Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TRENDING :
    • Researchers say one childhood vaccine is preventing hundreds of cancer deaths
    • The unchanging playbook to build a high growth company
    • World Cup fans devastated after ticket resale purchases fall through
    • America just buried a message for people living in 2276. Some of the items inside are wild
    • One person has died. Now a major cheese recall is growing across multiple states
    • Kroger is giving away 100,000 free pints of ice cream. But you have to act fast
    • ‘Toy Story 5’ taps into white-collar fears of obsolescence in the age of AI
    • Public media is struggling under Trump. L.A.’s KCRW may have found the way forward
    Populist Bulletin
    • Home
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Headline News
    Populist Bulletin
    Home»Business»The unchanging playbook to build a high growth company
    Business 5 Mins Read

    The unchanging playbook to build a high growth company

    Business 5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    People ask me what it takes to build a high-growth company, with a rapidly growing footprint and enterprise value. They want the formula, a secret, or a shortcut.

    There isn’t one. But there is a playbook. And after more than 13 years leading organizations across the healthcare spectrum, I can tell you that the playbook does not change. The industry or sector changes. The team changes. The product changes. But the playbook does not.

    I have led two companies onto the Inc. 5000 list. The first was EmpiRx Health, a pharmacy benefit management (PBM) company that I took from early stage to a scaled, nationally recognized tech-enabled PBM. The second is OnMed, where we grew revenue 3,500% in a little over two years, deploying care infrastructure into communities left behind by traditional medicine. Two different companies with two different problems, but the same playbook.

    THE NORTH STAR BECOMES YOUR AIR

    The most dangerous thing a leader can do is assume the team understands the mission. They do not. The North Star has to be communicated so often, so clearly, and so consistently that it stops feeling like communication and starts feeling like the air everyone breathes.

    At OnMed, that North Star is simple: quality, affordable, equitable care for every person, in every community, regardless of ZIP code. That is not marketing language, but the operating principle behind every partnership, product, and hiring decision we make. When a team member faces a hard call, they should orient themselves against that North Star without asking me. If they cannot, I have failed at my job.

    BUILD FOR THE JOURNEY, NOT THE DESTINATION

    The obsession with outcomes is the single biggest trap leaders fall into. Outcomes matter, but they are the result of doing the right things, the right way, relentlessly—not of chasing the outcome itself. When you organize around outcomes, you start cutting corners. You make decisions that look good on a scoreboard but erode the foundation underneath you.

    Every company I have led has had chapters where nothing worked as expected. The headwinds felt too strong, the timeline too long, the obstacles too many. Those are the moments that reveal whether a culture is real or aspirational. I do not change the destination. I go back to the process. Execute in the present. Stay close to the customer. Lead with integrity. Do the right thing—not when it is easy, but especially when it is hard. Do those things relentlessly, and the outcomes figure themselves out.

    NO WHAT-IFS—EVER

    This is a culture, not a mindset. The teams that break down aren’t facing the hardest circumstances. They are spending energy second-guessing decisions already made. What-ifs are corrosive. They pull people out of the present and into a past they cannot change, creating hesitation at exactly the moment execution demands certainty.

    The culture I build is deliberate: Gather the best information, make the decision, commit fully, execute without looking back. If it is wrong, correct forward. Own the decision, learn, and move. Have accountability at its highest level.

    EIGHT ROWERS, ONE SHELL

    Daniel James Brown’s The Boys in the Boat chronicles the 1936 University of Washington crew that went to the Berlin Olympics and beat the global competition. What Brown captures so precisely is that those eight men were not the most gifted rowers individually. They won because they achieved something rare. It’s what Brown calls “the moment of swing”— when the shell moves on its own, carrying eight men as one, each stroke indistinguishable from the next, every man surrendering individual glory for collective force.

    That is the culture I build toward. A team that has internalized the North Star so deeply they pull together instinctively, when conditions are hard, when the race is close, when no one is watching.

    THE CEO IS NOT THE STRATEGIST

    Most CEOs misunderstand the job. It is not about sitting above the organization with the strategic view. It is about being in it—hands-on, close to the action, visible to the team.

    The CEO is communicator in chief. The mission must be stated, restated, and lived out loud. It cannot be delegated. The CEO is chief simplification officer. Growth creates complexity, and complexity is the silent killer of execution. My job is to strip the noise, cut the distractions, and refocus the management team on exactly what matters right now. Do fewer things but do them brilliantly. Every time the organization drifts toward doing more, the CEO pulls it back. That is the work.

    DO THE RIGHT THING, BUILD THE RIGHT WAY

    There will always be a faster path, a convenient shortcut, a deal that works if you look the other way. The playbook says no—not because of reputation risk, but because companies that endure are built on foundations that hold the weight of growth. Shortcuts leave hairline fractures you do not see until you are scaling fast and the structure cracks.

    Skill is teachable, conviction is not. Hire for conviction first. The playbook is simple, but it is not easy. It is repeatable, and I intend to run it again.

    Karthik Ganesh is the CEO of OnMed.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Researchers say one childhood vaccine is preventing hundreds of cancer deaths

    June 19, 2026

    World Cup fans devastated after ticket resale purchases fall through

    June 19, 2026

    America just buried a message for people living in 2276. Some of the items inside are wild

    June 19, 2026
    Top News
    Economy 9 Mins Read

    The Perks Workers Want Also Make Them More Productive

    Economy 9 Mins Read

    PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY EMILY SCHERER / GETTY IMAGES Three years after the beginning of the…

    OpenAI claims new GPT-5 model boosts ChatGPT to ‘PhD level’

    August 18, 2025

    With Alligator Alcatraz, Empire’s Tyranny Has Come Home

    August 19, 2025

    7 Top Wholesale Arts and Crafts Supplies for Your Business

    January 10, 2026
    Top Trending
    Business 3 Mins Read

    Researchers say one childhood vaccine is preventing hundreds of cancer deaths

    Business 3 Mins Read

    One of the only vaccines that prevents cancer is even more effective…

    Business 5 Mins Read

    The unchanging playbook to build a high growth company

    Business 5 Mins Read

    People ask me what it takes to build a high-growth company, with…

    Business 7 Mins Read

    World Cup fans devastated after ticket resale purchases fall through

    Business 7 Mins Read

    Bina Ramroop broke down in tears when she realized she wasn’t going…

    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    About us

    The Populist Bulletin was founded with a fervent commitment to inform, inspire, empower and spark meaningful conversations about the economy, business, politics, government accountability, globalization, and the preservation of American cultural heritage.

    We are devoted to delivering straightforward, unfiltered, compelling, relatable stories that resonate with the majority of the American public, while boldly challenging false mainstream narratives that seem to only serve entrenched elitists, and foreign interests.

    Top Picks

    Researchers say one childhood vaccine is preventing hundreds of cancer deaths

    June 19, 2026

    The unchanging playbook to build a high growth company

    June 19, 2026

    World Cup fans devastated after ticket resale purchases fall through

    June 19, 2026
    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    Copyright © 2025 Populist Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.