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February 24th, 2026

Why Your Growth Strategy is Failing by Design with Jessica Lackey

  1. Why Your Growth Strategy is Failing by Design with Jessica Lackey Karl Staib 36:51

Every ambitious executive in the service sector has felt it: that nagging suspicion that, despite the high-performance software, the latest marketing “hacks,” and the tireless hours, the business is actually running you.

In this episode, Karl sits down with Jessica Lackey, a Harvard and McKinsey-trained strategist, to dissect the quiet crisis facing small and mid-sized service businesses. If you feel like you’ve been building a “Frankenstein” company—stitching together pieces of advice from gurus and competitors that don’t quite fit your anatomy—this conversation is the mirror you need to look into.

The Casino Trap

Most leaders are playing a game they didn’t realize they signed up for. Jessica, author of Leaving the Casino, argues that service-based businesses often fall into a repetitive cycle of “betting” on the next big tactic without understanding the fundamental architecture of their own success. We explore why adopting a strategy before defining your business’s soul is a recipe for operational exhaustion.

Is your business a nimble boutique or a high-volume engine? If you don’t know, your tactics are likely fighting each other.

Beyond the Frankenstein Model

We’ve all seen it: a company with a high-end service heart but a cut-throat, automated sales soul. This internal friction is what Jessica calls the “Frankenstein” effect. It leads to a business that looks functional from the outside but is barely holding together at the seams.

This episode challenges you to stop looking for the “right” answer and start asking the right questions about your foundational values and goals. Before you can scale, you must achieve Business Clarity. We dive into why the most sophisticated AI tools and automated rhythms are completely useless—and often dangerous—if they are solving the wrong problems.

The “Roots to Fruits” Perspective

Forget traditional, cold KPIs for a moment. Jessica introduces a more organic, sustainable way to view your progress. By shifting your focus from just the “fruits” (the revenue and the results) to the “seeds” (your daily activities) and the “roots” (your long-term projects), you can begin to spot “sprouts”—those early signals of growth that most executives miss because they are too busy looking at the bottom line.

Why Systems Must Serve the Human

Systems are often viewed as cages—rigid structures that stifle the “sparkle” of a service-based business. Jessica and Karl flip this narrative. They discuss how to create a “rhythm of business” that actually protects your creativity and allows your team to focus on the human side of care and consulting.

If you are tired of the “administrative gunk” and feel like your business has become a series of manual workarounds and mismatched strategies, it’s time to stop betting and start building.

Are you ready to leave the casino?

You can learn more about Jessica Lackey over at Deeper Foundations. You can check out her book, Leaving the Casino (Amazon link). You can also connect with her on LinkedIn.

As always, if you have any questions or want to submit an amazing guest for the podcast, just reach out to me on the Systematic Leader website, and I’ll do my best to get them on. If you enjoy the interview, please take 30 seconds to rate the Systematic Leader podcast on your favorite platform. Thanks!

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Karl Staib Systematic Leader

Karl Staib founded the SOPguy Method and author of Bring Gratitude. He trains people to create processes that fit the employees’ and the company’s personality. He has been featured by Forbes, NPR and Zen Habits and has worked with great companies such as Philips Global, Southwest Research Institute and Pioneer Nation.

He has been helping clients develop SOPs since 2020, he would likely be utilizing his expertise in workplace happiness and productivity to design effective, efficient, and enjoyable procedures. SOPs are essential for businesses to ensure consistency and quality in their operations, and someone with Karl Staib’s background could bring a unique perspective to this task by focusing not only on the functionality of the procedures but also on how they impact employee satisfaction and morale.