Welcome to Focus and Vision with Gino Wickman, where we help you master EOS®.
Hitting the ceiling in your business is inevitable. In this episode, we cover the key to breaking through the ceiling: mastering The Five Leadership Abilities™.
Welcome to Focus and Vision with Gino Wickman, where we help you master EOS®.
Hitting the ceiling in your business is inevitable. In this episode, we cover the key to breaking through the ceiling: mastering The Five Leadership Abilities™.
As Kelly Knight stepped into EOS Worldwide, she wasn’t just joining a company; she was inheriting a movement built on trust, community, and a system that people expected the business itself to live perfectly. Within 18 months, the founder was selling the company, private equity entered the picture, the culture felt exposed, and Kelly had to grow from new Integrator into steward of something much bigger than herself. You’ll hear how a childhood moment of defiance shaped her leadership, how EOS had to mature without losing its soul, and why the next ceiling is forcing the company back to simplicity, focus, and the five leadership abilities.
Chad and Michela Taylor built Service Center Pro from a simple phone-answering problem into a growing virtual team, but beneath the success was a business stuck at the same employee count, the same revenue range, and the same exhausting cycle of turnover and client pressure. Every time they got close to scaling, people left, expectations broke down, and the couple had to confront whether their own leadership, generosity, and communication patterns were keeping the ceiling in place. You’ll hear how they turned painful feedback, kind candor, better delegation, and a clearer culture into a path forward for a company still fighting to become what they believe it can be.
As Chase Calhoun went from buying a foreclosure sight unseen to running a real estate and construction operation with more than 130 units under management, the pressure didn’t stem from a lack of opportunity; it came from becoming the bottleneck in the business. Capital constraints, scattered responsibilities, market cycles, and the need to hire before he felt ready forced him to confront the limits of doing too much himself. You’ll hear how Chase is learning to simplify the work, delegate real ownership, build systems from painful experience, and turn a founder-led hustle into a business that can scale beyond him.