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CH 23 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 29, 2025 1:42:45 PM

 

 

Chapter 23 Breakdown: Profile Everyone, Especially Yourself — Build Teams That Actually Work

Section B2: People | Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Series

Resilience Repurposed Blog by Brent Parker

👁️ Intro: Know Thyself (and Everyone Else)

Most entrepreneurs launch with a bias: they try to do everything themselves.

But if you want to scale, you’ll need a team that’s more than just capable—you need a crew that’s complementary. Chapter 23 lays it out plain and simple: Profiling isn’t just about others—it starts with you. Know your dominant strengths, your weak spots, your tendencies under stress… and then build around that.

Just like the crew of the Enterprise, it’s the mix of personalities that makes the mission possible. Not everyone can be Captain Kirk. You’ll need your Spock, your Scotty, your McCoy—and you’ll need to know who you are before you can recognize them in others.

🧠 Key Lessons from Chapter 23

✅ 1. Check Your Dominance at the Door

“60% of what gets an entrepreneur to successfully build a business ends up undermining them when they try to scale.”

Many founders rely on dominance and decisiveness early on—but those same traits can become a liability as your business grows. If you’re used to being the one who knows and does everything, it’s time to start delegating leadership, not just tasks.

✅ 2. Delegate Responsibilities, Not Tasks

You can’t grow if every single decision runs through you. Learn to assign ownership, not just “to-do lists.” This means empowering leaders within your team to make decisions and evolve independently from your constant oversight.

✅ 3. Profile Yourself Using Tools Like DiSC

The book breaks down Colin’s version of the DiSC framework using Star Trek analogies:

  • D – Dominance: Captain Kirk (Decisive, assertive)
  • I – Influence: Scotty (People person, high energy)
  • S – Steadiness: Bones McCoy (Stable, methodical)
  • C – Conscientiousness: Spock (Analytical, accuracy-focused)

You’ll likely fall into a combo of two. Understanding this lets you lead with intention—and hire what you lack.

✅ 4. Profile Everyone Around You

Once you know your own gaps, you can intentionally fill them. The right team isn’t just about skills—it’s about balance. You’re not looking for clones; you’re building an ecosystem.

✅ 5. Learn to Lead Leaders

This is the next level of leadership maturity: training people who train others. If you only know how to manage, you’ll bottleneck. If you know how to inspire and release, you’ll scale.

💡 Final Takeaway

This chapter is a turning point in the SCALE section. It’s not about hustle anymore—it’s about who you empower. Start with honest self-awareness. Know your type. Then build the team that makes up for your blind spots and unlocks your growth potential.

🔁 Coming Next

Chapter 24 – Hiring Great Leaders: Leaders for Hire

We’ll go deeper into what makes someone a high-value hire—and how to identify leaders before they even see it in themselves.

💬 Share This With a Future Founder

Know someone struggling with delegation or team dynamics? Share this post with them or tag them in the comments. It might save their startup from growing pains they didn’t see coming.

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Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 22 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 22, 2025 9:25:47 PM

Chapter 22: Finding the Right Distribution/Sales Channel

Figuring out how to sell what you’ve built isn’t just about making sales—it’s about finding the most effective path to scale. In Chapter 22 of Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat., Verne Harnish explains that many great ideas die not because they’re bad, but because they’re delivered through the wrong distribution or sales channel. The right product with the wrong channel equals failure.

Build Around Your Real Buyer

Success begins with clarity. Harnish reminds us that “to develop effective sales channels, you have to know who your real buyer is, and build everything around them” (Campbell, 2023, p. 172). Hostopia’s pivot from selling to IT managers to targeting resellers through a wholesale model was a defining moment. That shift to a channel-focused strategy allowed them to grow by aligning product, messaging, and sales strategy to the people who could move volume—not just the end user.

Distribution is Not One-Size-Fits-All

What works for one company may not work for another. Harnish contrasts examples like Hugo and Top Gun: Maverick, where quality alone didn’t determine success. The structure of distribution—how the product gets to customers—plays a major role. Choosing between direct sales, resellers, joint ventures, or retail partners is less about preference and more about fit.

Scale Through Strategic Partnerships

Harnish emphasizes that strategic alliances can be the best channel for growth. The Hostopia example is instructive: their Canadian business took off once they partnered with providers offering complementary services. In today’s landscape, a distribution partner with the right audience, infrastructure, and incentives can help a startup achieve more with less capital risk.

