3 days ago
260: Leadership Mistake Too Many Entrepreneurs Make When Hiring

Podcast Show Notes – Episode 260 | 12.16.2025
Episode Title: Leadership Mistake Too Many Entrepreneurs Make When Hiring
Hiring the wrong person isn’t just a bad business decision, it can quietly damage your credibility as a leader.
In this episode, Sean Barnes breaks down one of the most common traps leaders and entrepreneurs fall into as their teams grow: hiring people they trust instead of people who are qualified. From workout buddies to close friends, familiarity can create blind spots that lead to costly mistakes.
Sean explains why slowing down the interview process, involving your team, and asking real, technical questions upfront is not optional, it’s leadership. He also tackles the uncomfortable truth about ego, reputation, and why admitting a bad hire is often harder than making one.
If you’re building a team, scaling a business, or carrying the weight of leadership decisions, this conversation will sharpen how you think about hiring before it costs you more than money.
Key Moments
00:00 – Why hiring the right person is critical as a leader
00:31 – The danger of hiring friends and workout buddies
01:09 – Why urgency and trust can cloud judgment
01:41 – The importance of panel interviews and team input
02:13 – The real risk: salary burden and reputation damage
02:46 – Ego, denial, and giving someone “too many chances”
03:18 – Why slowing down the hiring process is a leadership skill
Key Takeaways
- Trust isn’t the same as qualification.
Liking someone, knowing them personally, or trusting their character does not mean they have the skills required to succeed in the role. - Rushing a hire creates long-term damage.
Filling a role quickly to relieve pressure often leads to performance issues, reputation risk, and far more time spent fixing the mistake later. - Ego is what keeps bad hires in place.
Leaders often give too many chances because admitting a hiring mistake feels personal—but accountability is a leadership responsibility, not a failure.
Key Takeaways
- Trust isn’t the same as qualification.
Liking someone, knowing them personally, or trusting their character does not mean they have the skills required to succeed in the role. - Rushing a hire creates long-term damage.
Filling a role quickly to relieve pressure often leads to performance issues, reputation risk, and far more time spent fixing the mistake later. - Ego is what keeps bad hires in place.
Leaders often give too many chances because admitting a hiring mistake feels personal—but accountability is a leadership responsibility, not a failure.
Host: Sean Barnes
Website:
https://www.wolfexecutives.com
LinkedIn:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/seanbarnes/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/wolfexecutives
https://www.linkedin.com/company/thewayofthewolf/
LinkedIn Newsletter:
https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/7284600567593684993/
The Wolf Leadership Series:
https://wolfexecutives.com/wolf-leadership-series/
YouTube:
youtube.thewayofthewolf.com
Twitter:
https://x.com/the_seanbarnes
Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/the_seanbarnes
https://www.instagram.com/wolfexecutives
https://www.instagram.com/the_wayofthewolf
TikTok:
https://www.tiktok.com/@the_seanbarnes
Email: Sean@thewayofthewolf.com
Audible:
https://www.audible.com/pd/The-Way-of-the-Wolf-Podcast/B08JJNXJ6C
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/2BTGdO25Vop3GTpGCY8Y8E?si=ea91c1ef6dd14f15
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