
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Entrepreneurs don’t burn out because they lack ideas. They burn out because they stay stuck doing work they should have left years ago. In this episode of Marketing Misfits, Norm Farrar and Kevin King sit down with James Friel, founder of 57 Hats, to break down why growing businesses start bleeding time, money, and energy and how founders can systematically escape roles that are holding them back.
James Friel explains why most businesses suffer from waste, poor role clarity, weak systems, and misaligned hiring, and why entrepreneurs must treat themselves like temporary “special forces”: build the system, extract yourself, and move on to the next constraint.
This is a practical, operator-level conversation about systems, hiring, delegation, performance management, and building businesses that can actually run without you.
If you’re wearing too many hats, struggling to hire, or wondering why revenue keeps growing but profits don’t, this episode will feel uncomfortably accurate.
This episode is brought to you by:
- QuietLight Brokerage: Get a free, confidential valuation https://quietlight.com/
- Sellerboard: https://sellerboard.com/misfits
- House of AMZ: Elevate your brand today at https://www.amazonseo.com/
- 8fig: Get 25% off 8fig off at https://8fig.co
- Stack Influence: Use code MISFITS for 10% off at https://stackinfluence.com/
- Levanta: Get 20% off Levanta's gold plan and book your call today - https://get.levanta.io/misfits
Chapters
00:00 Entrepreneurs Die Inside
01:04 The Spider Prank Story
03:39 Meet James Friel
07:20 Businesses That Are Bleeding
08:32 Value vs Waste Explained
11:01 The Hiring Rollercoaster
12:11 Work Your Strengths
14:09 Know Your Real Profits
16:04 Build Systems First
18:47 The Special Forces Role
21:48 Buy Back Your Time
23:41 The Five Business Pillars
27:26 Agency vs In-House
31:09 Teams Aren’t Families
36:18 Fixing Broken Businesses
48:31 Inside 57 Hats
59:17 Why Letting Go Is Hard
What You’ll Learn
- Why entrepreneurs “die inside” when they stay stuck too long
- The difference between value creation vs waste in a business
- When to hire, outsource, or automate (and how to decide)
- Why founders should buy back their time aggressively
- How to identify $10, $100, $1,000, and $10,000 tasks-
- Why most entrepreneurs are bad managers and what to do instead
- How to escape the hire–fire roller coaster
- Why systems matter more than effort
- People, processes, and tools explained clearly
- How poor role clarity kills otherwise good teams
- Why managing outcomes beats managing tasks
- The truth about “we’re a family” culture at work
- Why teams must change as businesses grow
About the Guest
James is a systems-focused operator and the creator of 57 Hats, a hands-on framework and physical product designed to help founders identify which roles they should keep, delegate, or eliminate entirely.
Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.
By The Marketing Misfits5
66 ratings
Entrepreneurs don’t burn out because they lack ideas. They burn out because they stay stuck doing work they should have left years ago. In this episode of Marketing Misfits, Norm Farrar and Kevin King sit down with James Friel, founder of 57 Hats, to break down why growing businesses start bleeding time, money, and energy and how founders can systematically escape roles that are holding them back.
James Friel explains why most businesses suffer from waste, poor role clarity, weak systems, and misaligned hiring, and why entrepreneurs must treat themselves like temporary “special forces”: build the system, extract yourself, and move on to the next constraint.
This is a practical, operator-level conversation about systems, hiring, delegation, performance management, and building businesses that can actually run without you.
If you’re wearing too many hats, struggling to hire, or wondering why revenue keeps growing but profits don’t, this episode will feel uncomfortably accurate.
This episode is brought to you by:
- QuietLight Brokerage: Get a free, confidential valuation https://quietlight.com/
- Sellerboard: https://sellerboard.com/misfits
- House of AMZ: Elevate your brand today at https://www.amazonseo.com/
- 8fig: Get 25% off 8fig off at https://8fig.co
- Stack Influence: Use code MISFITS for 10% off at https://stackinfluence.com/
- Levanta: Get 20% off Levanta's gold plan and book your call today - https://get.levanta.io/misfits
Chapters
00:00 Entrepreneurs Die Inside
01:04 The Spider Prank Story
03:39 Meet James Friel
07:20 Businesses That Are Bleeding
08:32 Value vs Waste Explained
11:01 The Hiring Rollercoaster
12:11 Work Your Strengths
14:09 Know Your Real Profits
16:04 Build Systems First
18:47 The Special Forces Role
21:48 Buy Back Your Time
23:41 The Five Business Pillars
27:26 Agency vs In-House
31:09 Teams Aren’t Families
36:18 Fixing Broken Businesses
48:31 Inside 57 Hats
59:17 Why Letting Go Is Hard
What You’ll Learn
- Why entrepreneurs “die inside” when they stay stuck too long
- The difference between value creation vs waste in a business
- When to hire, outsource, or automate (and how to decide)
- Why founders should buy back their time aggressively
- How to identify $10, $100, $1,000, and $10,000 tasks-
- Why most entrepreneurs are bad managers and what to do instead
- How to escape the hire–fire roller coaster
- Why systems matter more than effort
- People, processes, and tools explained clearly
- How poor role clarity kills otherwise good teams
- Why managing outcomes beats managing tasks
- The truth about “we’re a family” culture at work
- Why teams must change as businesses grow
About the Guest
James is a systems-focused operator and the creator of 57 Hats, a hands-on framework and physical product designed to help founders identify which roles they should keep, delegate, or eliminate entirely.
Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

300 Listeners

1,452 Listeners

1,355 Listeners

211 Listeners

593 Listeners

62 Listeners

99 Listeners

526 Listeners

2,663 Listeners

37 Listeners

29,313 Listeners

212 Listeners

50 Listeners

13 Listeners

95 Listeners