S2 Episode 11|024 The Growth Trap - What Scaling Reveals About the Human Side of Transformation
The Growth Trap: What Scaling Reveals About the Human Side of Transformation
Guest: Mike Peroni, Revenue and Go-to-Market Leader
Most transformation conversations assume that change is something organizations do when they are struggling. When the numbers decline, when the market shifts, when the board starts asking uncomfortable questions. But there is a form of transformation that is far more psychologically complex than a turnaround, and it happens inside organizations that are succeeding.
Growth itself is a transformation engine, and it creates human dynamics that are among the most intense and least understood in organizational life. Mike Peroni is a revenue and go to market leader who has operated across startup, growth, and enterprise contexts. He served as Chief Operating Officer at Hypervent Systems during a period of sixteen times top line growth before its acquisition by 3M. He then served as COO at Content Raven during the early stage startup phase. Most recently, he built ETQ's first indirect sales channel and international expansion as VP of EMEA Sales, work that contributed directly to Hexagon's $1.2 billion acquisition of the organization.
In this episode, Kevin Novak and Mike explore what breaks when an organization scales faster than its people can adapt. The conversation examines Larry Greiner's research on how organizations pass through distinct stages of growth, each ending in a crisis produced by the success of the previous stage. It draws on Denise Rousseau's research on psychological contracts to explain why rapid scaling violates the implicit promises organizations make to the people inside them. Mike describes how resistance starts with belief systems, why founders tend to be more flexible than leaders of established organizations, why promoting successes within an organization is one of the most effective ways to break down resistance, and why people consistently assume others are where they are informationally and emotionally. The episode also examines Clayton Christensen's research on the innovator's dilemma to explore why feature based differentiation is no longer defensible in the AI era, Karl Weick's research on organizational sensemaking to explain why leaders construct versions of reality rather than perceiving it objectively, and Chris Argyris's research on espoused theory versus theory in use to explain the gap between what leaders say they believe and what their behavior reveals.
Subscribe to the Ideas and Innovations Newsletter at 2040digital.com [https://www.The Growth Trap: What Scaling Reveals About the Human Side of Transformation Guest: Mike Peroni, Revenue and Go-to-Market Leader Episode Descriptions Spotify Most transformation conversations assume that change is something organizations do when they are struggling. When the numbers decline, when the market shifts, when the board starts asking uncomfortable questions. But there is a form of transformation that is far more psychologically complex than a turnaround, and it happens inside organizations that are succeeding. Growth itself is a transformation engine, and it creates human dynamics that are among the most intense and least understood in organizational life. Mike Peroni is a revenue and go to market leader who has operated across startup, growth, and enterprise contexts. He served as Chief Operating Officer at Hypervent Systems during a period of sixteen times top line growth before its acquisition by 3M. He then served as COO at Content Raven during the early stage startup phase. Most recently, he built ETQ's first indirect sales channel and international expansion as VP of EMEA Sales, work that contributed directly to Hexagon's $1.2 billion acquisition of the organization. In this episode, Kevin Novak and Mike explore what breaks when an organization scales faster than its people can adapt. The conversation examines Larry Greiner's research on how organizations pass through distinct stages of growth, each ending in a crisis produced by the success of the previous stage. It draws on Denise Rousseau's research on psychological contracts to explain why rapid scaling violates the implicit promises organizations make to the people inside them. Mike describes how resistance starts with belief systems, why founders tend to be more flexible than leaders of established organizations, why promoting successes within an organization is one of the most effective ways to break down resistance, and why people consistently assume others are where they are informationally and emotionally. The episode also examines Clayton Christensen's research on the innovator's dilemma to explore why feature based differentiation is no longer defensible in the AI era, Karl Weick's research on organizational sensemaking to explain why leaders construct versions of reality rather than perceiving it objectively, and Chris Argyris's research on espoused theory versus theory in use to explain the gap between what leaders say they believe and what their behavior reveals. Subscribe to the Ideas and Innovations Newsletter at 2040digital.com.].
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