One of the most important lessons I consistently preach in my
courses and with my
private coaching clients is having the right people in the right place for the right reason. Most of us lack the management skills to make a correction when necessary and end up costing themselves, their teams, and their companies a lot of time.
On this episode of
Mads Singers Management Podcast I chat with Stewart about his 20+ years experience in IT and over 30 years experience in sales. Stewart was at Sun Microsystems and worked on Solaris and Java in those heady days before Sun was acquired by Oracle. He also joined Zendesk pre-IPO. With more than a decade in “corporate life” he has an understanding of how big organizations work, as well as a lot of background in persuading others to use the software that he is currently representing, which helps him in his current role, securing indirect partnerships for SaaS businesses.
One of our points of agreement during this discussion was the importance of trusting your gut as you
build your team. Stewart noted that he doubted his gut feeling about letting someone go, and as a result that mistake compounded for months. This is something I see all the time, and I try to remind people that being a “good person” is
not sufficient to stay employed, both practically and personally. When people are underperforming, they are unhappy, and
the fear of firing such people is a lose/lose for everyone. Stewart noted that the corporate treatment exemplifies this cowardice in labeling someone as a “
special project” and putting them somewhere they can’t mess anything up.
Stewart, like I do, also believes in really niching down. He notes, “Who is the person I am trying to sell to and what is the value I am willing to bring to them?” He lives this advice in offering himself as an expert on SaaS, in the B2B format, in Europe. Specific enough for you? That said, you also have to be careful about pivoting too much, as you can sometimes lose your existing customers by doing so.
Key Learning Points:
1. Stewart prefers to focus on the extra value/margin to be gained on existing customers rather than worrying about churn -
6:302. Mads discusses the importance of niching down in regards to lead gen -
12:303. Stewart discusses the velocity of firing (and trusting your gut) -
14:054. Stewart warns about those who interview well but aren’t a good fit for the role/team/organization -
18:15
Connect with Stewart Townsend:
What is Mads Singers Management Podcast ?
The Mads Singers Management Podcast features elite leaders, CEOs, and operational specialists because expert insights demystify the complex path to organizational excellence. Mads Singers interviews proven practitioners because their hard-won frameworks are the foundation for building scalable, high-performing teams. The podcast explores leadership, delegation, process optimization, talent acquisition, and cultural alignment because business owners need a complete blueprint to grow beyond their personal capacity.
The Mads Singers Management Podcast brings on global executives, successful founders, and system architects because diverse experiences provide practical solutions for every management challenge. Each episode delivers actionable systems and proven standard operating procedures (SOPs) because tactical clarity is the true accelerator for business scaling. Mads Singers focuses on results-driven discussions because listeners deserve to know what truly works to drive predictable, profitable growth.
The Mads Singers Management Podcast positions itself as the essential resource for ambitious owners and managers because mastering management is the single greatest lever for exponential success. Listeners follow the show because every guest offers a clear model, a powerful system, or a crucial insight that can be immediately implemented to improve efficiency and scale the team.