249 - Most Founders Try to Escape the Success Trap by Working Harder. That’s the Trap Talking
Working harder won’t fix the Success Trap because the machine is the problem. This episode explains why founders respond to pressure with more hours, how that reinforces dependency, and the real question that changes everything: what must change structurally so the trap stops. Learn why architecture beats effort.
Most Founders Try to Escape the Success Trap By Working Harder. That’s the Trap Talking
Most business owners, when they feel the trap closing in, do the same thing. They work harder. More hours. Earlier mornings. The machine pushed harder, hoping it would produce something different. It doesn’t, because the machine is the problem.
That’s the idea at the heart of this episode: working harder is the trap’s own solution to being trapped. It feels responsible. It feels like leadership. It even creates short-term relief because things keep moving. But it also reinforces the exact system that is draining you. You keep feeding the machine that is consuming you, and the business stays dependent on your effort to function.
This is why the Success Trap is so deceptive. From the outside, it looks like commitment and performance. From the inside, it feels like you can’t stop. The founder becomes the mechanism that makes progress possible, and the more pressure there is, the more the business reaches for the founder. That’s not a mindset issue. It’s the architecture revealing itself.
The episode points to the real reason founders default to effort: effort avoids the harder question. Working harder keeps things moving just long enough to avoid the moment of redesign. It delays clarity. It delays the structural work. It delays the conversation about what decisions should not flow through you, what authority is missing, and what operating model is quietly forcing you to carry the business.
So the question this episode leaves you with is blunt: what would you actually have to change for this to stop? Not more effort. Architecture. Because until the structure changes, the pressure will always return, and the business will keep asking for more of you as the solution.
If you want the weekly deep dive on how to think about this more clearly, subscribe to my newsletter. Link in my bio.
Highlights:
00:00 The Hustle Trap
00:15 Why Harder Fails
00:24 Ask the Real Question
00:33 Change the Architecture
00:37 Newsletter Call to Action
Links:
Website: https://www.marcogrueter.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marcogrueter/
Transcript:
Most business owners, when they feel the trap closing in, do the same thing. They work harder, more hours, earlier mornings, the machine pushed harder, hoping it produces something different. It doesn't because the machine is the problem. Working harder is the Trap's own solution to being trapped. It keeps things moving just long enough to avoid the harder question:
What would you actually have to change for this To stop? Not more effort, architecture. Subscribe to my newsletter for the weekly deep dive link in my bio.