much , like there are fewer emails so it's easier to passively stay in deep focus . But it sounds like this is recommending like what steps you take to actively stay in deep focus during our normal work hours , ie nine nine to five .

Speaker 2

Yeah , absolutely , and you're not going to stop that

Founder's Time Management and Growth Strategies

Speaker 2

. I mean , as a founder , you do have to put in nights and weekends sometimes . I mean , like two days ago I had a proposal to write and for that exact reason , I couldn't write it during the day . There's all these other responsibilities and things that came up and so I spent the evening writing this . I got it done , it was great , but interestingly , last night I was completely exhausted right . The evening I worked my day , but then the evening I was just completely wiped and done and so it had an impact on me and you got to be kind of aware of that and plan for it .

Speaker 2

But what are the things you are in control of , right ? So we , as a founder , you're gonna have a million meetings probably , especially in a consulting company . What I try to do is I try to have sort of Tuesday through Thursday my meeting days , and Monday and Friday are like minimal meeting days . So nothing , you know nothing every week planned . Some things might come up . I try to at least have a full morning block or full afternoon block to at least give yourself the time to do that , to possibly get into your deep work , deep focus .

Speaker 1

I've seen quite a few fans . I think we're slightly brainwashed to think that anything to do with team is high priority and that can be meetings , that can be one-off chats , it can be audio five minutes and I think often it's actually much more . It's actually low importance , sometimes even low urgency , but just feels like , oh , we can justify it , it's a team thing . I can do this Like it's a slightly more advanced form of like looking at Instagram for a founder .

Speaker 2

Yeah , it's true . I mean , meeting with the team is obviously important , but you're not actually getting any work done when you're meeting . Right , You're planning to do the work later . So if all you're doing is meeting , you're not getting any work done . But I try to create a culture of promoting deep focus .

Speaker 2

And we have the Foxbox way , which is like a kind of handbook of how to work at Foxbox , and I meet with every single person who joins a company . They're on their first month to walk them through it because it's that important . And one of the things in there is we promote deep focus and I tell people , hey , we have Slack and Slack is a great tool , but it's also the downside is it's a distraction mechanism .

Speaker 2

And so there's a lot of pressure , especially when I message someone you know to , to respond right away . But I'll actually get mad . I'm like you're in a meeting . Why are you responding to me ? Right , and I try to promote that . Hey , you're in control of how you use Slack . It's asynchronous . So if you tell people on your team , hey , I'll check in , I'll check Slack every couple hours , great , Now people know when they can expect to hear back from you and that gives you permission to shut Slack down . I'll give you just a quick example my head of client services , joseph . I messaged him something and he didn't get back to me until a few hours later . And he's like sorry , man , I closed Slack because I had to work . I'm like great , I'm so happy you did that .

Speaker 1

But it's quite powerful for you as the founder to model the behavior that you would like , which you think motivates deep focus and sort of tackles the unwritten assumption that if I message , I expect the culture of instant communication Like congratulations . You just turned your entire business into like Slack monkeys , they're not saying anything , there's staring at a screen , going cause . It's like how can you get any quality work done if you're expected to respond instantly to stuff ?

Speaker 2

Yeah , it's , it's bad and some people like that . I worked . I worked with two super high performing developers one at Foxbox , one at my last company and they responded to Slack immediately and I don't know how they did it , but it worked well . So I also don't force this topic Like . What we say is how you communicate is up to you , right , you can set your own rules of engagement just to communicate them , and you know we measure this too . In the beginning , I felt like I needed to be in everything at all times , and so when we looked at their Slack admin panel , I was the number one message sender of the past 30 days . And you know , my leadership team and I looked at each other and we're like this is a problem . You know , my leadership team and I looked at each other and we're like this is a problem . And so I actively , you know , tried to to not be so involved and just let people solve things Right , and and I and I just stepped back and I dropped down on the board .

Speaker 2

I'm still probably top 10 , but I dropped down a lot , which is good . It's probably where I'm supposed to be .

Speaker 1

Well , that's really quite a nice to understand that , the practical tip or hack that you would share with other founders when it comes to making things happen .

Speaker 2

So this isn't really a hack , but it's be relentless .