Distribution Strategy Shapes Everything

Your chosen distribution channel influences product features, pricing models, messaging, and even company culture. As Harnish writes, “To scale, you’ll have to be innovative in how you approach who you target, how you get them, what value you offer—and how your distribution can carry that” (Campbell, 2023, p. 176).

💡 Final Takeaway

Great distribution isn’t a nice-to-have—it’s the difference between obscurity and scale. Choose your sales path with intention, based on real buyer behavior, not assumptions.

🔁 Coming Next

In Chapter 23, we’ll explore partnerships and earned media—how to get attention without paying for every click.

💬 Share This With a Future Founder

If someone you know is struggling with how to sell their product, send them this post. Sometimes the problem isn’t what they built—it’s how they’re getting it into the world.

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References

  • Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Lioncrest Publishing.

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 21 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 22, 2025 9:17:24 PM

Chapter 21: Promote It

After proving your concept, the next step is to get out there and tell everyone about it. While many entrepreneurs fear promotion—thinking it’s “too soon” or “too salesy”—Verne Harnish cautions that promoting a product before it’s been validated is a mistake that can cost time, money, and credibility. The key isn’t whether to promote; it’s when and how.

Timing Is Everything

“There is a danger to order—promoting a product you haven’t yet proved.” That quote sets the tone for this chapter (Campbell, 2023, p. 169). Harnish shares how, in the early days at Hostopia, they made the mistake of spending on advertising too soon—before they were ready. Rather than spending time perfecting their product or getting more feedback, they burned resources trying to scale something not yet stable.

Build It, Then Promote It

This advice sounds obvious, but many entrepreneurs act on emotion instead of strategy. Harnish references the infamous Field of Dreams fallacy—“If you build it, they will come”—and counters it with examples of Hollywood flops like Waterworld and Hugo. These films had big budgets and marketing pushes but lacked strong products or audience alignment. When Warner Bros. canceled Batgirl after it was nearly finished, it reinforced a powerful truth: marketing can’t save a weak product.

The Four Scenarios

Harnish outlines four promotional outcomes to watch for (Campbell, 2023, p. 172):

  • A – You have a bad product and promote it. Result: disaster. (e.g., Batgirl)
  • B – You have a poor-quality product and over-promote it. Result: damaged brand. (e.g., Waterworld)
  • C – You have a great product but fail to promote it. Result: missed opportunity. (e.g., Hugo)
  • D – You have a great product and promote it effectively. Result: success. (e.g., Top Gun: Maverick)

The Right Promotion Multiplies Your Momentum

In the successful launch of .CLUB, Harnish’s team knew they had a validated product, so they invested in promotion confidently—and it paid off. Likewise, Top Gun: Mavericksucceeded not only because it was well made, but because it aligned marketing strategy with product value and audience expectation (Campbell, 2023).

💡 Final Takeaway

Don’t rush promotion. Make sure your product is proven, your audience is defined, and your message is clear. Then go big. That’s how you build momentum that lasts.

🔁 Coming Next

In Chapter 22, we’ll dive into branding and media outreach—what it really takes to craft a magnetic message that scales.

💬 Share This With a Future Founder

If you know someone about to launch something big, share this post. One premature ad campaign could sink their ship.

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For strategic insights, behind-the-scenes founder stories, and lessons from the field, subscribe to the full blog series from Resilience Repurposed.

References

  • Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Lioncrest Publishing.
  • Thean, P. (n.d.). CEO coaching insights on business strategy. Private communication, as cited in Campbell (2023).

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 20 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 22, 2025 7:42:22 PM

Chapter 20: Prove It

You always need to be proving your business model—it’s not something that’s one and done. If we sold to a hundred customers, can we sell to a thousand? And then ten thousand? If we have sold into ten distributors, can we target a hundred?

Going back to the story of Facebook, they proved their concept by selling first at Harvard, then launching into other colleges, then into other cities, then into other countries, every step of the way proving they could grow in those markets (Campbell, 2023).

Not All Markets Are the Same

Every market has its own culture, and you have to really dig in to understand the needs of the new market culture you’re about to enter. When Hostopia came to the US, one of the big differences between us and our competitors was that we were already set up with a dual-language platform because in Canada, the law required us to be able to serve both English and French speakers (Campbell, 2023).

