The Enterprisors

Tim Meadows-Smith

  Two businesses. Same starting point. Ten years later, one is worth £35 million. The other is worth £4.4 billion. Same market. Same era. Different decision. One that most founders never even know they’re making. Hosted by Jo Parker, who has spent her career asking the questions people don’t want to answer. With her co-host Tim Meadows-Smith who has built and scaled businesses worth over £10 billion. He’s also spent 25 years in the room when companies quietly stop growing and watched founders convince themselves it’s the market, the economy, the timing. It isn’t. The Enterprisors is for the founders who’ve done the hard part. Past a million. Past ten million. And are now hitting something they can’t quite name. A ceiling that feels like circumstance but is actually a choice. Every episode, Tim and Jo go after the real reasons mid-sized businesses stall. The founder who has become the bottleneck. The plan that exists only in one person’s head. The team that’s stopped telling the truth. This is not a show about starting up. It’s for the top half-percent of founders who are ready to stop running their business and start leading it. The Enterprisors. Because the company you keep determines the company you build.  

Episodes

  1. 1d ago

    Six Silent Failures

    Tim Meadows-Smith breaks down why so few founder-led businesses ever reach serious scale and names the six specific failures that quietly kill growth before it can take hold. With only 13,000 founder-led businesses in the UK turning over more than 10 million pounds, and just 0.4% of all businesses ever reaching that threshold, the stakes are high and the obstacles are rarely spoken about plainly. This episode speaks plainly. Key Takeaways No vision ahead - Without a clear destination, businesses default to incremental shuffling rather than purposeful growth. Start with the end in mind and work backwards, ideally with someone who has built something similar.Not knowing what good looks like - Founders who have never worked inside a well-run organisation have no reference point for what better performance actually requires. You do not need to know what Arsenal looks like; you just need to understand what winning in the league above you takes.The wrong finance function - The accountant who helped you reach one million is not the person to take you to ten million, and that person is not the CFO you need to reach fifty million. Loyalty to early-stage advisors is one of the most common growth blockers.Weak planning - Businesses that operate reactively hit a ceiling fast. Effective planning lets you anticipate cash shortfalls, staffing gaps and stock problems before they become crises.Dreaming instead of planning - There is a difference between having ambitions and having a plan. Improvisation works briefly at small scale; it becomes dangerous as complexity grows.Leaders who have not led - Leadership is not solving every problem or telling people what to do. It is creating clarity, setting standards, and building an environment where good people want to perform. People do not leave for money; they leave because they are not led well.Timestamps 00:05 -- Introduction and the 13,000 figure02:28 -- Why founders hit a ceiling: the skills gap explained04:50 -- Failure 1: No vision ahead07:13 -- Failure 2: Not knowing what good looks like12:02 -- Failure 3: The finance function14:27 -- Failures 4 and 5: Weak planning and dreaming instead of planning17:57 -- Failure 6: Leaders who have not led19:18 -- The compounding effect and what comes next19:45 -- Tim's upcoming book: Enterprisation

    21 min
  2. Jun 3

    The Learner-Driver in the F1 Car

    Reaching £10 million in revenue is a genuine achievement, but it can also be a trap. The instincts, habits and behaviours that got you there are precisely the ones that will stop you going further. In this episode, Tim explores what he calls The Flip™ the critical but often overlooked transition every founder must make if they want to scale beyond £10M. Using the metaphor of a learner driver suddenly handed the keys to a Formula One car, Tim unpacks why command and control leadership creates an invisible ceiling, how mission control unlocks the full value of your team, and why the hardest part of growing a business is often growing yourself. If you're somewhere between £3M and £10M and wondering why things feel harder than they should, this episode is essential listening. Key Takeaways Reaching £10M isn't failure, it's taxiing to the end of the runway. But the same instincts that got you there will hold you back.The Flip™ is the shift from command & control (telling people what to do) to mission control (giving people the objective and trusting them to act).Command & control creates a bottleneck, every problem lands on the founder. Mission control frees the leader to think strategically.The decision to flip can be instant. The skills take weeks or months to embed.To grow past £10M, you must stop being the smartest person in the room and hire people who are better than you in each discipline.You can't grow a business faster than you grow yourself.Timestamps 00:05 — The F1 car metaphor: small business vs. big business driving02:29 — Why founders who reach £10M are genuinely skilled (but not yet ready)04:54 — Command & control vs. mission control, the Napoleonic origins07:12 — What a founder's week looks like before and after the flip09:38 — The smarter team dynamic: becoming the least smart in the room12:04 — From operative to leader to developer of leaders14:21 — How to start: mentors, coaches, humility, and staying curious

    16 min
  3. May 27

    Being the Smartest Person in the Room – The Insecurity of Being Too Clever!

