Editor's Note: Entrepreneur Richard Branson regularly shares his business experience and advice with readers. What follows is the latest edited round of insightful responses. Ask him a question and your query might be the inspiration for a future column.
Q: Your company has hundreds of different businesses in operation; how do you manage to keep them on track and achieve expected output? ~ Robert Cheng, Taiwan
A: The short answer is that I rely on a terrific team of CEOs and top managers, and on the great people around the world who work for Virgin. But building this group was a long process, so let's look at how our team arrived at this point.
Virgin's ability to grow and diversify successfully was set in the company's early days, with my learning how to delegate and let go. This will probably seem counterintuitive to anyone who is in the midst of launching a business. Right now, you are almost certainly motivating your staff by demonstrating your own drive and enthusiasm. Most days, the founder will be the first to arrive at the office and the last to leave. This is often the only way to survive those first tough years, when most businesses have to scrape by with the minimum number of employees.
The trick is to start promoting from within on day one. I'm not just referring to moving people to new positions, but giving all employees enough flexibility to take on new responsibilities within their current jobs.
When employees tell you about their good ideas for the business, don't limit your response to asking questions, taking notes and following up. If you can, ask those people to lead their projects and take responsibility for them. From those experiences, they will then have built the confidence to take on more and you can take a further step back.
Related: Work On -- Not In -- Your Business
I stumbled across this truth accidentally. My friends and I started up Student magazine and Virgin Records when we were kids, and so we had little corporate experience and knew next to nothing about setting up a bureaucracy. If someone in our group had the ability and desire to take on new responsibilities, he or she just went ahead and did it.
A few years later, as the number of our employees neared 100 at our record business, I began to fear we were becoming slow and cumbersome. So I split the company in half, which created a new company. We picked talented people from within Virgin Records to run it. The next time Virgin Records' number of employees reached 100, I repeated this trick, and I have carried on doing it. This policy kept our businesses hungry and adaptable and, crucially, we uncovered great management talent -- people who otherwise might not have gotten noticed, and would likely have pursued promotions at other companies.
At Virgin, we often promote employees who have energy and determination, even if they don't yet have a lot of experience. They are so buoyed by their promotion and passionate about their work that they make a success of the new job. All we have to do is ensure they have the support they need to carry out their goals.
Related: Build Your Management Team
Looking back, my decision to work out of my houseboat in West London rather than at Virgin Records' offices was a very important move. This happened about the same time I split Virgin Records into two. I decided to take a step back to give my managers space to make decisions. That's when I learned that the most successful entrepreneurs are those who find people who are at least as good as, or better than, they are at running their businesses.
Stepping back frees the founder to focus on the bigger picture -- to dive in when there are problems or to help close a deal. This is how I manage our diversified group: I am not involved in the daily business of any Virgin company, unless I need to be.
When your team is in place and the launch phase is over, take the time to conduct a test to see how well the company performs without your help. This can be a very revealing exercise: It will show you where the problems are and, most important, how well you have learned to delegate.
So make sure you hire great people and find ways to keep them on your team for the long term. Encourage them to pursue their ideas and give them the tools that they need to succeed: promotions, assistance, or perhaps a new company! If you get this right, you will also have more time to look after body, mind, family, friends and children. Basically, you'll have to time to have a blast.





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Comments:
I agree with you here. Mr. Branson is my hero!
Very good article and provision for reflection on what we are doing! Thank you
Richard is an expert at hiring experts hence his great success.
I think the biggest transition from going from employee to entrepreneur is the ability to let go and let your team do what it can do best. Which means you have to hire great people which means you have to focus on your hiring. This is a never ending lesson and you will never be perfect but TRY anyways. And as far as letting go it is a discipline that is hard to follow but when you do you can get great results.
Sir Richard is my new best "DOJO".
I once learned to always employ perople that are smarter than yourself. That's smart!
yes, great advise, its like a you ask to put a price on your baby. when you work so hard to built a comapny that finally shows profit or rasing your kids the best way of possiable then before the child become an adult or your company that you spend your entire life on it cant be giving to best person to keep it running. a succsefull small buessieness man must stay on top of everything happening around him even with the best employee out there
Knowing when and how to delegate is the sign of a true leader. http://innovativethinking.posterous.com/
definitely agree with the notion that micro-managing does not create the best results... however, i pose the question to mr. branson, "how do you manage the challenge of what you envision virgin becoming in the future with a laissez-faire management style that may create programs and companies that do not follow your own vision?"
I think one person who has made a history is Riachard but his advert on the Samsonite Suite case is funny. Could he not afford one that he has to advertise one? I wonder/ I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBA
Yes it seems so, the thought of delegating is quiet challenging for persons who have high regard for independence and are used to it. Some entrepreneurs have reservations on the costs involved in getting skills on board and on profit sharing. It is definitely a part of the learning process with the end goal of being able to live comfortably whilst having time for the things that really matter.
What a great article. Quick read but full of insight! Loved it! Thank you, Enrepreneur!
Wow! Great words of wisdom! Thank you!
Its very difficult to delegate but when you get it right you'll be laughing.
Pursuing this company-structure also is a great tool to build the relevant "trust" within your Mgmt.-staff. Very effective.
Very good article, when you read it , it makes good sense- so why don't many other companies take this approach? Is is because because people are frightened of loosing 'overall' control ?