The Heartbreak of Outgrowing Your Heroes
There's a conversation every successful founder dreads having.
It's with the person who said yes when everyone else said no. Who believed in your vision when it was just words on a whiteboard. Who took a pay cut to join your crazy dream when they could have had security somewhere else.
The person who helped build what you have today.
The same person who's now holding back what you could become tomorrow.
The OG Dilemma
Your first 3-5 employees are different from everyone else. They didn't join a company—they joined a movement. They didn't evaluate your benefits package—they evaluated your potential.
They chose you when you had nothing to offer but passion and possibility.
And now, years later, as you're trying to scale from 20 to 50 people, their limitations are becoming your limitations.
How It Happens
It's not that they're not good people. It's not that they're not trying. It's that the skills that made them perfect for a 5-person startup aren't the skills you need for a 30-person scale-up.
The sales guy who could sell anything to anyone struggles with systems, processes, and managing a team.
The operations person who kept everything running can't build the structured workflows you need for sustainable growth.
The marketing genius who got you noticed doesn't have the strategic depth for your current market position.
They're still the same talented people you hired. But the job has evolved faster than they have.
The Loyalty Trap
Here's where it gets complicated: You owe them everything.
They stayed late when there was no overtime budget. They took on roles way outside their job description because "we all wear many hats here." They turned down other opportunities because they believed in what you were building together.
How do you tell someone who sacrificed for your vision that they're no longer part of it?
How do you explain that their reward for loyalty is being asked to leave?
The guilt is crushing. The gratitude is overwhelming. And the business need is undeniable.
The Cost of Not Acting
But here's what I've learned from watching founders struggle with this decision:
Not making the hard choice doesn't protect your OGs. It hurts them.
It hurts them because they can sense they're not succeeding in their evolved role, even if they can't articulate why.
It hurts them because they're being set up to fail in a job that's beyond their current capabilities.
It hurts them because they're becoming the problem everyone talks around but no one addresses.
And it destroys your business because:
New hires can't understand why standards are different for different people
Growth stalls when key positions can't handle increased complexity
Your newer, more capable team members get frustrated and leave
You spend more time managing around the limitations than building forward
The Conversation Framework
When you finally decide to have this conversation, here's how to do it with integrity:
Lead with Gratitude
"I need you to know that everything we've built started with your belief in this vision. You took a risk on us when no one else would, and I will never forget that."
Own the Evolution
"The role has evolved beyond what either of us anticipated when you started. This isn't about you not being good enough—it's about the job becoming something different."
Be Clear About Reality
"I need someone in this position who can [specific requirements]. I don't think it's fair to ask you to stretch into areas that aren't your strengths when you've already given us so much."
Offer Dignity and Support
"Let's figure out a transition that honors what you've contributed and sets you up for success in your next opportunity."
The Right Way to Say Goodbye
Give Them Time
Don't make it immediate unless there's a crisis. Give them time to process, to find something new, to leave with their head held high.
Provide Real Support
References, introductions, even helping with their search. Your network is probably their best asset for landing somewhere great.
Celebrate Their Contribution
Publicly acknowledge what they built with you. Make sure the team understands they're not leaving in failure—they're leaving as founders who helped create something bigger than themselves.
Leave the Door Open
Maybe there's a consulting role, or an advisory position, or just a standing invitation to company events. They were part of your origin story.
What You Learn About Leadership
Making these decisions teaches you something crucial about leadership: Sometimes the most loving thing you can do is let someone go.
Keeping someone in a role they can't succeed in isn't loyalty—it's cruelty.
Protecting their feelings at the expense of their growth and the business's health isn't kindness—it's avoidance.
Real leadership means making the hard decisions that serve everyone's long-term interests, even when they hurt in the short term.
The Aftermath
Here's what most founders don't expect: When you handle this transition well, something beautiful happens.
Your OG becomes one of your biggest advocates. They tell people about the amazing experience they had building something from nothing. They refer great candidates to you. They speak proudly about their role in your success story.
Because they understand that being outgrown isn't personal—it's mathematical. The business got bigger than what any one person from the early days could handle alone.
And that's not failure. That's success.
The Bottom Line
Your OGs helped you build something bigger than what you could have created alone.
Now it's your job to honor that contribution by making sure the thing you built together continues to grow, even if they can't grow with it.
The conversation is hard. The decision is painful. The guilt is real.
But the alternative—watching your business plateau because you can't make the tough choices—doesn't serve anyone.
Your OGs deserve better than being set up to fail.
Your business deserves better than being held back by loyalty.
And you deserve to build the company your vision deserves, even when it means saying goodbye to the people who helped you start it.
That's not betrayal. That's the price of building something that lasts.