Speaking of other cultures, this also allowed us to tweak our platform to go into Brazil by adding in Portuguese. In the end, we included more than ten languages as we scaled to new markets, proving ourselves each time, which eventually set us up for our IPO.

Understand the Culture of Your New Markets

It’s easy for your market research to look only at bottom-line issues like projected costs to acquire new customers, overhead, distribution, and so on. While all those are important, it’s more important to understand the cultural preferences of your market: “How do they like to pay for things? What language are they most comfortable in? What are their expectations for communicating problems?” (Campbell, 2023).

As we discussed in Start, you don’t want to go into a new market expecting a change in the human behavior there. Instead, you need to adapt and mold your business practices to meet the preferences of that market. The more you can culturize your product to your new market, the better success you’ll have at scaling.

For example, when we set up Paw.com, we originally designed it as a US-based business, even though the founder and I are Canadian. When it came time to scale, it was only natural for us to look north to our homeland. But simply buying up ads in Canada and adding Canadian distribution was not going to be enough to make it successful there in the same way that it was in the US.

Sometimes this need to prove your concept again and again in new markets is the reason entrepreneurs stop scaling and get comfortable with the market they already have. Launching into a new market and proving it can be as stressful as launching the company itself.

“If you’re not growing, you’re dying.”

And that’s a lifestyle choice—because once again, to prove yourself over and over is a deep price. But if you fail to continue proving, you stop learning valuable lessons that can help you be prepared for the unexpected.

💡 Final Takeaway

Success in one market does not guarantee success in another. Don’t assume culture, language, or consumer behavior will translate directly. Prove it. Again and again. That’s how you scale responsibly and sustainably.

🔁 Coming Next

In Chapter 21, we’ll explore how to build a world-class sales team—from incentive structures to playbooks that scale with you.

💬 Share This With a Future Founder

If you know someone preparing to take their product global, share this post. Cultural insight could be their secret edge.

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For real-world reflections and actionable business tools, follow the full Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. blog series.

References

  • Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Lioncrest Publishing.

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 19 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 22, 2025 12:32:28 AM

Chapter 19: Find Your X Factor

Finding your X Factor is tough—there’s no denying it. In fact, many entrepreneurs only discover it through failure, grit, and iteration. In this chapter, Verne Harnish challenges us to discover the one thing that sets our business apart in a way that’s nearly impossible to copy. This “X Factor” isn’t just a brand story—it’s the painkiller that solves a nearly unbearable customer frustration that no one else is addressing.

What is the X Factor?

The term X Factor goes back decades, referring to that mysterious quality that makes someone or something stand out. In business, it's the element that gives you a 10x competitive edge. Author and coach Jim Collins (Collins, 2001) emphasized the importance of identifying what makes your company truly great, and Harnish builds on that by explaining how to operationalize your X Factor into a core strategy (Merriam-Webster, 2022).

Creating vs. Discovering Something Special

CEO coach Patrick Thean reframes the X Factor as not something you're born with—but something you create. It’s what makes your solution indispensable. Thean’s advice: “Give your customers a 10X advantage.” This isn’t fluff—it’s about crafting offers and experiences that eliminate risk, ease stress, or make customers heroes in their own right (Thean, n.d.).

Connect Your X Factor to Your Brand Promise

Harnish recommends tying your X Factor directly into your Nearly Unbearable Brand Promise (NUBP)—a concept introduced earlier in the book. For example, when Hostopia migrated 75,000 websites for EarthLink without losing a single one, they weren’t just fulfilling a contract—they were proving their X Factor in action.

Failures Often Reveal the X Factor

Hostopia didn’t stumble into their X Factor on a good day—it came after a disaster involving thousands of lost email settings. But instead of folding, they leaned into the failure, learned fast, and reengineered their process. This journey became the path to their 10X strength: bulletproof migrations.

Look for the Bottlenecks

What are your customers struggling with that no one else is solving? That’s where the gold is. Harnish highlights examples like Tiff’s Treats and Tesla—companies that found their edge by eliminating friction. For Tesla, the bottleneck wasn’t the car; it was the dealership experience. By removing the dealership, they reshaped the industry.

