EPISODE · Jun 15, 2026 · 23 MIN
Scaling With Purpose: How to Protect Your War Chest and Lead Without Losing Yourself - Michael Haskell
from Hacks and Hobbies with Junaid Ahmed · host Junaid Ahmed
When the funding hits the bank, everything changes — your team, your decisions, your sleep. In this raw, curious conversation, Michael Haskell pulls back the curtain on the moment every founder either becomes a leader or gets eaten by growth. He explains how to spend with discipline, hire with rigor, and keep the sense of urgency that made you successful in the first place. In this episode of Hacks and Hobbies, Michael and I dig into the fragile period after fundraising: the temptation to hire fast, the danger of diluted standards, and the single-minded focus that preserves runway and sanity. Michael shares the practical metrics, psychological habits, and leadership plays that let founders scale revenue without burning culture or cash — and why going “deep and narrow” beats globe-trotting growth streaks. Five key takeaways Treat your war chest like a loan to yourself: spend to accelerate proven revenue engines, not to chase shiny new initiatives. Keep the bar high: scaling often erodes conversion and quality — use data-driven metrics to preserve urgency and margins. Hire selectively and surround yourself with experienced shareholders/mentors who’ve been through scale. Leadership sanity = self-care + continuous learning + positive psychology; neglecting any one leads to burnout. Go deep and narrow before you go wide: capture more share locally before burning cash to enter new geographies. Timestamps 0:00 — Episode setup: Why the post-fundraise moment defines companies 1:11 — The most common mistake founders make after funding: hiring and quality slip 4:50 — Metrics that tell you when to hire and when to hold back 8:01 — Keeping urgency alive: why conversion rates fall as lead volume rises 9:09 — Advice for first-time founders managing 50 people overnight 12:11 — Three plays to scale without losing your mind (self-care, learning, mindset) 16:18 — The one lesson to remember after raising capital: don’t chase too many initiatives Guest links Navitas Consulting — (website) - https://navitasgroup.ph/ Michael Haskell — LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/navitasitgroup/ 🎙 Wanna be a guest? Apply on PodMatch: https://www.podmatch.com/member/hacksandhobbies📖 Home Studio resources: https://homestudiobook.com🔗 LI: https://linkedin.com/in/superjunaid Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
What this episode covers
When the funding hits the bank, everything changes — your team, your decisions, your sleep. In this raw, curious conversation, Michael Haskell pulls back the curtain on the moment every founder either becomes a leader or gets eaten by growth. He explains how to spend with discipline, hire with rigor, and keep the sense of urgency that made you successful in the first place. In this episode of Hacks and Hobbies, Michael and I dig into the fragile period after fundraising: the temptation to hire fast, the danger of diluted standards, and the single-minded focus that preserves runway and sanity. Michael shares the practical metrics, psychological habits, and leadership plays that let founders scale revenue without burning culture or cash — and why going “deep and narrow” beats globe-trotting growth streaks. Five key takeaways Treat your war chest like a loan to yourself: spend to accelerate proven revenue engines, not to chase shiny new initiatives. Keep the bar high: scaling often erodes conversion and quality — use data-driven metrics to preserve urgency and margins. Hire selectively and surround yourself with experienced shareholders/mentors who’ve been through scale. Leadership sanity = self-care + continuous learning + positive psychology; neglecting any one leads to burnout. Go deep and narrow before you go wide: capture more share locally before burning cash to enter new geographies. Timestamps 0:00 — Episode setup: Why the post-fundraise moment defines companies 1:11 — The most common mistake founders make after funding: hiring and quality slip 4:50 — Metrics that tell you when to hire and when to hold back 8:01 — Keeping urgency alive: why conversion rates fall as lead volume rises 9:09 — Advice for first-time founders managing 50 people overnight 12:11 — Three plays to scale without losing your mind (self-care, learning, mindset) 16:18 — The one lesson to remember after raising capital: don’t chase too many initiatives Guest links Navitas Consulting — (website) - https://navitasgroup.ph/ Michael Haskell — LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/navitasitgroup/
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Scaling With Purpose: How to Protect Your War Chest and Lead Without Losing Yourself - Michael Haskell
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