Traits and behaviours of successful Tech and Digital start-up founders

Plexus Leadership
5 min readDec 19, 2019

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We identify some traits and behaviours of successful Tech and Digital start-up founders and leaders.

It is extremely difficult to pinpoint common traits and behaviours required to lead and grow successful Tech or Digital start-ups. The diversity of founder-leaders is almost as great as the wide range of businesses we are seeing launching in this rapidly growing space. Unsurprisingly, start-up founders also have varying ideas on what success means for them. Subsequently, they follow very different paths to grow their venture and achieve success.

Despite this diversity, I have found interesting themes based on peer-reviewed research and my own PhD research in this area.

Some of the most common traits and behaviours of successful Tech and Digital start-up founders and leaders are:

Knowing yourself and the value you bring

Even the most confident Tech and Digital founders and leaders like Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg acknowledge not only their areas of greatest strength but also their weaknesses. They focus on activities that play their strengths and learn to delegate tasks that drain their positive energy. This, therefore, enables them to build top teams made up of people with diverse and complementary strengths, skills and experience who are well placed to meet the complex challenges faced by their organizations.

In the words of Steve Jobs: “Your time is limited, don’t waste it living someone else’s life…have the courage to follow your heart and intuition, they somehow already know what you truly want to become.”

Passion and energy

Passion is best defined as a “fire in the belly” or positive energy to achieve one’s goals and outperform. Research shows that founders who are passionate about their vision and believe strongly in what they are doing are more likely to achieve breakthrough results. Passion is contagious as anyone who has been led by an inspirational leader knows. Highly passionate founders are often able to infuse their energy throughout their company, something that is particularly important during the early start-up phase.

Passion also ensures founders keep going and put in the ‘heavy lifting’ when things get tough. As one founder of a digital design agency commented: “Doing something you love and are engaged by is crucial as this ensures you put more effort and hours in”.

It is important to distinguish between two types of passion — obsessive versus harmonious passion. The former is characterized by an obsessive preoccupation with the venture which consumes all the founder’s energy, time and capacity. This can lead to unhealthy stress and an inability to “switch off. If this negative stress is left unchecked, it can lead to burnout and stress-related illnesses.

Unlike obsessive founders, the best leaders find harmony between building their venture and other parts of their lives. Their identity is not just linked to their venture. They manage to find balance with other aspects of their life, for example, being a friend, partner or parent. These founders tend to find the work itself enjoyable, fun and motivating over time. They also feel more in control of their work-life balance.

Grit to go all the way

Grit is the capacity to sustain high levels of effort and motivation to achieve one’s goals, even when they are very tough or take years to accomplish. It is essentially a combination of passion and perseverance. Grit appears to predict success in education, but also in entrepreneurship and leadership. Research shows it is linked to important outcomes such as improved performance, resilience and personal career success.

In order to succeed, Tech and Digital founders have to tackle all sorts of tough dilemmas and challenges. These include securing funding, managing investors, hiring the right talent and getting traction for their products. Gritty founders are much more likely to stay focused on their goals, even in the face of adversity. Without grit is it difficult for founders to succeed in a highly competitive, demanding and fast-changing environment.

Agility and rapid learning

Agility involves the ability to learn quickly and adapt to ever-changing and uncertain circumstances. Changes in technologies, regulations, customer preferences and market conditions are just some of the many challenges Tech and Digital founders need to deal with. One founder I interviewed characterized this capability as needing the “flexibility to change the business quickly when things change”. Another described rapid learning as “being ready to be ruthless about throwing things away and starting again when things don’t work out.”

Focused execution

Because the best Tech and Digital founders are gritty and passionate, they remain laser-focused on achieving ambitious goals for their venture. They are better at building a strong performance culture, one where high standards, accountability and teamwork are valued and expected. They put in place effective and scalable management systems to ensure performance is planned, delivered and continuously improved.

It is important to note that some of the traits and capabilities required by Tech and Digital founders will shift as the business scales and becomes bigger. Some founders find it very difficult to make this transition. It is important that they either adapt to learn new capabilities. Alternatively, they can also bring in leaders with different capabilities needed to scale the business. Our experience suggests that some leaders are simply better suited to leading start-ups. Others perform better during the subsequent scale-up stages of the growth cycle.

Contact us to discuss how we can help your business achieve breakthrough success.

About the Author

James Brook
Leadership Consultant | Executive Coach | Business Psychologist

James has over 25 years’ experience working with leaders and organizations internationally to optimize their performance, talent and future success. He has worked with leaders from diverse sectors, countries and cultures. Clients have included Commvault, Equinor, Gilead Sciences, GSK, PhotoBox, Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Novo Nordisk, Oracle, Sainsbury’s, Swiss Re, Tesco, Yahoo! and WSP.

James has set-up and successfully grown several of his own businesses, including Strengthscope®, a global strengths assessment and consulting business. As Joint Founder and MD, he grew Strengthscope® into a market leader before selling his stake in the business in 2018.

James is a regular speaker on leadership, coaching, assessing and developing talent and the future of work. He has contributed a wide range of publications in these areas. His most recent book, Optimize Your Strengths, explores how leaders can transform their organizations by inspiring people to shine and deliver exceptional results.

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Plexus Leadership
Plexus Leadership

Written by Plexus Leadership

We develop positive leaders and thriving workplaces to deliver breakthrough performance, innovation and sustainable growth. www.plexusleadership.com

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