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What if the smartest people in your corner are the reason you're stuck?
Founders build advisory boards by collecting impressive resumes: former CEOs, industry veterans, people who've been exactly where they want to go. Six months later, they're making the same decisions they'd make alone, except now four people validate them first. That's not an advisory board. That's an echo chamber with better titles.
Chris Franks and Stephanie Hays tear apart the conventional playbook on personal boards of advisors. They dig into Paula Caprani's research on managerial derailment, the concept of the "loving critic," and why fifty percent of professionals stall out because nobody challenges their blind spots. They explore the Techstars "mentor whiplash" phenomenon, where contradictory advice from smart people turns out to be the real curriculum. And they get honest about the hardest part: recognizing when the advisor you're most loyal to is the one holding you back.
You'll walk away knowing how to build an advisory board that actually makes you better, not just makes you feel better, and when to refresh it before it costs you.
Keywords: personal board of advisors, founder mentorship, advisory board strategy, mentor whiplash, loving critic, startup advisors, founder development, cognitive diversity, business mentors
By Anthony FrancoWhat if the smartest people in your corner are the reason you're stuck?
Founders build advisory boards by collecting impressive resumes: former CEOs, industry veterans, people who've been exactly where they want to go. Six months later, they're making the same decisions they'd make alone, except now four people validate them first. That's not an advisory board. That's an echo chamber with better titles.
Chris Franks and Stephanie Hays tear apart the conventional playbook on personal boards of advisors. They dig into Paula Caprani's research on managerial derailment, the concept of the "loving critic," and why fifty percent of professionals stall out because nobody challenges their blind spots. They explore the Techstars "mentor whiplash" phenomenon, where contradictory advice from smart people turns out to be the real curriculum. And they get honest about the hardest part: recognizing when the advisor you're most loyal to is the one holding you back.
You'll walk away knowing how to build an advisory board that actually makes you better, not just makes you feel better, and when to refresh it before it costs you.
Keywords: personal board of advisors, founder mentorship, advisory board strategy, mentor whiplash, loving critic, startup advisors, founder development, cognitive diversity, business mentors