    Two high-achievers sit down for a rare and candid conversation about the specific insecurity that comes with exceptional intelligence, not the fear of being found out, but the burden of being demonstrably ahead. Nick and Tim explore how early social friction taught them to suppress their instincts, how that habit quietly followed them into the boardroom, and what it costs a business when its brightest people are playing small. Key Takeaways: Suppression starts young - Both guests learned early that projecting intelligence made others uncomfortable. The coping mechanism? Self-deprecation, modesty, and holding back. Useful at 16, damaging at 52. The agreement problem - When you're tall, authoritative, and intellectually quick, it's almost impossible to know whether people are agreeing because you're right or because they've stopped trying to push back. That blind spot is dangerous for decision-making. Corporate vs. founder environments - Traditional corporate structures reward conformity and waiting your turn. Founders, meanwhile, often reject process entirely, which works until they try to scale. The trading floor lesson - Nick's time in commodity trading at BP taught him that you can't be right every time, decision-making requires a risk mindset, and the smartest move is delegating everything you don't need to do yourself. Hire on attitude, always - Both guests agree: one exceptional, motivated person with the right attitude outperforms five average ones every time. The rest can be taught. From doer to designer - The founder's real job is to move from doing everything to designing how everything gets done. The goal isn't to be the smartest person executing, it's to put the best person in every seat. Play to your superpowers - Know the two or three things you're distinctly better at than most, and delegate the rest with confidence rather than guilt. Timestamps: 00:05 Introduction: the rarer admission, being the most capable person in the room 01:34 Nick's story: a bright, bored kid who learnt to suppress himself socially 03:53 The hairdresser moment and early self-consciousness 05:30 How self-deprecation became a deeply ingrained habit 06:15 The blind spot: assuming everyone sees what you see 07:30 The word problem: using the right word and losing the room 09:30 Tim's story: six foot tall at age 10 and backing off physically and intellectually 10:42 Managing 160 people at 25 and what that did to character 12:53 Why corporate environments aren't built to embrace outlier potential 15:15 Moving from big corporate to entrepreneurial and falling flat 17:19 The trading floor revelation: delegation, risk mindset, and letting go 19:47 How to know when you need to delegate and how to commit to it 22:12 Hiring on attitude: the 23 year old entrepreneur and the JP Morgan story 24:33 Closing thoughts: swap energy for wisdom, be the designer not the doer

