That's a whole new skill set and they find they get over their heads pretty quickly.
Here's where the Peter Principle kicks in. It states: "In a Hierarchy Every Employee Tends to Rise to His Level of Incompetence." The related and satirical Dilbert Principle created by cartoonist Scott Adams states that companies tend to promote their least competent employees to "remove morons from the productivity flow."
Can the same be said for business owners?
Do we grow our companies just beyond the point of our ability to manage them? The businesses that make the transition are often the ones that hire professional management.
Or f

Sometimes people start a business because they figure they can run a business better than their boss can. Michael Gerber, in his E-Myth book, talks about how a person with a skill is hit by an entrepreneurial seizure and starts a business. This technician believes that because they know how to do the work of a business, they know how to run that business.
What do you think? Do the Peter Principle and the Dilbert Principle apply? Do you know of any examples? Do you see it in yourself?
Leave a comment and let me know what you think.
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