Many women start their businesses because they are brilliant at what they do.
They’re exceptional consultants, creatives, strategists, practitioners, or service providers. They launch their business because they see a gap, they want freedom, or they want to make a meaningful impact.
What they rarely imagine at the beginning is that one day they’ll need to lead a team.
Yet for most businesses, growth eventually reaches a point where success no longer depends on how much the founder can personally deliver. Instead, it depends on how effectively the founder can lead other people to deliver that work.
This transition—from doing everything yourself to leading a team that does the work — is one of the most important and often most challenging shifts a business owner will make.
In a recent episode of the HerBusiness Podcast, leadership expert and entrepreneur Shivani Gupta shared powerful insights into how founders can successfully navigate this shift.
With more than two decades of experience building and scaling businesses and coaching over 1,500 leaders, Shivani has seen firsthand what separates founders who stay overwhelmed from those who build thriving, sustainable companies.
And according to Shivani, the first shift is deeply personal.
The Mindset Shift: Letting Go
Many founders believe that working harder and maintaining control will ensure their business’s success.
But Shivani discovered the opposite.
Early in her career, she tried to do everything herself. Like many entrepreneurs, she believed that no one could do the work quite as well as she could.
But eventually, the cost became clear.
Not only was the workload affecting her well-being, it was also limiting the number of people she could serve and the impact her business could make.
The real breakthrough came when she began focusing on what she calls her “zone of genius.”
Instead of trying to manage hundreds of tasks, she asked herself a simple question:
If you could only do three tasks in your business every day for the rest of your life, what would they be?
For Shivani, the answer was clear: coaching, speaking, facilitating, and thought leadership through writing.
Everything else could be delegated.
That decision didn’t just create more time. It allowed her to build businesses that could scale far beyond what she alone could accomplish.
“The more I let go, the more successful I became. My mind believed the opposite — that the harder I worked and the more I controlled, the more successful I would be.”
The Real Cost of Losing a Team Member
For many small businesses, hiring can feel urgent.
A role opens up, work starts piling up, and the temptation is to fill the position quickly just to relieve pressure.
But rushing the hiring process can create far bigger problems later.
According to Shivani, the true cost of losing a team member goes far beyond the expense of placing another job ad.
Recruitment costs are only the beginning. There is also:
- The time spent interviewing and onboarding
- The investment in training
- The productivity lost while a new employee ramps up
- The disruption to the rest of the team
Research suggests that replacing a high-performing employee can cost multiple times their annual salary when all these factors are taken into account.
For small businesses with only a few employees, the impact is even greater.
If a company with four team members loses one person, that represents 25% of the team.
In those situations, every hire matters.
That’s why Shivani encourages founders to slow down the hiring process, spending more time assessing values, motivations, and alignment—not just skills and experience.
Why High Performers Burn Out First
One of the most surprising insights from the conversation was Shivani’s observation about burnout.
Most leaders assume burnout happens among struggling employees.
But in reality, it’s often the opposite.
High performers frequently take on more work because they are dependable. When something urgent appears, they are the people leaders naturally turn to.
They rarely complain. They don’t ask for much support.
And because of that, they are easy to overlook.
Over time, however, that additional workload accumulates.
Without careful attention from leadership, even the most capable and committed employees can reach exhaustion.
Shivani encourages leaders to be particularly intentional about supporting their strongest performers—checking in regularly, acknowledging their contributions, and ensuring they aren’t consistently carrying more than their share of responsibility.
The Leadership Skill Most Founders Are Missing
Perhaps the most important insight Shivani shared is that many founders are missing a core leadership skill: coaching.
Founders are often visionary thinkers. They see opportunities, identify new directions, and imagine how the business can grow.
But team members don’t automatically know how to execute those visions.
That’s where coaching becomes essential.
Instead of simply assigning tasks or solving every problem themselves, effective leaders ask questions that help their team think critically and take ownership.
Questions like:
- What do you think the next step should be?
- What resources would help you move forward?
- What challenges do you see coming?
This approach builds confidence, strengthens decision-making skills, and empowers team members to take greater responsibility for outcomes.
It also makes delegation far more effective.
When people feel trusted to contribute ideas and solve problems, they become more engaged and invested in the business’s success.
Building a Business That Supports Your Life
At its core, this conversation is about more than productivity or leadership techniques.
It’s about building a business that truly supports the life you want to live.
For Shivani, the freedom created by building a strong team has become deeply meaningful. After recently receiving unexpected health news about her son, the ability to step away from work and be present with her family has taken on an entirely new significance.
The systems, leadership skills, and team culture she built over the years have given her the flexibility to show up where she is most needed.
And that, ultimately, is why leadership matters.
Not simply to grow a business, but to create a business that allows you to live your life on your terms.
Listen to the Full Episode
In this episode of the HerBusiness Podcast, Shivani Gupta shares practical strategies for:
- Identifying your true zone of genius
- Hiring the right people for your team
- Supporting high performers before burnout occurs
- Developing coaching skills that empower your team
- Delegating effectively so your business can scale
If you’re building a team—or preparing to take that next step in your business—this conversation offers both practical guidance and meaningful perspective.
