When building new teams or organizations from the ground up, we usually start with a handful of people who own every piece of the product. In the process of building systems in fast-paced environments, we often create “Hero”es. A hero is a person who pulls an all-nighter to fix broken systems, stepping in at the last minute to save us from a failed deployment and by doing so, they carry the weight of an entire organization on their shoulders. This behavior is often praised and seen as a good thing.

But the dire reality is: If your org is constantly relying on hero, then your process is broken. Relying on heroic feats of an individual is not a sign of a high-performing culture; it is an indication of systemic failure. As we scale up the systems and culture, this often works as an impediment. Before we start to improve the culture, moving from the creation of heroes to scalable systems and processes, we need to understand what actually creates heroes.

How We Create "Heroes"

A hero is not born, but created due to the environment, based on need. While their intentions are almost often noble, the dynamic slowly spirals into a vicious cycle of structural dependency.

Why "Hero" Culture is Dangerous

Understanding how a “hero” is created is one thing; we also must understand why relying on them is destructive. While it feels good for a hero to have a savior complex and organizations lauding such behavior, it is often a ticking bomb for the organization in the long term, for the following reasons.

How to Actually Build Systems (And Stop Relying on Heroes)

Transitioning away from "hero" culture doesn't mean firing or removing your best folks (read: "heroes"), but building a culture where we don't require heroes for the company to survive and thrive. It is about moving away from a reactive to a proactive environment using the following methods:

The hero culture might work when you are figuring the GTM strategy or Product-Market Fit, but as you mature as a organization, it required a reliable and boring processes.

When you shift your culture to reward fire prevention instead of fire fighting, you build a resilient, systems and teams. The goal is not to penalize hard work or brilliance, but to channel energy into building sustainable systems that don't constantly demand personal sacrifices.