Welcome back to ScaleUp Radio Shorts, where Kevin Brent and Louise Blunt distil the best insights from our recent full-length interviews and turn them into practical, actionable takeaways for ambitious business owners. This week, we're bringing together two very different voices with a surprisingly aligned message: Jack Molyneux – former Merchant Navy Master Mariner turned tech founder, building a disruptive superyacht platform, IDOSY. Lindsey Burden – Intuitive Business Coach with over a decade of experience helping founders stop overcomplicating and start executing. Different industries. Different journeys. The same core lesson: scaling successfully comes down to clarity, courage and focused execution. 1. Simplicity Scales. Complexity Distracts. Jack built IDOSY around a clear mission: fix a broken, opaque system in the superyacht charter industry. His entire platform centres on three things: Live price. Live availability. Live booking. In an industry dominated by phone calls, PDFs and delayed email chains, that simplicity is the disruption. Lindsey shared the flip side. In her early days, she described herself as the "Queen of Overcomplication". Busy work felt productive. Complexity created the illusion of progress. But when business owners panic, they often abandon the plan and chase shiny objects. A new platform. A new offer. A new strategy. Instead of staying focused on the destination, they start reprogramming the sat-nav mid-journey. The lesson? Simplicity creates traction. Complexity creates noise. 2. The Right Team Will Challenge You Jack made a powerful point about leadership: as a founder, you must have someone around you who is prepared to say no. Founders are persuasive. Vision-driven. Convincing. But without challenge, conviction can turn into blind spots. Having led crews of over 100 people as a Master Mariner, Jack understands operational discipline. In a scaling business, strong teams aren't just compliant. They question. They test. They refine. Lindsey sees this transition from another angle. When you move from solopreneur to employer, you quickly realise: No one will care quite as much as you. You cannot hire only "doers". You need a mix of reliable executors and people who think, lead and innovate. Scaling requires a shift in identity. From being the person with all the answers… To being the person who sets the intent and trusts others to execute. 3. The 90-Day Sweet Spot One of the strongest overlaps between both conversations was execution rhythm. Lindsey is a huge advocate of 90-day planning. She calls it the sweet spot: Long enough to deliver meaningful results Short enough to stay focused and accountable Without that rhythm, founders get trapped in what she calls the "octopus business" – tentacles everywhere, constant activity, little progress. Jack demonstrated this mindset in action when raising capital. Instead of being overwhelmed by the enormity of fundraising, he broke it down step by step. His advice? Start with friends and family. If you cannot convince the people who know and trust you, persuading strangers will be even harder. It builds confidence, momentum and belief. And when the rejections come, as they always do, remember: Every "no" is one step closer to the next "yes". 4. Pricing, Confidence and Backing Yourself Lindsey delivered some tough but essential advice on pricing. When things get quiet, the temptation is to drop your prices or accept the wrong-fit clients for quick cash. But that decision shapes your future pipeline. Do premium work at bargain prices and you attract more bargain buyers. She challenges founders to stop pricing by the hour. Clients do not pay for time. They pay for outcomes. They care about getting from A to B, not how many hours it takes. Her practical tip for selling high-ticket services: "Nail your pricing, say it with confidence, and then don't say another word." Confidence is built through repetition. Through experience. Through backing yourself. Which mirrors Jack's advice to his younger self: Back yourself. Be brave. It's okay if people don't like it. He also challenged the idea of overprotecting your concept. You do not have a business until you build it. Talking about your idea creates momentum. Silence does not. The One Key Thing The one key thing this week: Focus on execution over emotion. Keep it simple, commit to a 90-day rhythm, price with confidence, and back yourself even when it feels uncomfortable. Standout Message "You can have 100% of nothing, or you can start talking to people and see what happens." Quick Heads-Up: Smart90 Lite We're currently looking for a handful of founders to test our new AI-powered Smart90 app. It's built to help you stay accountable and actually deliver on your goals in just a few minutes a day. It's free while we're in testing, and your feedback will directly shape the final version. If you would like early access, take a look at smart90.co.uk