Try These X-Factor Discovery Steps:

  • Ask: “Where do things slow down for customers in my industry?”
  • Audit what legacy practices cause frustration—then do the opposite.
  • If entering a new market, look at the blind spots “old-timers” have ignored.

Use the X Factor to Scale

As Harnish explains, “At this stage of the process, your X Factor isn’t optional. It’s a must-have in order to really scale.” If you can’t pinpoint what makes you exceptional—or if your business is flatlining—it’s time to return to this question and dig deeper.

The X Factor isn’t just a tactic. It’s your dragon-slaying sword, your secret weapon, your moat. When paired with your story, your systems, and your people, it becomes the defining trait that drives sustainable, rapid growth.

💡 Final Takeaway

Don’t wait to stumble into your X Factor—hunt it down. Look for friction. Embrace failure. Examine bottlenecks. Then reframe those pain points as the foundation of your competitive edge. That’s how legendary companies are made.

🔁 Coming Next

In Chapter 20, we’ll explore how to build a successful sales team—and why it might not be who you think. From cultural fit to incentive structures, the right team will amplify your X Factor and convert it into real results.

💬 Share This With a Future Founder

If you know someone grinding to find what makes their business special, share this post. Their X Factor might be closer than they think.

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References

  1. Collins, J. (2001). Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't. HarperBusiness.
  2. Thean, P. (n.d.). CEO coaching insights on the X Factor. Private communication as cited in Harnish, V. (2022).
  3. Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Charleston: Lioncrest Publishing.
  4. Merriam-Webster. (2022). X Factor. Retrieved October 19, 2022, from https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/X%20factor

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 18 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 22, 2025 12:16:00 AM

Chapter 18: Scale in Zeros

Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Blog Series

Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

📘 Scaling Begins in the Mind

Chapter 18 of Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. is titled "Scale in Zeros" and introduces a deceptively simple concept with transformative power: to scale, you must think, plan, and act in zeros. It’s a mental model that pushes entrepreneurs to visualize growth from 10 to 100, then 1,000 and beyond. Each zero added isn’t just an increase in number—it’s a radical shift in mindset, systems, and operational capacity.

🔁 Think in Zeros

One of the earliest keys to Hostopia’s success, as retold by author and entrepreneur Walker, was his ability to break away from incremental thinking and adopt a 10X approach. Instead of merely aiming for modest growth, Walker asked, “How do we serve 100 times more people?” This question forced strategic decisions, like upgrading team capabilities, breaking into the U.S. market, and investing in scalable systems. This aligns with Grant Cardone’s concept of the “10X Rule,” which teaches that exponential goals demand exponential effort (Cardone, 2011).

🧠 Plan to Scale in Zeros

Visualization isn’t fluff—it’s a strategic tool. Chapter 18 links your company’s story (the WHO you serve) to how big you're willing to think. SMART goals—specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time-bound—are essential, but Walker says they should also be built around a 10X mindset. From human resources to funding, every element of your company must be aligned with scaling.

🚀 Act to Scale in Zeros

The chapter drives home that scalable action follows scalable thinking. By hiring top-performing salespeople and investing in team growth, Hostopia created a replicable path to expand. Walker didn’t start with the entire path figured out—he made bold decisions aligned with future potential. This courage to act on a vision larger than the present moment is what distinguishes startups that scale from those that stall (Ismail, Malone, & van Geest, 2014).

💡 Final Takeaway

Scaling starts internally. By thinking in zeros and visualizing exponential growth, you force your business to evolve—first in mindset, then in planning, and finally in execution. Your X-factor—the part of your story that makes you stand out—becomes your competitive edge in a crowded market.

🔁 Coming Next

In Chapter 19, we dive deeper into the real metrics that drive scale—what to track, why it matters, and how to know when it’s time to pivot or press forward.

💬 Share This With a Future Founder

Know someone stuck in the weeds of incremental thinking? Share this chapter breakdown and help them see the power of scaling in zeros.

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References:
Cardone, G. (2011). The 10X Rule: The Only Difference Between Success and Failure. Wiley.
Ismail, S., Malone, M. S., & van Geest, Y. (2014). Exponential Organizations. Diversion Books.
Walker, D. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat.

