#512 Alec Broadfoot: When does a CEO need a #2 leader?
08 April 2026

#512 Alec Broadfoot: When does a CEO need a #2 leader?

21st Century Entrepreneurship

About

Alec Broadfoot is founder and CEO of VisionSpark and author of Hiring Your Right #2 Leader. We spoke about why most entrepreneurs fail to hire the right number two—and how to fix it using data instead of gut instinct. His turning point came after building a profitable company with great service but disastrous hiring results, where “we were actually firing about 7 out of 10 people.” Everything changed when he adopted structured assessments and flipped those results, proving that hiring isn’t intuition—it’s a system.

That realization led him to develop a method grounded in science, process, and pattern recognition. Instead of relying on interviews and resumes—which he warns against since “78% of resumes have lies on them and 100% have embellishments”—his approach evaluates candidates across mental aptitude, personality, and leadership capability. He emphasizes that the role of a number two is not a glorified assistant or project manager, but “a leader of leaders” who can run the business, make decisions, and create leverage for the founder.

We also explored when entrepreneurs actually need this role and how to recognize both the right and wrong hire. A key signal is complexity—when working more no longer produces results and the founder feels stuck, exhausted, or even considers quitting. On the flip side, you’ve hired wrong if you feel the need to micromanage or constantly stay “on the watchtower” protecting the business. Broadfoot uses a simple but powerful metaphor: the right number two is like a doubles tennis partner—aligned, complementary, and in sync—because “you can go farther together when you have that right number two.”

This episode gives founders a clear, practical framework to stop guessing in hiring, avoid costly leadership mistakes, and build a business that can scale without them being the bottleneck.

Key takeaways

     Stop hiring on gut instinct; use structured assessments and data  Don’t promote by default; internal candidates are often wrong fit  Avoid “pool of one”; always evaluate multiple strong candidates  A true number two must lead leaders, not just manage tasks  Micromanagement is a clear signal you hired the wrong person  Start considering a number two near $1M revenue