43 min

Would you sack your biggest client to keep your team happy? - Richard Clarke of Secret Source Karmic Capitalist - businesses with purpose

    • Entrepreneurship

Would you sack your biggest client if they were making your team unhappy? Create a BIG hole in your revenue and profit? Actually put some of your team at risk due to the financial hit?
"We want our team to be happy".
Pretty much every company says this at some level.
And in the inimitable words of Greta Thurnberg, "blah blah blah". It usually is as real as the staged photos of smiling employees (or occasionally, as we don't have any real smiling employees, a stock photo of smiling white people).
But not for Secret Source.
Richard Clarke always wanted a happy company. But the reality is that at the outset, when the "not entirely happy" sh!t hit the "grow and make more profit" fan...
Well, let's just say that the normal expectation of what a business should be, i.e. revenue growth and profitability above all else, just kind of ran its course.
Until they hit *that* project. *That* client
 And had *that* project manager. Who backed him up against the wall.
"Either our happiness counts and this client goes... or we keep the client, but we stop talking about happiness as THE thing."
Ballsy? Yes. Direct? Yes. The right thing to ask?
Absolutely.
Richard chose happiness.
And ironically (or not) the company has grown by 50% a year since.
This has to be one of my favourite #KarmicCapitalist episodes. If there were a case study in putting team happiness front and centre, Secret Source have got to be it.
In this episode, Richard talks openly about the transformation from wanting a happy company to making one. About how they made it happen - psychological safety was a foundational principle.
He talks about how when you place happiness at the heart of what you do, it leads you in certain directions for your commercial, your sales and your people strategies. It drives not only client selection, but the model for engagement.
We talk about hard customer decisions and the actual customer conversations to deal with them.
We talk about the hard conversations with your team (which don't go away) and how to deal with them. 
We talk about succession while maintaining your values (unsurprisingly, hello again Rachel!).
About what worries Richard most.
And a whole lot more.
I genuinely loved this episode. Richard is so humble with what he's built and how, and paints a blueprint which many companies could learn from.
Enjoy. I did.
_______________

I host a weekly online workshop with CEOs of SMEs (10 to 100 employees approx) about scaling up, allowing them to step back and do more strategic work, and doing it in line with their values. Max 6 per session so we can have a real conversation.

If you'd like to join me, find a date that works for you here. They aren't charged for - you and I will both get value from the conversation.

Only CEOs / MDs apply - strictly peer-level conversation.

Would you sack your biggest client if they were making your team unhappy? Create a BIG hole in your revenue and profit? Actually put some of your team at risk due to the financial hit?
"We want our team to be happy".
Pretty much every company says this at some level.
And in the inimitable words of Greta Thurnberg, "blah blah blah". It usually is as real as the staged photos of smiling employees (or occasionally, as we don't have any real smiling employees, a stock photo of smiling white people).
But not for Secret Source.
Richard Clarke always wanted a happy company. But the reality is that at the outset, when the "not entirely happy" sh!t hit the "grow and make more profit" fan...
Well, let's just say that the normal expectation of what a business should be, i.e. revenue growth and profitability above all else, just kind of ran its course.
Until they hit *that* project. *That* client
 And had *that* project manager. Who backed him up against the wall.
"Either our happiness counts and this client goes... or we keep the client, but we stop talking about happiness as THE thing."
Ballsy? Yes. Direct? Yes. The right thing to ask?
Absolutely.
Richard chose happiness.
And ironically (or not) the company has grown by 50% a year since.
This has to be one of my favourite #KarmicCapitalist episodes. If there were a case study in putting team happiness front and centre, Secret Source have got to be it.
In this episode, Richard talks openly about the transformation from wanting a happy company to making one. About how they made it happen - psychological safety was a foundational principle.
He talks about how when you place happiness at the heart of what you do, it leads you in certain directions for your commercial, your sales and your people strategies. It drives not only client selection, but the model for engagement.
We talk about hard customer decisions and the actual customer conversations to deal with them.
We talk about the hard conversations with your team (which don't go away) and how to deal with them. 
We talk about succession while maintaining your values (unsurprisingly, hello again Rachel!).
About what worries Richard most.
And a whole lot more.
I genuinely loved this episode. Richard is so humble with what he's built and how, and paints a blueprint which many companies could learn from.
Enjoy. I did.
_______________

I host a weekly online workshop with CEOs of SMEs (10 to 100 employees approx) about scaling up, allowing them to step back and do more strategic work, and doing it in line with their values. Max 6 per session so we can have a real conversation.

If you'd like to join me, find a date that works for you here. They aren't charged for - you and I will both get value from the conversation.

Only CEOs / MDs apply - strictly peer-level conversation.

43 min