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 17 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 21, 2025 6:32:37 PM

Chapter 17 Breakdown: Scale Quickly, Kill Quickly

Reflections on Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. by Brent Parker – Resilience Repurposed LLC

⚙️ Post Intro

When entrepreneurs think about scaling, they often imagine hockey-stick growth and viral success. But in Chapter 17: Scale Quickly, Kill Quickly, author Colin C. Campbell flips that fantasy on its head. Scaling, he argues, is not a reward — it’s a test. And sometimes, the best way to win is to quit. This chapter dives deep into how to identify what’s working, kill what isn’t, and scale with ruthless efficiency. For builders like me, this was a wake-up call: grow fast, but never blindly (Campbell, 2023).

🔍 Key Takeaways from Chapter 17

1. Scaling Isn’t Success — It’s a Spotlight

“Scaling isn’t something that happens to you. You decide to scale.”

Campbell (2023) emphasizes that scaling doesn’t guarantee success — it amplifies whatever’s already happening. If you have a flawed product or inefficient system, scaling will expose it. If you’ve found product-market fit, scaling will validate it. But in either case, scale shines a light on reality.

2. Kill Fast, So You Can Scale What Works

The ability to “kill quickly” is what separates entrepreneurs from dreamers. If it’s not growing, it’s dying — and the longer you drag a failing product, service, or offer, the more resources it consumes. Campbell's own stories about sunsetting tech products and pivoting based on early signals reinforce this (Campbell, 2023).

3. The Faster You Can Move On, the Faster You Get to Your Real Success

This one hit home. I’ve had prototypes, marketing ideas, even collaborations that showed promise — but not performance. This chapter gave me permission to admit defeat faster and reinvest that energy into more scalable, defensible wins (Campbell, 2023). In fact, it inspired me to review my current product lines and run stress tests on their scalability.

🧠 Brent’s Reflections as a Veteran Founder

From the battlefield to the boardroom, decisiveness is a survival skill. “Scale Quickly, Kill Quickly” resonated with me because I’ve seen how indecision drains energy, resources, and morale. As the owner of Resilience Repurposed LLC, I have to make hard calls — whether that means scrapping a filament product that underperforms or doubling down on HueForge prints that consistently sell.

Reading this chapter reminded me that entrepreneurship is war — and your greatest ally is clarity.

💡 Final Takeaway

Growth without wisdom is just expensive failure. Use your early traction as a test. Scale what works. Kill what doesn’t. And never fall in love with a strategy just because it took effort to build — fall in love with outcomes.

🔁 Coming Next

Chapter 18: People Don’t Scale — Systems Do
We’ll explore why your best employee can’t be your growth strategy, and how systems are the real engine behind a sustainable scale-up.

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📚 References

  • Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Plain Sight Publishing.

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

The Resilience Repurposed Podcast - Episode 04: Veteran Resilience, Innovation, and Leadership – An Interview with Brad Pond of Cavaliers Coffeehouse

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 11, 2025 4:18:12 PM

Brewing Community & Business: The Brad Pond Interview

By Brent Parker | Resilience Repurposed Podcast & Blog

In this special interview, I sat down with Brad Pond—veteran, tech entrepreneur, and now proud owner of Cavaliers Coffeehouse in North Augusta, SC. His journey from Navy submariner to multimillion-dollar software sales executive to the steward of a thriving local café is nothing short of inspiring.

We dug deep into his background, motivations, marketing strategies, and what drives him to keep building—even when others would call it quits. Grab a cup of something strong and enjoy this deep dive into resilience, reinvention, and relationship-driven business.


☕ From Submarine to Small Business

Brad joined the Navy at 17, inspired by Tom Clancy’s Red Storm Rising. His six years of military service instilled the discipline and resilience that shaped the rest of his life. After a successful career in enterprise software (including emergency management tools used by FEMA and the military), Brad was offered the chance to acquire Cavaliers.

Instead of immediately stepping in, Brad pulled an “Undercover Boss” move—spending three months quietly observing the shop’s operations and customer dynamics before finalizing the deal. That approach gave him a front-row seat to Cavaliers’ unique culture and helped shape his first 100 days of ownership.

“It wasn’t about coming in and changing everything. It was about seeing what made Cavaliers special and asking how I could elevate that.”


🎯 Relationships Over Transactions

Whether in sales, tech, or hospitality, Brad believes relationships are the cornerstone of business. From FEMA contracts to barista-made lattes, it’s all about connecting people with solutions—or experiences—they remember.