    26 min
  4. May 20

    From One CEO to Another - The Isolation Premium

    In this episode Tim Meadows-Smith unpacks one of British business's most overlooked paradoxes: the founder of a £30m company surrounded by hundreds of employees who is, structurally, the loneliest person in the room. He explores why medium-sized business leaders are misclassified, misunderstood, and chronically under-supported and what to do about it. Key Takeaways The SME label is misleading and harmful. Grouping a sole trader with a £300m business means medium-sized founders receive no relevant support, community, or benchmarking.Isolation is structural, not personal. There are only 60,000 medium-sized businesses in the UK — finding a true peer takes real effort.Ambition is contagious — but so is mediocrity. Without peers who know what "good" looks like, founders accept far less than they're capable of.The democracy trap is real. When everyone around you says you're doing fine, it takes courage to believe otherwise. The right peer group gives you that courage.The fix is proactive. Join or build a small group of 3–4 founders at a similar or slightly larger scale. NEDs who are still active operators are especially valuable.The UK is leaving growth on the table. Singapore nurtures its mid-market; the UK taxes it. Until policy changes, founders must create their own support structures.Timestamps [00:05] — Introducing the isolation premium: why the founder with thousands of people around them can still be the loneliest person in British business. [01:30] — The SME myth: how a single category lumps together a self-employed sole trader on benefits and a £300m business employing 249 people. [02:26] — The numbers game: only 60,000 medium-sized businesses in the UK. Walk past 1,000 business owners before you find one your size. [04:46] — The three circles of isolation: you can't be honest with staff, family don't understand and friends see you as the hero. [06:10] — Peer groups like EO and YPO: valuable but expensive (£15k–£50k/year) and not reaching enough of the 60,000 cohort. [07:04] — The ambition deficit: how isolation kills big targets. Plan for 5% and you'll get 5%. Plan for 30% and you might hit 20%. [09:27] — The democracy problem: psychologically wired to defer to the majority, founders capitulate to mediocrity even when their instinct is right. [10:30] — The scale reality check: only 0.4% of UK businesses reach £10m. The UK and India are joint worst globally; Singapore achieves 15%, 40 times better. [11:42] — NEDs as a solution: finding people still in their prime as mid-size leaders, not retired advisors chasing kudos. [13:30] — Practical advice: be proactive. You won't stumble across your peers. Seek them out deliberately.

    15 min
  5. May 13

    The Journeyman Problem: Why Your Early Team Could Be Holding You Back

    In this episode, Tim Meadows-Smith tackles one of the most uncomfortable truths in founder-led business growth. The people who helped you build to £5M may not be the people who can take you to £50M. Using professional football as a lens, Tim breaks down why businesses stall, what loyalty really means, and how to break through the ceilings keeping you stuck. This episode will make some founders uncomfortable. Good. That's the point. Timestamps [00:05] Introduction: Why leadership is at the heart of almost every stalled founder-led business between £5M and £50M, and why founders know it but don't act. [00:30] Defining the Journeyman using football: the enormous gulf between League Two and the Premier League and why that same gap exists inside your business. [02:32] Your first hires were effectively part-time amateurs. Without investment in their development, those same people become the ceiling, not the ladder. [03:30] The loyalty trap: founders who can't have the hard conversation, so nothing changes or it changes too late. [04:57] The real betrayal: spending years extracting everything your people know without ever helping them learn anything new. [05:30] The hardest truth: the worst trained person in most founder-led businesses is the founder themselves. [06:20] Why founders unconsciously surround themselves with Journeymen: they're easy to manage, don't challenge you, and protect the ego. But they won't take you anywhere new. [07:19] The growth ceilings mapped: £100K, £500K, £1M, £3M, £10M, £15M, £20M. Real, identifiable stall points and the root cause is almost always the same. [09:29] The manager analogy: the person who gets you to League One is rarely the same person for the Championship. Your whole team is optimised for where you've come from, not where you're going. [10:45] What true loyalty looks like: moving people into roles where they can succeed, not keeping them in roles where they're quietly failing. [14:19] Business intelligence: most businesses are drowning in data and starving for insight. You can't solve a problem you can't see. [16:22] The Journeyman Finance Director: accurate management accounts, but no strategic intelligence. The board gets last year's numbers when it needs direction. [18:49] The three traits every founder needs to break through: humility, curiosity, and a thirst for knowledge. Key Takeaways Growth ceilings are real and predictable. People, systems, and poor business intelligence are almost always the cause. Early loyalty can become your biggest blocker. The team that got you here won't automatically get you there. The founder is usually the least developed person in the building. Years building the business come at the cost of building yourself as a leader. Redefine loyalty. Develop people, reposition them where they can succeed, and be honest when a role has outgrown them. You don't need a full rebuild. A few hires from the league above can shift culture and raise standards across the whole team. Your data isn't telling you what you need. If your FD delivers variance reports rather than strategic insight, you have a Journeyman problem at the top of your numbers. Humility, curiosity, and a thirst for knowledge are the three non-negotiables for any founder serious about breaking through. Enjoyed this episode? Share it with a founder who needs to hear it. Subscribe and leave a review.

