馃攳
What Does a Startup CEO Do: Roles and Responsibilities - Entrepreneur Life - YouTube
Channel: Slidebean
[0]
Let me just throw it out there: being a startup
CEO is the most demanding and mentally exhausting
[4]
job I've ever had.
[6]
The decisions you make, affect not only the
future of your company but the future of the
[9]
people who trust you to make the right decisions
for the company they work for.
[13]
It's extremely demanding.
[15]
It never stops... and it's also the most thrilling
experience of my professional life.
[20]
This is Startup CEO Roles and Responsibilities.
[23]
BTW- this is part of a new course on starting
a business- check out the link below to subscribe.
[36]
Here鈥檚 some of my background in case you
don鈥檛 know me: our company Slidebean is
[40]
a web presentation platform, way more efficient
than PowerPoint.
[45]
We have over 600,000 sign-ups from all over
the world, over $1MM in annual revenue and
[50]
growing fast.
[51]
We are a US company with a team of 20+ people
based in New York City and in San Jose, Costa Rica,
[56]
where I'm originally from.
[58]
I'm the CEO, and one of three company founders-
and everything in these videos comes from
[63]
my own experience, managing this, we'll call
it a successful company, and a previous one,
[68]
who went out of business.
[69]
As a CEO you'll need creativity, people skills,
number skills, patience, resolve... but before
[75]
all that, I think the most critical skill
a founder needs is the ability to learn
[82]
and adapt fast.
[84]
You will need to do a bit of everything in
your company, especially when starting up-
[89]
from tech tasks such as setting up an email
to routing your domain- to understanding the
[95]
employment legislation in your city, state,
and country.
[98]
As your company grows, you can delegate these
tasks, but it's much easier to build a team
[102]
by delegating your tasks, than by hiring people
to do things you have no idea how to do.
[108]
When you know how to do something, you know
how long it should take others to do it, which
[112]
keeps your teams efficient.
[114]
However, knowing how to do everything means,
well, that you have to learn a bit about everything.
[120]
Going back to my background: coming out of
high school I decided to study computer science,
[124]
which didn't end up doing it for me but gave
some basic knowledge in coding which has been
[128]
insanely useful as the CEO of a tech company.
[131]
I understand, at least in the abstract, how
most of our features work.
[136]
After quitting computer science, I did my
undergrad in digital animation, as in the
[140]
guys that do this stuff for a living.
[143]
I fell out of love with this career path and
ended up dropping out when I started my first
[147]
business; however, I learned to design.
[150]
I don't consider myself an excellent designer,
but I know how things work, I know how long
[152]
things take to make, I can tell good websites
and bad websites apart, and before Slidebean
[157]
existed, I could build a nice-looking pitch
deck without any help.
[160]
So as you can see, I don't have a business
background.
[163]
Still, I know accounting, financial models,
human resources, I live and breathe Excel,
[169]
I know legal documentation for startups, I
know stocks, loans...
[173]
I can't say I'm an expert in either of these
matters, but I understand them.
[177]
As a CEO, you just have to.
[179]
You have to learn something new every day,
and you have to learn fast, and no career
[183]
path can prepare you.
[186]
While this may vary from company to company,
I'm going to breakdown the tasks I need to
[191]
perform at Slidebean.
[192]
Again, at the time of writing, we are a team
of 20 people based in 2 countries.
[197]
Starting with my core tasks, or the ones I
feel I'll never be able to delegate- and then
[201]
moving to the functions that I am already
looking to pass along to somebody else on
[205]
the team.
[207]
Job #1 for the CEO: Don't run out of money.
[210]
Job #2: Don't run out of money.
[212]
Balance new hires, budget expansion with revenue
forecasts to spend capital efficiently.
[218]
I'm understating how important this is. It is your responsibility to keep the company going.
[223]
Define the company roadmap and strategy:
from yearly to quarterly to monthly plans.
[230]
Connect the tasks of all the teams: ensure
we are all rowing in the same direction, and
[235]
sync feature launches with marketing campaigns
and customer training.
[238]
You are the one person in the company that oversees everything that's going on.
[243]
Optimize and facilitate, so that teams can work more efficiently.
[247]
Preside over the Board of Directors, and
keep board members and investors updated and
[252]
informed.
[253]
Create and care for the company culture.
[255]
Again, this is easier said than done, and
so much more important than it sounds.
[259]
Keep the team motivated.
[261]
Our revenue information is open to everyone
in the team, so they know, every day, whether
[265]
it's meeting our expectations or not.
[268]
It's my job to keep everyone calm so they
can perform to their full potential.
[274]
Deal with compliance: understanding legal
and tax situations and how the company is
[278]
addressing them.
[280]
Most of those tasks would apply to any company.
[283]
On more Slidebean and me-specific tasks- these are some that I expect I'll delegate soon>
[288]
Write the scripts for these weekly videos,
and oversee the content marketing efforts
[292]
we make.
[293]
Approve large product or service purchases.
[297]
Oversee the marketing site (our landing
pages) and the strategy to improve it.
[301]
Lead some of our new marketing experiments,
once again, so I can understand them and then
[306]
delegate them.
[307]
Define salaries and benefits packages for
our team, based on our company budget.
[310]
Create and follow up on critical partnerships
and business proposals. And a lot more stuff I can't remember.
[317]
So, starting a company is a marathon, not
a sprint (not my quote, by the way).
[323]
If you are considering starting a business,
you need to prepare yourself for what's to
[327]
come.
[328]
Here are my top 3 priorities:
[332]
Don't start a company for the sake of starting
a company: I see a lot of entrepreneurs who
[337]
just 'wanted to build a business' and sat
down to find an idea.
[343]
That's the wrong approach.
[344]
In most cases, your startup idea comes from
your own experience: a unique industry insight
[350]
you learned at your job, an exceptional talent
you acquired, or a business opportunity that
[354]
you have the skills to monetize.
[357]
Uncertainty: be prepared for not knowing
where your company is going.
[362]
For the first few months or even years, you
will have limited visibility about your future,
[367]
so embrace living in the moment.
[372]
Most startups fail, that's a sad but very
real statistic, so even if your idea is great,
[377]
be prepared mentally and financially to deal
with failure.
[381]
Don't quit your day job until you are ready
and know when to go back to a day job.
[387]
Long working hours: as a founder-CEO, you
are working on your business 100% of the time.
[393]
Your brain is always going to be on your business,
and it's incredibly exhausting.
[398]
Even vacations are hard to enjoy when people's
lives depend on your decisions.
[402]
I can talk all day about drawing boundaries
and setting aside personal time, but the truth
[407]
is as a founder, vacations and holidays don't
mean what they used to mean when you are an
[413]
employee.
[414]
Your business is a part of you; period.
[416]
So be prepared for the marathon of your life.
[419]
Thanks a lot for watching.
[421]
As always, the first 25 people that sign up
with the link in the description will get
[424]
3 free months on our Slidebean Premium plans.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





