The Moz CEO's Wonderfully Refreshing Reason for Stepping Down Rand Fishkin loves his company and has passion by the boatload. But he has come to hate his job.

By Ray Hennessey Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

moz.com
Rand Fishkin

It takes guts to start a company. It takes even more to know when to step down running that same company.

Founders are getting bounced from their jobs left and right these days, from George Zimmer at Men's Wearhouse to Lululemon's Chip Wilson. It happens all the time, mostly because leaders who started a business don't have the skillset to run it once it grows up.

So it is refreshing to see resignation of Moz founder Rand Fishkin.

Fishkin loves Moz. He founded the online marketing and analytics company in 2004, and, thanks largely to his charisma, leadership and smarts, Moz grew from a small consultancy into a big-time enterprise.

But Fishkin, who describes himself as the Wizard of Moz, now says he doesn't love his job. So he won't be running the company he loves anymore.

"Being a CEO at a 10-person startup, a 30-person startup, and even up to ~75 people at Moz was a truly enjoyable experience," he writes in a blog post. But the growth from ~75 to ~135 today has been less fun for me. I'm still learning a tremendous amount, but I'm being challenged to such a degree on issues like organizational development, HR, conflict resolution, process building, and morale that I feel out of my depth, and poorly suited, especially from an emotional resiliency perspective, to meeting my obligations."

Related: How to Fire Yourself With Grace

Fishkin is turning over the reins to Sarah Bird, Moz's president and chief operations officer. Fishkin will stay with Moz, continuing to be its driving creative force.

Fishkin's move is disappointingly rare in business. Many founders outlive their welcome because they lose their passion. Fishkin is re-investing in his passion, deciding to stay on to do the creative roles he does best, and admitting his shortcomings.

"I want to do what I love and what I'm good at, and I believe I'll be healthier and happier and Moz will be better served by me taking that role," Fishkin wrote in a memo to his staff. "Sadly, it's not what a CEO needs to do at a 100+ person company and definitely not at 300 or 500+ (which we might be someday)."

Ray Hennessey

Former Editorial Director at Entrepreneur Media

Ray Hennessey is the former editorial director of Entrepreneur.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Data & Recovery

The $50 Software That Could Save Your Business One Day

Because losing your entire email history shouldn't be part of your growth strategy.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Leadership

How Successful Leaders Get More Done in Less Time

The most successful leaders don't work longer; they manage their time with intention. Here's how to master time-blocking, prioritization and delegation to get more done in less time.

Growing a Business

Is Sharing Equity Worth It? Here's How to Add the Right Partners at the Right Time

While adding new equity partners dilutes the ownership of existing owners, it is inarguably the right and necessary move in certain business scenarios.