How to Build a Business That Runs Without You

80% done by somebody else is 100%ing awesome.

Table of Contents

Build a Business That Runs Without You

I used to work 100 hours a week grinding just to hit six figures. Now I run multiple companies generating over $100 million while working half the time.

The difference is simple. I stopped building businesses that only worked when I was in the room and started building ones that scaled without me.

If you’re serious about freedom, you need a system that makes your business run on its own. Here’s exactly how to do it.

1. Define Your North Star Metric

Your business needs one number that drives everything. Without it, your team is just busy, not productive.

Examples:

  • Restaurants: revenue per seat

  • Media company: revenue per follower

  • SaaS: enterprise value created per dollar spent

Once you pick your number, every person on your team can align to it. That’s when systems stop being busywork and start producing real outcomes.

📌Related: Learn how to buy back your time so you can focus on scaling, not micromanaging.

If you don't have a north star metric, it's kind of like building a house without a blueprint.

2. Clone Yourself with the 10-80-10 Rule

You don’t scale by doing more. You scale by doing less but in the right places.

Here’s the breakdown:

  • First 10%: Set the vision, define “done,” communicate the feeling, draw it out if you can.

  • Middle 80%: Let your team execute. They own the build.

  • Final 10%: Step back in to refine, polish, and add taste.

Think of it like Steve Jobs. He wasn’t soldering chips. He set vision, reviewed prototypes, and delivered magic on stage.

📌 When you learn to start a SaaS business this way, you scale without becoming the bottleneck.

Service type businesses work really great in more affluent or wealthy neighborhoods.

3. Systemize With the Camcorder Method

Traditional SOPs die on the shelf. The camcorder method makes them living, breathing assets.

Here’s how it works:

StepActionWhy It Works
1Hit record on Zoom while doing the taskReal, not theoretical
2Explain what you’re doing and whyContext for better learning
3Hand it to a team memberThey create and own the checklist

This way, you build training while working, and your team takes responsibility for updates.

📌 You can also use AI tools to get ahead in business when documenting and automating workflows. 

The best systems aren't typed, they're recorded.

4. Run the Business by the Numbers

Gut feelings are not strategies. Data is.

You need two types of metrics:

  • Leading indicators: inputs you can control (sales calls made, leads generated, demos booked).

  • Lagging indicators: results that follow (revenue, churn, profit).

When your team connects the two, they see how their daily work drives company outcomes. That’s when your business stops depending on your intuition and starts running like a machine.

📌 If you want to scale your business fast, this mindset shift is non-negotiable.

Numbers don't lie. People do.

5. Lead From Your Zone of Genius

Once your business runs without you, the real work begins. Your job shifts from operator to multiplier.

Here’s how to stay in your genius zone:

  • High-leverage work only: vision, mission, values.

  • Hire talented builders: trust them, share upside.

  • Lead like an artist: bring energy, taste, and the magic only you can.

If you’re stuck managing tasks, you’re limiting growth. Step into your genius, and you’ll stop being the glue and start being the gasoline.

📌Focus on developing skills AI cannot replace so you stay future-proof.

Your job is to multiply, not maintain.

Take Back Control of Your Time and Freedom

Building a business that runs without you isn’t about checking out. It’s about leveling up. Define your north star, apply the 10-80-10 rule, systemize with recordings, run the numbers, and step fully into your zone of genius.

That’s how you build a company that scales without you, and because of you.

 Frequently Asked Questions

To build a business that runs without you, focus on creating systems, empowering your team, and aligning everyone around a clear north star metric. Use frameworks like the 1080 10 rule to delegate effectively, the camcorder method to create living SOPs, and run the business by numbers instead of gut instinct. This way, your company becomes scalable and sustainable without requiring your constant involvement.

 

A north star metric is the single most important number that defines whether your business is getting better. For example, a restaurant may use revenue per seat, while a SaaS company may use lifetime value of a customer. Choosing the right north star metric gives your team alignment, focus, and clarity, ensuring that every decision and system drives growth in the same direction.

 

The 1080 10 rule helps entrepreneurs delegate by setting clear expectations at the start (first 10 percent), allowing the team to execute most of the work (the 80 percent), and then stepping back in at the end to refine and polish (the final 10 percent). This framework ensures leaders stay focused on vision and quality without micromanaging every detail, making it easier for teams to work independently.

 

Running a business by numbers instead of gut feelings ensures decisions are based on objective data rather than emotions or assumptions. By tracking leading indicators (activities that drive outcomes) and lagging indicators (results like revenue or churn), entrepreneurs can spot problems early, optimize performance, and scale with predictability. What gets measured gets moved, making metrics the foundation of sustainable growth.

 

 

Once a business runs itself, entrepreneurs should shift to operating from their zone of genius. This means focusing on high-leverage activities like vision, strategy, culture, and innovation. By leading from their strengths and empowering the team to handle execution, founders can continue driving growth without falling back into day-to-day operations.