    19 min
  6. May 7

    The Founder Trap -Designing Freedom Into Your Business

    Most founders start a business chasing freedom, only to find themselves more trapped than ever. Tim Meadows-Smith breaks down why exhaustion becomes the default, and what it actually takes to escape it. Key Takeaways Freedom was the promise; exhaustion is the trap. Recognising this is the starting point.More staff does not mean less work until you have systems and a mission they can operate within.Use the 80/20 rule to create space, then use that space to build the structure that replaces you in the day-to-day.Flip from command and control to mission control and share your vision so your team can make decisions without you.Design the destination first, then work backwards. Most founders only ever try to improve where they are.Your primary job is to design and lead the business, not to be its hardest worker.  Timestamps and Key Moments [00:05] The Freedom Paradox The Hollywood dream of entrepreneurship, fast cars, free time, financial independence, collides with the reality of bootstrapping and doing everything yourself from day one. [01:30] The Hiring Trap Adding people doesn't reduce your load, it multiplies it. Each new hire waits for instructions, making you their decision-maker on top of everything else you're already doing. [02:30] Why Systems Never Get Built Founders can't afford systems early on, and by the time they can, they're too busy to design them. The result: more people, more problems, more of your time consumed. [03:10] Exhaustion as a Status Symbol Founders normalise and even celebrate burnout. Hobbies, friendships, and family moments get quietly sacrificed on the altar of building something. [04:39] The Weight of Recognition Crisis forces a moment of clarity, but most founders respond by making a small tweak rather than a structural change. The trap resets itself. [06:00] Command and Control vs. Mission Control The shift every founder must make: stop being the sole decision-maker and start giving your team a mission they can act on autonomously, the same lesson learned from Napoleonic warfare and NASA. [09:19] Creating Space With the 80/20 Rule Apply the Pareto principle ruthlessly. Stop doing the low-impact tasks eating 80% of your time. You could reclaim a full day per week simply by stopping, not delegating. [10:30] What Good Looks Like The benchmark: being able to take a full year off, no email, no calls, and the business runs fine. Most founders can't manage a weekend away. [11:42] The First Step Out Decide it cannot continue. Then define the destination first, not just financially but in terms of your own freedom, and build the plan backwards from there. [13:00] It's Your Fault (And That's Good News) If your team isn't performing, the responsibility sits with you. You haven't trained them, given them direction, or given them permission to think. That's fixable. [14:04] Go Beyond Doing The core shift: founders are brilliant doers, but doing is not leading. Nobody is born a leader, it's a skill you must deliberately develop. Until you do, the business won't grow. [16:12] Wisdom vs. Energy With age comes learning, not less of it. The real work of entrepreneurship is designing and leading the business, not making yourself ill working inside it.

    18 min
  7. Apr 29

    The Missing Profit — Why Most Founders Wouldn't Survive Their Own Standards

    Episode Summary Tim Meadows-Smith returns to challenge a comfortable myth: that steady growth and a profitable business mean you're doing well. In this episode, he argues that most mid-sized founders are operating at roughly half their potential profit, surrounded by people who can't tell them any different — and that the longer it goes unchallenged, the more value quietly disappears. Key Takeaways Half your potential profit is likely hidden in operational inefficiency, not in sales or costsCompounding better growth and productivity over 10 years creates a ~100x difference in exit valueYour FD probably has about 25% of the skills the role actually requires at this stageThe smartest thing you can do is find people running businesses bigger than yours and ask how they got thereThe first question in any underperforming business: what is this hiding from me?Timestamps [00:05] — The Brutal Opening Benchmark Half the potential profit in most mid-sized businesses is simply missing. In a PE-backed company, a leader delivering this performance would be replaced within two quarters. The only reason founders survive is that no one is holding them to the same standard they'd apply to anyone else. [01:00] — Why Founders Stop Learning Getting to mid-size puts you in the top half percent of all founders — but your knowledge base hasn't kept pace. You're still relying on people hired when the business was half the size, who are now out of their depth. Without exposure to people running bigger businesses, no one can show you what good looks like. [02:20] — The PE Sprint Analogy PE-backed businesses operate like a sprint within a marathon, high intensity, zero tolerance for underperformance. Founder-led businesses, by contrast, drift along accepting 5% growth as success. Tim's key challenge: to double your business every five years you need 15% compound growth. To build serious enterprise value, you need 25–35%. [03:45] — Where the Profit Is Hidden The missing profit lives in operational productivity, not in sales or cost control. Large companies typically need one person to deliver what a mid-size company uses three people for. [05:30] — The 100x Enterprise Value Gap Compound the difference between drifting (5% growth, low productivity) and performing (25–30% growth, doubled productivity) over 10 years, and the gap in what you could sell the business for becomes enormous. [07:30] — The Board That Isn't Really a Board Founders create comfortable boards populated with people they can manage easily. They enjoy being the smartest person in the room. [09:19] — The First Question to Ask When Tim enters a mid-sized company for the first time, he asks: "What is this business trying to hide from me?" The real question is: what would it take to double performance by year end? [13:00] — The Real Culprit: Your Finance Director The person founders trust most is often the source of the blind spot. A management accountant has roughly a quarter of the skills a true CFO needs. They're missing business analysis, data science, economic analysis, and planning capability. [15:30] — Should You Replace Yourself? If you treat your business purely as an asset, the question becomes: do you have the best possible CEO in post? Two paths forward, develop yourself rapidly or step into a chairman role and hire someone who can execute. [16:24] — The Other Missing Skill: Real Marketing Marketing in most mid-sized businesses means digital and promotion. What's actually missing is product management, genuinely understanding what customers want (not just need). Most founders are promoting the wrong thing, brilliantly.

