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The dishonesty you keep finding is usually the system you designed working perfectly.
Most founders treat employee dishonesty as a hiring problem or a character flaw. The founders who've watched this play out across multiple companies see something different — a system pattern wearing a person's face. Anthony and Chris break down the two flavors of dishonesty, why founders almost always confuse them, and what changes when you stop scrutinizing the people and start scrutinizing the conditions you built around them.
They cover the easy calls (theft, fraud, a faked status report on a publicly traded client) where the right move is fast and final. Then the harder ground — the everyday padded estimates, the inflated progress reports, the credit-grabs — where firing misses the diagnosis entirely. They get into the Buurtzorg case where removing managers actually decreased dishonesty, why Meta's bottom-third firing cycle creates the lying it claims to filter out, and the Slack origin story as a working example of upward honesty paying off.
If you've ever caught someone in a lie at your company and wondered whether the problem was them or you, this one's for you.
Keywords: employee dishonesty, founder leadership, company culture, psychological safety, hiring mistakes, trust and verify, command and control management, Buurtzorg, Slack pivot, founder accountability
By Anthony FrancoThe dishonesty you keep finding is usually the system you designed working perfectly.
Most founders treat employee dishonesty as a hiring problem or a character flaw. The founders who've watched this play out across multiple companies see something different — a system pattern wearing a person's face. Anthony and Chris break down the two flavors of dishonesty, why founders almost always confuse them, and what changes when you stop scrutinizing the people and start scrutinizing the conditions you built around them.
They cover the easy calls (theft, fraud, a faked status report on a publicly traded client) where the right move is fast and final. Then the harder ground — the everyday padded estimates, the inflated progress reports, the credit-grabs — where firing misses the diagnosis entirely. They get into the Buurtzorg case where removing managers actually decreased dishonesty, why Meta's bottom-third firing cycle creates the lying it claims to filter out, and the Slack origin story as a working example of upward honesty paying off.
If you've ever caught someone in a lie at your company and wondered whether the problem was them or you, this one's for you.
Keywords: employee dishonesty, founder leadership, company culture, psychological safety, hiring mistakes, trust and verify, command and control management, Buurtzorg, Slack pivot, founder accountability