The value of a business co-founder lies in their ability to build business relationships and extract value from them.
The value of one founder to another lies in complementary skills and perspectives engaging start-up issues in a productive way, which usually means deep levels of mutual understanding and trust -- which can be antithetical to business relationships and personal comfort. So: hard.
The CEO/COO split reflects the difficulty of scaling this.
Is the solution to talk early? Maybe, or maybe that interferes with trust-building. The key thing I believe (here and elsewhere) is to avoid projecting what you want or fear into what you have. If it's important to success, validate it. For that, it helps to have people willing and able to be honest and truthful, particularly about unknown unknowns -- even if it is otherwise their mandate and mission to project confidence and gain trust.
The value of one founder to another lies in complementary skills and perspectives engaging start-up issues in a productive way, which usually means deep levels of mutual understanding and trust -- which can be antithetical to business relationships and personal comfort. So: hard.
The CEO/COO split reflects the difficulty of scaling this.
Is the solution to talk early? Maybe, or maybe that interferes with trust-building. The key thing I believe (here and elsewhere) is to avoid projecting what you want or fear into what you have. If it's important to success, validate it. For that, it helps to have people willing and able to be honest and truthful, particularly about unknown unknowns -- even if it is otherwise their mandate and mission to project confidence and gain trust.