    18 min
  8. Apr 23

    AI: The Conversation You've Been Avoiding with Guest Gerard Fogarty from Precision AI

    In this episode, Tim and Jo sit down with AI strategist Gerard Fogarty to cut through the noise around AI. What mid-sized business leaders actually need to know, what they don't and where to start. Key Takeaways ·       It's okay not to know. AI has arrived so fast that even CEOs of AI companies misrepresent what it can do ·       Before AI can help you, your business needs documented processes and structured data. If your business runs on gut instinct, AI can't query that ·       Your staff are already using AI whether you like it or not. Shadow usage creates real data leakage risk ·       The highest-ROI AI projects are usually the unglamorous ones. Automating repetitive, process-heavy workflows beats flashy pilots ·       AI is a capability, not a solution. Anyone promising guaranteed outcomes is a red flag ·       Going AI-positive doesn't mean going all-in. It starts with a policy document and a conversation ·       Gerard's 4-week starter plan: Week 1 visibility, Week 2 policy document, Weeks 3 and 4 identify and evaluate real use cases   Timestamps 01:00 Introducing Gerard to talk about AI conversations we have been avoiding 02:32 Why it's okay not to know about AI and why we are embarrassed to admit it 04:21 The "travel" analogy: AI isn't one thing 06:04 It is the same as knowing how to switch on a light but not knowing how the electricity gets to your home 07:24 How ChatGPT reached its inflection point 08:45 What your business needs before AI can help 11:07 Two CEOs, same market: what happens in 12 months? 12:41 Shadow AI: the data leakage risk hiding in your organisation and how to avoid it happening 14:32 Cognitive offloading and the erosion of domain expertise 16:31 The compounding effect of going AI-positive 19:00 The boring stuff delivers the best ROI (the “red” luxury brand car story) 21:19 Will AI replace jobs? 24:17 Gerard's personal story: tremor diagnosis and how AI will help him 26:30 How to handle AI when your team is already overwhelmed 30:36 Red flags when hiring an AI provider 35:55 Gerard has built an LLM 39:56 The £5,000 weekend mistake 41:50 Your 4-week AI action starter plan

