Your circle is either raising your standard or lowering it.
There is no neutral.
Founders protect their hiring bar.
Then let their calendar fill with people who shrink their thinking.
You can build an A-player team and still let B-player relationships set your pace.
The five people you speak to most will shape your clarity, your speed, and your next decision.
Choose wrong and it compounds.
Here is how to treat your circle like your hiring bar:
1) Map your voices
↳ List the fifteen people you talk to most.
↳ Tag each one: raises energy or drains it.
2) Set entry standards
↳ Define five traits your circle must have.
↳ Review quarterly. Drop repeat violations.
3) Debrief your energy
↳ After every recurring call, rate your clarity.
↳ If it drops three weeks running, replace the call.
4) Cap low-value time
↳ Fifteen-minute limit on any meeting that drains.
↳ If it can't fit in fifteen, it shouldn't exist.
5) Upgrade your rooms
↳ One peer roundtable a month with operators ahead of you.
↳ Track what you implement. Two ideas minimum.
Standards are not just for your team.
They are for every voice that touches your week.
Where are you letting convenience choose who gets your time?
♻ Repost this if it resonated.
✅ Follow Michael Krayenhoff for more on building teams, leadership, and careers.
There is no neutral.
Founders protect their hiring bar.
Then let their calendar fill with people who shrink their thinking.
You can build an A-player team and still let B-player relationships set your pace.
The five people you speak to most will shape your clarity, your speed, and your next decision.
Choose wrong and it compounds.
Here is how to treat your circle like your hiring bar:
1) Map your voices
↳ List the fifteen people you talk to most.
↳ Tag each one: raises energy or drains it.
2) Set entry standards
↳ Define five traits your circle must have.
↳ Review quarterly. Drop repeat violations.
3) Debrief your energy
↳ After every recurring call, rate your clarity.
↳ If it drops three weeks running, replace the call.
4) Cap low-value time
↳ Fifteen-minute limit on any meeting that drains.
↳ If it can't fit in fifteen, it shouldn't exist.
5) Upgrade your rooms
↳ One peer roundtable a month with operators ahead of you.
↳ Track what you implement. Two ideas minimum.
Standards are not just for your team.
They are for every voice that touches your week.
Where are you letting convenience choose who gets your time?
♻ Repost this if it resonated.
✅ Follow Michael Krayenhoff for more on building teams, leadership, and careers.