More Resources

  • Zoom – Video conferencing platform used for the camcorder method to record SOPs and training.

  • 1080 10 Rule – A delegation framework that divides tasks into vision-setting, execution, and refinement.

  • Camcorder Method – A process documentation strategy where entrepreneurs record themselves doing tasks for training and system creation.

  • North Star Metric – A business alignment tool for identifying the single most important measure of growth and success.

(2) How to Build a Business That Runs Itself – YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZSyaDGp_Jo

Transcript:
(00:00) I went from barely making six figures a year while grinding a h 100red hour week struggling to get ahead to today making over hund00 million a year working half the hours and owning multiple businesses that run without me. SOPs and spreadsheets alone they won’t save you because your business only runs when you’re there.
(00:18) So today I’m going to show you how to flip that and build a business that runs without you even if you’re starting from scratch. That way you finally get the freedom you started a business for in the first place. First things first, we need to define what I like to call your northstar metric. You need to be able to tell me what is the math equation that defines your business.
(00:39) If you know this, then everybody on your team can align to it. You can optimize for it. The northstar metric is that one number that if it gets better, it tells you the business got better. If you don’t have one, it’s kind of like building a house without a blueprint. Everyone’s running around hammering and sawing and putting up walls and all of a sudden you step back and you look and it’s just a pile of lumber like you haven’t built a home.
(01:03) Every business I starts with a Northstar metric. For example, restaurants revenue per seat. My media company revenue per followers. Martell Ventures enterprise value created for dollars spent. The way I came up with that is I’m putting my money into a business and I’m creating enterprise value because you don’t get wealthy with revenue, you get wealthy with equity.
(01:26) And that’s the way we measure enterprise value. So of course the dollars I spend to generate equity value is the ratio that if everybody can get aligned with, then we make it better because enterprise value is creating predictability, durability, and revenue. That has nothing to do with cash flow. Think about it for you.
(01:44) Is it revenue? Is it lifetime value? Is it retention? Is it customers? Is it five-star reviews? Once everyone’s clear and building in that same direction, your systems actually start driving real outcomes, not just keeping people busy. But let’s be real, just knowing the metric doesn’t move the needle. There’s still some work that needs to get done.
(02:03) So, the next step to build a business that runs without you, clone yourself with the 108010 rule. You don’t scale by doing more. You scale by strategically inserting yourself at the right moments and in many ways doing way less. It’s kind of like Steve Jobs. If you actually like go back and hear how he worked with his teams, he didn’t do all the steps.
(02:23) He could have never possibly done that. When he built the iPhone, for example, he talked to Johnny about the material science and the different equipment and the design and the thoughts. Then Johnny went off and he built prototypes and then Steve came in and they talked about and they refined it.
(02:35) So this is how you do it for yourself. And that’s why it’s called the 1080 10. The first 10% that’s where you set the vision. You talk about what the definition of done looks like. You talk about the essence of it, the way the customer is going to feel, where you’ve seen it done well. If you can draw a picture, draw the picture.
(02:50) If there’s a wireframe, draw the wireframe. But the clearer you can communicate the vision, the better this is going to work. The second step is 80%. It’s let your team run. Let your team execute. Let your team do the work based on the vision that you both agreed and saw together. And the final 10%, this is where your taste comes in.
(03:09) This is where the refinement, it’s review and polish. That’s for Steve Jobs was getting on stage and doing the demo. That’s his favorite part was, okay, based on what you built, I’m going to demo it this way, this way, and this way. So, make sure we refine it so that it really pops when I talk about it on stage.
(03:25) The magic isn’t doing it all. It’s knowing when to show up. Here’s my favorite quote on the topic. 80% done by somebody else is 100%ing awesome. And guess what? If it’s not, go be better. The more you stay in the vision and the review part, the more your team can scale without you. Next, we need to talk about what I like to call the camcorder method.
(03:45) Let’s be honest, we all hate SOPs, making them, updating them, reading them. I mean, it’s so crazy. Like, people have these fully documented systems that nobody opens, nobody looks at, and they honestly they become stale in like 6 months after you create them in the first place. However, they’re 100% necessary.
(04:05) I like to do it completely different than the way most people do. The best systems aren’t typed, they’re recorded. A few years ago, I was talking to my friend and he’s like, “Yeah, I created an SOP, but it didn’t really work.” And I was like, “Well, how’d you do it?” So, he said, “I took my whole team. We went to Tahoe for an offsite.
(04:18) We spent 3 days building the company way, this document, this handbook, and everybody spent all this time documenting every aspect of the business, and then they got back, nobody ever used it, and 6 months later it became stale. It wasn’t even updated. It wasn’t useful. That is not the way to do it.
(04:35) Instead, use the camcorder method to document how it’s done so that you’ve got the training. Then the person creates the checklist. Then it’s their responsibility to update and maintain it, not for the people at the top to do it. Plus, it’s done while you’re doing the work, saving you all that time. So, instead of a regular SOP, I use what I call the camcorder method.