“People don’t come back just because of a coupon. They come back because something clicked. Because they felt seen.”


🛠 Marketing That Builds Trust

Cavaliers thrives on community engagement. Brad uses a blend of traditional and digital marketing:

  • Email campaigns tied to events and product launches

  • Social media storytelling—focusing on real people, not just products

  • Customer-generated content, like reposting guests’ photos from the courtyard

  • Old-school loyalty cards—every 10th coffee is free

“You don’t need to dominate the whole market. You just need to be sticky enough for the right people.”


🗺 The Local Advantage

While large chains expand into the region, Brad remains confident that authenticity and experience will always beat convenience.

“Dutch Bros doesn’t have a courtyard and blues music on a Friday night. We do. That’s the difference.”

His team sources pastries, bagels, and cookies from beloved local bakeries like Sheila’s, Little D, and Alamie’s. The courtyard? Modeled after Charleston’s low-country charm. Cavaliers doesn’t just serve coffee—it curates moments.


🧠 Lessons in Leadership & Life

  • On Entrepreneurship:
    “It costs more than the spreadsheet says. But God’s timing is always right. Sometimes you’ve got to leap before the money shows up.”

  • On Niche Business:
    “Be the expert. Spend 18 minutes a day honing your craft. That’s how you rise to the top.”

  • On Veterans in Business:
    “The civilian world doesn’t move at military speed. Be patient. Know when to push and when to pause.”


🎤 Listen to the Full Interview

🎵 Stream on Spotify


💡 Final Takeaway

Brad Pond exemplifies what happens when discipline meets soul. His success isn’t from chasing trends—it’s from understanding people, taking smart risks, and leaning into service with humility.


🔁 Coming Next

Stay tuned for more veteran entrepreneur spotlights and behind-the-scenes looks at real small businesses making a real difference.


💬 Share This With a Fellow Founder

Know someone starting a business, balancing a day job, or thinking about pivoting careers? Send them this post.


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https://blog.resiliencerepurposed.com


💌 Promote & Connect

Cavaliers Coffeehouse
Instagram: @cavscoffee
Facebook: Cavaliers Coffeehouse

MotorKeg
Instagram: @motorkegsocial
Facebook: MotorKeg

Help support Brad Pond and the incredible work he's doing to bring people together—one drink, one beat, one courtyard conversation at a time.

 

Tags: Digital Ads, Digital Advertising, Digital Advertisments, Interviews, Entrepreneurs, Veteran, Podcasts, Veteran Support

CH 16 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 8, 2025 5:55:04 PM

Chapter 16 Breakdown: Why Startups Fail — And How You Can Avoid It

Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Let’s face it—no founder likes to talk about failure. But as Colin C. Campbell points out in Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat., understanding why startups collapse is one of the fastest ways to avoid joining that statistic. In Chapter 16, he peels back the layers of bad hiring, flawed product-market fit, ignored warning signs, and poor funding decisions that quietly sabotage good ideas.

This post isn’t about doom and gloom—it’s about decoding failure so you can design your business to be more resilient from day one.

🚫 Failure Happens—But It’s Not Random

Campbell opens up about his own failed venture in blockchain tech, sharing how a combination of Silicon Valley hype, the wrong hires, and skipped systems led to a shutdown. He takes ownership of what went wrong—not just emotionally, but operationally. This isn’t just storytime; it’s a template for recognizing structural cracks before they become fatal flaws (Campbell, 2023).

🧩 The Six Hidden Reasons Startups Fail

  • The company doesn’t solve a real problem. Like MoviePass, many startups create exciting features without validating if enough people care about the problem being solved.
  • The wrong people are running the company. Even a great idea will crumble if led by mismatched leadership. Entrepreneurial vision can’t be outsourced.
  • Red flags are ignored. Emotional investment makes it easy to overlook key warning signs. But those flags often predict collapse.
  • They raise too little—or too much—money. Underfunding creates fragility. Overfunding can lead to waste, arrogance, or diluted control.
  • There are too many cooks in the kitchen. Leadership confusion and partnership misalignment create internal gridlock that kills momentum.
  • External forces strike. Even well-run companies can get crushed by outside events like the dot-com crash or COVID-19. But how you prepare can cushion the blow.