    43 min
  9. Apr 15

    Finding Your Tribe

    Most CEOs at mid-size companies have tried networking. Most have concluded it doesn't work. They're right…but only about the wrong kind of networking. Chambers of commerce, local coffee mornings, IOD breakfast events: full of people who haven't yet reached a million in revenue, and predatory service providers who want to sell to you. That's not a tribe. That's a waste of a Tuesday morning. The networking that actually moves the needle looks completely different. It's deliberate, it's scarce, and you have to go looking for it. Because the people who share your level of ambition and capability, the founders who've broken through a million, through ten million, and are still hungry, number around 13,000 across the entire country. You won't bump into them at a local business breakfast. In this episode, we explore why peer connection is one of the highest-leverage things a mid-sized CEO can invest in, how to find the right people and why 5% growth feels like success right up until the moment you're in a room with someone doing 50%. TIMESTAMPS 01:33 — Why most networking doesn't work. Two types fill the average networking room: those who haven't built their business yet, and those trying to sell to you. 04:55— Why buying advice isn't enough. Even the best non-exec hasn't done what you've done. The value of peer connection is finding someone who is living exactly what you're living right now, at your scale. 05:32 — The right kind of network and how to find it. Ask your lawyer, banker, or broker who else they work with at your scale. One introduction leads to another. But you have to ask directly and keep asking. 06:19 — What your tribe actually gives you Confidence that 40–50% growth isn't exceptional — it's achievable. Once you're in a room with people who believe that, your own ceiling starts to move. 07:30 — Non-execs from your own peer group, Mid-sized CEOs sitting on each other's boards. Challenging the finance director's voice of caution. Unlocking the value already sitting in your payroll without spending an extra penny. 09:38 — The loneliness of the top 0.5% You've done something fewer than half a per cent of founders ever achieve. But that rarity is also isolation. Good is 35–50% growth. Five per cent is barely above inflation and well into zombie territory. 10:45 — From entrepreneur to enterprisor. You've already proved you can solve problems. Now it's about borrowing what works at enterprise scale, adapting it to where you are now, and going beyond doing. 13:45 — Tim's open offer: He built 3 businesses with a total value of over £10 billion in global sales. Tim explains why he'll connect any mid-sized founder with the right people in their geography over a coffee, for free. 15:55 — Tim has created “Enterprisation” and the podcast is a starting point, not the destination. Peer events, introductions and questions from the audience. An open invitation to ask what hasn't yet been covered. KEY TAKEAWAYS The wrong networking is worse than no networking, it costs time and quietly kills ambitionYour peers are out there, but you have to go looking; they will not find you by accident5% growth feels safe. In a room of ambitious peers, it feels like what it actually is, just above inflationDoubling productivity through your people costs nothing extra. Doubling sales requires borrowed cash. Choose your lever wiselyYou are in the top 0.5% of every founder who ever started. The next move is learning to think like an enterprisor, not just an entrepreneurNext episode: AI expert Gerard Fogarty on what artificial intelligence really means for mid-sized businesses — and how to use it to free up space to grow.

    17 min
  10. Apr 8

    Utopia First

    Most business plans start in the wrong place. They begin with last year's numbers, add a cautious percentage,and call it ambition. The result is a 5% growth rate dressed up as a strategy. It's not planning, it's budgeting with optimism sprinkled on top. Utopia First does the opposite. It starts with the life you actually want in ten years, in detail and works backwards to build the business that delivers it. Not what seems achievable. Not what the finance director will sign off. What you actually went into business for in the first place. In this episode, Tim walks Jo through the full Utopia First method: why personal vision has to come before business planning, how to build a path from £10M to £100M without it feeling impossible, and why the person sweeping the warehouse floor has a number too. TIMESTAMPS 01:07 — Utopia first and why most businesses don't plan properly. Budgets aren't business plans. Tim explains the difference between a plan that sits in a drawer and an operating system that actually runs a business. 02:49 — The operating plan as meta process. The tool that sits above everything else, measuring performance, spotting gaps, and making sure you spend 85% of your time on what's next. 04:25 — Why starting from now is the problem. If you plan forward from where you are, you imagine forward from where you are. Tim explains why that's the ceiling — and how Utopia First breaks it. 06:09 — What Utopia actually looks like. How many days in the office? Which car? How often do you holiday? This isn't a business plan, it's defining the life the business is supposed to deliver. 07:34 — Building the blueprint backwards for your best life, from ten-year vision to now. How to close the gap between dream and reality without losing your nerve halfway through. 11:23 — Reviewing the plan and how often; monthly, not annually. The key drivers to watch, why you spend only 15% of your board meeting on the past, and what to do with the other 85%. 13:10 — Getting from 5% to 45%. The Utopia First number isn't just more ambitious, it's structurally different. Here's what has to change for the higher number to become inevitable. 16:00 — Everybody has a number. Goals aren't just for directors. Tim explains how the person sweeping the warehouse floor has a measurable contribution and why that's where productivity actually lives. 17:39 — The Japanese lesson Toyota didn't beat General Motors on marketing. They had a 20-year plan, continuous improvement, and people empowered to fix problems without asking permission. 21:19 — The stages of leadership maturity. From doing everything, to deciding, to delegating, to leading, to creating other leaders, to visionary. Most founders get stuck at supervision. Here's the roadmap out. 22:40 — Why nobody will buy your business If it can't run without you, it's worth 3–4x earnings. Build the systems and it becomes 15x. The difference is the same distance as everything else in this podcast. KEY TAKEAWAYS Business planning that starts from now will always underestimate what's possibleYour personal definition of success must come before your business plan — not afterEverybody in the organisation has a measurable number, including the warehouse floorSpend 15% of your board time on the past. Spend 85% on what's nextA business that runs without you is worth 4–5 times more than one that doesn'tThe enemy of success is ego. Humility, curiosity and appetite for learning is what drives itComing Soon: AI expert Gerard Fogarty on what artificial intelligence actually means for mid-sized businesses and how to use it to create the space to grow.