(04:52) And this is how it works. First, press record. Meaning like on this really expensive, hard to find software called Zoom, you can get on a meeting all by yourself, share your screen, record it to the cloud, hit record, and all of a sudden do the thing you’re doing. The only difference is you talk out loud and explain why you’re doing what you’re doing.
(05:12) If it’s processing your inbox, if it’s creating a pitch deck, if it’s having a sales call, whatever you do, just record it. Once you’ve got the recording and you’ve got a few of those, then you can give it to somebody else. Let your team turn it into a repeatable system. have them document and create the checklist. So with that, now your marketing, your ops, your fulfillment, your hiring, they all get done without you becoming the help desk.
(05:34) So once you do that, we can now move on to the next step to make sure your business runs without you. Running the business by the numbers. Here’s why. Numbers don’t lie. People do. I’ve seen great people try to tell me what they’re feeling. And I believe and I think and I’ve seen, show me the data.
(05:52) Like I understand you’re bullish. you you talked to this person. They gave you some optimism about what’s going to work and how it’s going to work. It reminds me of this guy I knew. He had this agency. And he’s like, “Yeah, I don’t really like looking at my numbers. I’d rather just like do it the way I feel.
(06:06) I mean, that’s why I have a business in the first place.” And then his revenues went down and he blames marketing. Customers upset and he fires someone. He has no metrics to understand what’s actually happening and where it’s broken. and he thinks that just because of his desire to run the business based on his feelings to have the freedom so he doesn’t feel like he’s like built this prison of structure.
(06:26) It’s like dude you’re firing people and the customers upset. That’s enough for you to decide, hey, I probably need to get the data. So to do this in a way that you don’t go insane. You just need your team to report on two things. The first off is you need the leading indicators. The leading indicators are things you’re going to measure that are correlated to the outcome you want.
(06:44) You all want more profit. I get that number of profit goes up, you’re happy. But what you need to teach the team is to figure out what are their activities they do before that happens. If it’s a sales function, it’s the number of calls they did that day. If it’s a marketing team, it’s the amount of leads they generated.
(06:58) There needs to be leading indicators that correlate to the results you want. That brings us to the second type of numbers you got to look at, which is the lagging indicators. These are things like revenue and churn and profit that happen after the fact based on activities that came from the leading indicators.
(07:12) When you can get everybody to understand, I do this and the volume goes up and then the lag indicators goes up and everybody wins and you connect those two things. Now you’re running a business with numbers that you don’t have to be involved in. Here’s why. What gets measured gets moved. Now you know exactly what to measure.
(07:29) You’ve learned how to clone yourself with the 108010 rule. You’ve built systems with the camcorder method. And you’re running the business by the numbers instead of gut feel. But here’s the question I hear every entrepreneur who finally steps back. If my team is running the business, then what the am I supposed to do now? And that’s where most founders either slide back into the weeds because they feel useless or worse, become completely disconnected, stop innovating, and ultimately cause their own business to stall. When the business
(07:56) finally runs without you, you need to step into your next level. Which brings us to our last, but arguably the most important point, leading from your zone of genius. It’s the thing that you do that creates value for your team, for your customers, for your family. That honestly, if you didn’t even get paid to do, you’d probably be doing it anyway.
(08:17) That’s why I always think the best businesses to start are doing the thing that you do when you procrastinate. Think about all the people that all they do is spend time on YouTube. They should just get a job doing YouTube stuff. The way I like to think about it, it looks like work, feels like play.
(08:31) So, here’s how you find it. First off, find the high lever moves. Think about vision, mission, values, the stuff that only you can do as the founder. Then what you want to do is build a team that builds the business of like really talented people that you trust, that are creative, that are driven, and share in the upside with them.
(08:50) And then lead like an artist. Think about what an artist does. They bring strategy, energy, taste, essentially magic that only you can. Now, if you tell me you’re stuck just managing tasks, you’re not leading. You’re just limiting. Your job is to multiply, not maintain. When you operate from your zone of genius, you stop being the glue and start being the accelerator, the gasoline.
(09:12) That’s when the business actually scales without you and because of you. Most people don’t allow themselves to integrate all aspects of themselves so they can truly live into their zone of genius. And look, if you’re a business owner and want help directly from me to implement these strategies, just message me coach on Instagram and let’s make it

Dan Martell

Dan Martell is the bestselling author of “Buy Back Your Time” and the #1 executive coach for founders and CEO’s in the world. He was named Forbes Top 10 Business People to Follow on Social Media and is a highly sought-after speaker, including events by Tony Robbins and John Maxwell. He’s a husband and dad of two boys, and when he’s not in family mode, he’s competing in Ironman races and supporting troubled youth.

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