Is being in the details, micro-managing and following your instincts the key to building a business? Has an obsession with professional managers blinded us to what really matters in founding and scaling a business? Welcome to the debate about founder mode v manager mode, which was started by Brian Chesky, the co-founder of Airbnb, and Paul Graham, the co-founder of Y Combinator.
Will Shu, the chief executive and co-founder of Deliveroo, is an ideal person to ask about this. He founded Deliveroo, the online delivery service, in 2013 alongside Greg Orlowski. 12 years later he is still the chief executive. But Deliveroo is now a very different business. It is worth more than £2bn, listed on the London Stock Exchange and has had highs and lows. How does he think a founder should run a business?
In this episode of the Business Leader Podcast, Will Shu looks back on building Deliveroo, how his role has changed, how he strives to keep a start-up culture at the heart of the company, and his own views on the founder mode v manager mode debate. Shu also says what he wishes he had done differently in building Deliveroo - and the answer may surprise you…
Related and recommended
Richard Harpin, the founder of HomeServe and Growth Partner and owner of Business Leader, answers your burning business questions
Contestants from The Apprentice reveal the fundamental business lessons they learned from taking part in the TV show
From global talent pools to AI-powered documentation, a work-from-anywhere model is a new way of thinking about productivity, innovation and teamwork
The story of how cycling brought Business Leader member John Readman together with his co-founder and investors