🧠 Human Error Is the #1 Culprit

Campbell doesn’t sugarcoat it: “The biggest factor in success and failure is human failure” (Campbell, 2023, p. 140). Whether it’s hiring too fast, scaling without systems, or ignoring your gut, most collapse points come down to judgment—yours or someone else’s. But that’s also where your greatest opportunity lies.

❤️ Failures Are Scars That Guide Us

From Walt Disney’s early cartoon rejections to Milton Hershey’s candy startup struggles, Chapter 16 reframes failure as a rite of passage. “Startup failures are the scars of our past that guide us forward in our new ventures” (Campbell, 2023, p. 141). You don’t have to fear failure—but you do have to learn from it.

💡 Final Takeaway:

Failure isn’t random—it’s a pattern. Chapter 16 teaches you how to spot it early, take responsibility when things go sideways, and turn losses into future-proof systems. Learn from Colin’s scars so you don’t have to earn your own the hard way.

🔁 Coming Next: Chapter 17 – How to Vet a Business Idea

We’ll dive into the checklist that separates ideas from real businesses and walk through the rigorous testing process Colin Campbell uses before he bets on anything new.

💬 Share This With a Future Founder

Tag someone who’s launching their first business—or recovering from their last one. This post could save them months of pain and thousands of dollars.

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Want first access to future chapters, bonus insights, and tactical guides for veteran entrepreneurs? Subscribe at Resilience Repurposed or follow Brent on LinkedIn.

📚 References (APA Style)

Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Wiley.

Bryant, S. (2022, November 28). How Many Startups Fail and Why? Investopedia.

Mitchell, B. (2022, November 22). 82% of Small Businesses Fail Because of Cash Flow Problems. U.S. Bank.

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 15 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on Jun 8, 2025 5:40:07 PM

Chapter 15 Breakdown: The Four Sticky Note Business Plan

Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Section A4: System | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Welcome to Chapter 15 of the Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections Series
Forget the 40-page business plan template. In this chapter, Colin C. Campbell gives us something better: clarity. The “Four Sticky Note Business Plan” simplifies your startup vision into four essentials — Story, People, Money, and Systems. If your business can't be sketched in a few notes, you're probably not ready to scale it yet.

🧠 You Don’t Have to Know Everything Right Away

This chapter is a relief to founders still figuring it out. Campbell reminds us that the Start phase is about experimentation, not perfection. Uncertainty isn’t a weakness — it’s part of the process (Campbell, 2023).

📌 What Is Your Story?

Sticky Note 1 focuses on your purpose and problem-solving. What’s the big idea? Why should this business exist? Define what change you’re here to create.

👥 What People Do You Need?

Sticky Note 2 is about who you need to reach your first Stage Gate. What roles can be outsourced? Which ones must remain internal? Campbell highlights the importance of clarity around roles — and your limitations.

💰 What Money Do You Need?

Sticky Note 3 helps you break down funding into milestones. How much do you need to launch? What will it take to reach your Stage Gate? Cash isn't optional — it's foundational.

⚙️ What Systems Do You Need?

Sticky Note 4 = KPIs. Campbell pushes founders to identify leading indicators for business health early. Not just revenue, but churn rate, customer acquisition cost, and monthly recurring revenue.

✅ Check, Double-Check, and Triple-Check

This plan isn’t just a feel-good exercise. It's a tool to focus your time, reduce waste, and align your team. Campbell argues it dramatically increases your odds of surviving the chaotic Start phase.

💡 Final Takeaway

Success doesn’t come from complexity — it comes from clarity. The Four Sticky Note Plan is proof that simplicity scales better than spreadsheets. Get focused, get lean, and get going.

🔁 Coming Next: Chapter 16 – Build Your Startup as if You’re Going to Sell

Why wait for exit planning? Next chapter explores how reverse engineering your startup for acquisition improves decisions today — even if you’re years from selling.

💬 Share This With a Future Founder

Know someone who’s lost in the weeds of business planning? This post is their reset button. Share it and save them from paralysis by analysis.

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Want weekly breakdowns, real-world strategies, and no-fluff startup advice? Subscribe to the blog or follow @Brent Parker on LinkedIn to stay ahead.

📚 References (APA Style)

Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Wiley.

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

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