Speaker 2

Every business is different , but for my business , right , we're a consulting business it's all about , you know , sales and bringing in clients and then keeping them happy , obviously .

Speaker 2

So what I've really learned is you have to be relentless , you always have to be selling , you always have to be networking , meeting people , meeting new people , rekindling old relationships , even when , even when the times are great , right , there was , there was a period where we're growing like gangbusters and I , you know , I let up on that because I was like no , I got to focus on , you know , everything else , that the day to day , and by doing that , when we're at a different period in our journey , right , uh , then it was like okay , now I have to start all the networking , and then there's a delay effect , and so a better approach that I've learned is more like just a little bit each week . I would love to say a little bit each day , but even that's too hard sometimes , so it's a little bit each week . You're always selling , and that could mean you're always selling . That could mean you're always recruiting , right , but when you need to make hires , you have people that are already warm .

Speaker 1

So it's linked like what is , what is a founder role ? Different founders approach differently , but it feels like so one is always be networking from a business developer standpoint . There's always been networking from a people standpoint . Is anything else that you sort of put in those sort of like core elements that are just worth doing always ?

Speaker 2

I mean , I think everyone's business is different so I can only speak to mine um , but I mean , for for me it's it's sales and marketing , it's uh direction , it's um , it's seeing where the market's going um and so you have to kind of keep a pulse on all of it .

Speaker 2

Um so , yeah an example is ai . I mean , ai has been around for decades , but it's recently become very popular because of all the generative ai , the large language models , and when it , when the buzz first started happening , you know one to two years ago uh , I didn't jump on the bandwagon right away because I wanted to . I take a more pragmatic approach about it . I'm I have a healthy dose of skepticism and I wanted to see where this is going . I knew immediately it was groundbreaking technology , but I wanted to see what are the practical applications of this ? How are businesses ?

Speaker 2

actually going to use it for their businesses . And so I went into sort of research mode to really just gather information and I spoke to a bunch of tech leaders to understand , hey , how are you leveraging this for your business , for your products ? And then through these conversations , the light bulb really went off Like , oh , wow , okay , there are some really really interesting use cases , some things that we would love to help companies with . So we built an AI lab to help companies decide is AI right for their business , for their products ? So , getting back to it , that's something that I'm always doing . I'm always looking for opportunities and technology to help our clients .

Speaker 1

The common theme there is almost like the external element . It's like there's probably this temptation , almost like your first point , like letting go of control . You've got to win clients , but you've just got to figure out your process . You've got to figure out the link between product market fit . You've got to just really crank that out . I feel like the second stage is about really being a lot more external . It's still continuing to win new clients , but it's building that network of new hires , speaking to people , figuring out what the next five years look like . You almost earned the right to look further ahead . You've ticked the survival box . Now what next ? And so maybe when I'm feeling this shift of internal time versus external time that really moves between , let's say , phase one as a founder and phase two , yeah , I think that sums it up pretty well .

Speaker 2

And as you grow , I mean , you have decisions to make . Do you want to create a small business and keep it small , right , and then the way you set up your organization is going to be different from if you want a growth business , where you're going to have more leaders , you're going to have more infrastructure , more processes and more , more , everything .

Speaker 2

Really to really support that growth because you know you hit different stages and then you need you need different levels of that to really be able to operate , so kind of with that . If you decided to grow , you always have to be growing because survival is dependent on it . So in the beginning , survival , but you always have that survival right . You , you know you want to keep keep growing .

Speaker 1

Uh , to make that happen , and and you've got to go and find your riches , and by that I don't mean the money , I mean your , your coo , find

Transition to Strategic Leadership in Business

Speaker 1

your rich . It could be the could be the subtitle of this episode .

Speaker 2

Absolutely , and it's about Rich Megan , joseph Wesley Barrett all my key leaders .

Speaker 1

Today's chat with Rob Volt has shed light on an essential phase for any growing business the shift from hands-on management to strategic leadership . Rob's experience demonstrates the necessity of empowering teams and trusting in the collective strength of the people we choose to drive our visions forward . Thank you for tuning in to Peer Effect . I'm your host , james Johnson , inviting you to join us next week Wednesday for another enriching episode filled with strategies and stories from those at the forefront of innovation and leadership . See you then .