My last year and my greatest challenge, 2016-2017
A chapter summary from Principles by Ray Dalio.
“The challenge during 2016 and 2017, as I moved out of the co-CEO role, wasn't only operational.”
The hardest transition of my career, harder in its own way than the 1982 collapse, was letting go of day-to-day control without letting the standards I'd spent decades building quietly collapse behind me. Leadership succession is the real test of whether a culture is genuinely built into the organization or was only ever an extension of one person's personality — you don't find out which until that person actually steps back.
The challenge during 2016 and 2017, as I moved out of the co-CEO role, wasn't only operational. It was emotional in a way I hadn't fully anticipated: accepting that you can have been essential to building something, and still become non-essential to running it going forward, and that clinging past that point does more damage than good. If a founder can't make that shift honestly, they end up holding the organization back precisely by trying to protect it.
I focused my remaining energy on reinforcing the processes rather than my own presence — clear decision rights that didn't depend on me personally, open disagreement that didn't require my permission to happen, and objective, visible measures of performance — so that the system as a whole could outlast any individual's preferences, including mine.
What I came to believe, watching this play out in public and under real scrutiny, is that a lasting organization needs continuity of principles, not continuity of a specific person. You protect the machine you've built, and then you deliberately step far enough back to prove — to yourself and to everyone else — that it can genuinely run without you. That distance, uncomfortable as it is, turns out to be the real and final test of whether the whole project actually worked.
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