    28 min
  11. Apr 1

    The Myths of Building a Business

    Everyone has an opinion on what it takes to build a successful business. Governments celebrate founders. Hollywood glamorises the lone entrepreneur. Education systems tell us an idea plus ambition equals freedom. Almost all of it is wrong. In this episode, Tim and Jo dismantle the stories that keep Britain's mid-sized CEOs stuck, from the myth that starting businesses drives the economy, to the zombie businesses quietly existing just to service their debt, to the dangerous belief that a cash injection can fix a broken model. The uncomfortable truth is that five and a half million businesses are classed as SMEs in this country, yet fewer than 50,000 of them account for half of total UK sales. The engine isn't where anyone is looking. But perhaps the most important myth Tim unpicks isn't about business at all. It's about success itself, who defined yours, whether it's actually yours, and what happens when you spend a career chasing somebody else's version of it. Before you can flip your business, you have to know what you're flipping towards. TIMESTAMPS 01:10 — The SME myth 5.5 million businesses. 2 million of their founders on benefits. The government calls them all SMEs, but their needs couldn't be more different. 03:48 — Where the real engine actually is The 50,000 mid-sized businesses nobody talks about do half the total sales of the five and a half million beneath them. That's where productivity and policy should be focused. 04:49 — The numbers nobody wants to say out loud. Less than 3% reach £1M revenue. Under 0.5% reach £10M. And only half a per cent of those make it to £100M. The runway is longer and emptier than anyone admits. 07:43 — The five and a half inches revisited. The lone hero model doesn't work. Most founders spend everything building the business and almost nothing building themselves as leaders  and that gap is where growth dies. 10:45 — The education myth: Finishing a degree doesn't make you the finished article. The people who really succeed treat graduation as learning how to learn, not permission to stop. 11:51 — Whose definition of success are you chasing? If you haven't defined what success looks like for you, in specific, personal detail, you're almost certainly working towards someone else's version of it. 17:44 — The zombie myth Flatlined growth. Unprofitable but surviving. Existing purely to service debt. Tim explains how businesses end up here and why so many CEOs don't even realise they're in it. 19:50 — The Phoenix myth: A lump of cash feels like a rescue. But if nothing in the model changes, the money runs out and you're back where you started. The structure has to change, not just the balance sheet. 22:55 — Running vs leading. There's a fundamental difference between running a business and leading one. Most founders are taught to manage. Almost none are taught to lead. 23:06 — The psychological barrier. To solve a problem, you first have to admit it exists. Tim on why so many capable CEOs stay trapped and why ego is usually the lock on the door. KEY TAKEAWAYS The SME label is politically convenient and practically useless; 50,000 businesses do the work of millionsZombies don't always look broken. Sometimes they look comfortableMore money doesn't fix a broken model, it just delays the reckoningYour definition of success needs to be yours, built in detail, and revisited every yearReal champions keep asking what's wrong with them. The rest pretend they've got it sortedNext episode: Utopia First — how to design the future you actually want, then build backwards to now. Subscribe | Leave a review | Share with a founder who needs to hear this

