Agent skill
modern-elder-upward-influence
A framework for managing high-stakes relationships with founders or executives by balancing institutional wisdom with radical curiosity. Use this when reporting to a high-intensity "Founder Mode" leader, when seeking to build credibility in a new technical domain, or when managing a team through high-stress organizational transitions.
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SKILL.md
Modern Elder Upward Influence
The "Modern Elder" approach is a method for providing high-level strategic influence while maintaining the humility of a learner. It focuses on "mentoring up" by being as curious as you are wise, shifting from a role of a technical expert to a "confidant"—one who provides the confidence a leader needs to succeed.
The Alignment Protocol
High-intensity founders often assume everyone works at their pace and has their level of context. Use this protocol before and during every high-stakes meeting to prevent misalignment.
1. The Pre-Meeting Alignment Check
Before presenting to an executive or founder, run a "pep talk" with yourself or your direct lead to define three things:
- The Intention: What is the specific goal of this iteration?
- Success Criteria: What defines a "win" for this specific project or meeting?
- The Meeting Outcome: What exactly do you need to walk out with (e.g., a decision, a budget, or alignment on principles)?
2. The Meeting Opener
Start every meeting by stating the alignment points clearly to the founder:
- "Before we dive in, I want to get clear on what we’re trying to accomplish. My goal for this session is [Goal]. I’ve defined success for this iteration as [Metric/Outcome]. Does that align with your current priorities?"
3. Minimize Artifact Friction
Combustible or high-intensity leaders can be derailed by long slide decks.
- Limit the deck: Use only enough slides to set principles and goals.
- Stay fluid: Be prepared to abandon the deck if the founder takes the meeting in a different direction. Focus on the conversation over the presentation.
Building Credibility Through "Proximity"
If you lack technical skills in a new environment, build "Process Knowledge" and "Customer Proximity" to become indispensable.
- Customer Grounding: Go where the founder cannot. (e.g., Visit hosts in their homes, shadow customer support calls). Use these qualitative insights to challenge assumptions.
- Invisible Productivity: Focus on "elevating talent" rather than just individual output. Act as a manager who brings out the best in technical experts who may be faster or more "fluidly intelligent" than you.
- The Confidant Shift: Reframe your role from a "source of answers" to a "source of confidence." Ask questions that help the mentee find their own roadmap rather than dispensing solutions.
The Anxiety Audit
Use this framework to manage team stress when a founder sets "ridiculous" or "unreasonable" goals.
The Equation: Anxiety = Uncertainty × Powerlessness
The Exercise: Create a four-column balance sheet:
- What we know: List all certainties (e.g., current resources, fixed deadlines).
- What we don’t know: List the unknowns (e.g., market reaction, final specs).
- What we can influence: List the variables under team control.
- What we can’t influence: List external factors (e.g., founder's mood, macroeconomy).
Action: Focus the team's energy exclusively on the "What we can influence" column to reduce the "Powerlessness" variable in the equation.
Examples
Example 1: Challenging a Strategic Direction
- Context: A founder wants to move the product to "Mobile Only," but the data shows a segment of high-value users might struggle with the change.
- Input: Instead of arguing against the vision, the PM uses customer proximity.
- Application: Bring in 5 "Power Users" from the target demographic for a live session.
- Output: The founder sees the friction firsthand, leading to a "Mobile First, not Mobile Only" compromise that protects the core business.
Example 2: Managing a Founder Mode Meeting
- Context: You are presenting a new roadmap to a CEO known for "Founder Mode" deep-dives that often derail meetings.
- Input: A 20-slide deck.
- Application: Cut the deck to 3 slides: (1) Strategic Principles, (2) The "Why" behind the current priority, (3) The specific decision needed.
- Output: The CEO focuses on the high-level principles, feels "aligned," and gives the decision quickly without getting lost in the pixel-level details of slide 15.
Common Pitfalls
- The "Expert" Trap: Expecting respect because of your experience. Respect in tech is earned through curiosity and current "process knowledge," not just your resume.
- Matching Toxic Pace: Assuming you must work the same 15-hour days as a workaholic founder to be valuable. Instead, focus on "Metabolized Experience"—sharing wisdom that saves the company time, which is more valuable than raw hours.
- Failing to "Translate": Using old-industry lingo in a tech environment. (e.g., Not understanding that "Product" in tech is the software/app, not the physical service). Learn the lingo before you try to change the strategy.
- Over-Planning: Setting rigid 3-year plans in a "Founder Mode" environment. Founders pivot. Build for "TQ" (Transitional Intelligence) instead of long-term certainty.
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