    29 min
  12. Mar 26

    The 125x Gap

    Most business owners believe that reaching £20 million in turnover is the hard part. They're wrong. Getting there is the heroic bit — the scrappy, sleep-deprived, figure-it-out-as-you-go chapter that most people never survive. But staying stuck at £20 million? That's the quiet tragedy nobody talks about. Two businesses start from the same place. Same turnover. Same potential. Ten years later, one is worth £35 million. The other is worth £4.4 billion. That's not a different market, a better product, or a fortunate set of circumstances. That's a decision — one that most founders don't even know they're making. The decision is The Flip. From founder-dependent to enterprise. From hero to architect. From the person who does everything, to the person who builds the system that does everything. It sounds simple. It is anything but. And yet, as Tim Meadows-Smith — businessman, author, and 25-year veteran of corporate turnaround — makes clear, there is nothing about it beyond the reach of anyone who has already built a mid-sized business. What you may be missing is the five and a half inches between your ears. TIMESTAMPS 00:07 — Welcome & the 125x question Two businesses, same starting point, vastly different outcomes. The gap is avoidable and entirely deliberate. 02:11 — The compounding principle Billionaires don't just use the 80/20 rule, they apply it 20 times over, stacking 95/5 advantages until the numbers become extraordinary. 05:00 — The growth plateau You hit £10M expecting 35% growth. By £25–30M you're accepting 5%. Tim explains exactly why that ceiling appears  and who put it there. 06:16 — The accountant trap The person who got you from £1M to £10M may be actively braking your growth at £25M. It's not their fault. But it is your problem to solve. 09:42 — How do you know you're stuck? Late dinners, no family time, no headspace. The signs you've become the bottleneck in your own business. 13:09 — Investing in yourself, not just the business The CEOs compounding at 50% year-on-year share one trait: deliberate, continuous self-development. Humility isn't weakness, it's strategy. 13:54 — Why women outperform Women are 40% more successful at scaling than men, while receiving only 16% of investment. They're comfortable not being the smartest person in the room. 16:39 — The loneliness of mid-size At £30M turnover, you'd pass 400 CEOs before finding one the same size as you. The conversations you need simply don't exist at standard networking events. 19:40 — Britain's founding problem The UK gets 0.04% of businesses from zero to £10M. Singapore gets 15%. The difference is investment, training and measurement not talent. 23:50 — Tim's story; From corporate high-flyer to near-insolvency: what 25 years of turnaround work taught him about what actually makes businesses survive. 25:05 — The real fix; Distressed businesses almost never need more capital. They need a different way of doing things, one that self-generates momentum. KEY TAKEAWAYS The 125x gap is real, measurable, and the result of specific decisions — not market conditionsYour best early hires can become your biggest growth blockers — through no fault of their ownThe founder bottleneck is almost always the ceiling, not the marketHumility and curiosity are the most underrated scaling skills a CEO can developThe distance between £1M and £100M is roughly five and a half inches — the gap between your earsNext episode: the myths of business — debunked. Subscribe | Leave a review | Share with a founder who needs to hear this

    28 min

About

  Two businesses. Same starting point. Ten years later, one is worth £35 million. The other is worth £4.4 billion. Same market. Same era. Different decision. One that most founders never even know they’re making. Hosted by Jo Parker, who has spent her career asking the questions people don’t want to answer. With her co-host Tim Meadows-Smith who has built and scaled businesses worth over £10 billion. He’s also spent 25 years in the room when companies quietly stop growing and watched founders convince themselves it’s the market, the economy, the timing. It isn’t. The Enterprisors is for the founders who’ve done the hard part. Past a million. Past ten million. And are now hitting something they can’t quite name. A ceiling that feels like circumstance but is actually a choice. Every episode, Tim and Jo go after the real reasons mid-sized businesses stall. The founder who has become the bottleneck. The plan that exists only in one person’s head. The team that’s stopped telling the truth. This is not a show about starting up. It’s for the top half-percent of founders who are ready to stop running their business and start leading it. The Enterprisors. Because the company you keep determines the company you build.