Resources

Intuity Performance Leadership Spotlight: Riaz Sidi • Sidi.io

Written by Iliyana Shoushounova | Aug 6, 2021 11:13:41 AM

We’re excited to announce that after appearing on Episode #15 of the Elevate Business Podcast, Riaz Sidi, President at Sidi.io, has been selected for the Intuity Performance Leadership Spotlight series.

Here are the top 3 insights he shared with the community.

  1. How do you guide the culture at Sidi.io?

We have guiding principles printed out in my office here, but we also have a soft copy in Google Drive that anyone can access.

These are very simple, standard one-liners in terms of our ethics, our principles, how we operate and essentially define what our goal is. And so, it’s always about reiterating and reminding the team of these values and being very open and transparent.

You want to tread the line between your belief system or politics, if you will, into the workplace and make sure that we’re embracing the team’s diversity. I’ve been acutely aware of ensuring that there’s a gender balance in our organization and that there’s a diversity balance.

And when you close your eyes and open your ears to what people are saying, it’s interesting how many smart people are out there when we look past some of the preconceived biases and notions we have about people that are not like us.

  1. What has been your biggest learning, seeing your team double in size more than once this past year?

I probably waited too long to hire people. I don’t regret it, but I also recognize that if I maybe had invested in people earlier, we could have possibly scaled a little differently.

I know a lot of entrepreneurs and business owners; they get into the “I know everything kind of mentality,” and I think I was there where I didn’t feel like anyone was going to do it as well as me.

I’ve gotten to this point where we were making X amount of revenue per month, and no one else is doing that. So I must be the greatest thing ever. But I realized that I don’t know everything and that if I could leverage others’ expertise in, for example, Facebook ads, Finance, HR and other functions of the business, I’d make better use of my time.

So I think that the learnings have really been investing in the right people, recognizing that I’m not arrogant or obnoxious, thinking that you know everything, and then making sure that I pay a good salary to my people.

  1. How do you create an open environment for your employees to thrive?

In terms of how receptive people are going to be open, ultimately, the goal is for them to feel as open, as comfortable as they want. There’s no obligation to wear their heart on their sleeve. But ultimately, we just want the team to know that there is a channel for them to vent if they need to, and we don’t want to feel obligated to take me up on that.

But I think people have chosen to be open because they tend to trust me, and they trust the team. The way to keep people accountable is to hire people you can trust, passionate about the mission, and conveying a vision.

If people don’t know what success looks like, how will they describe that or get excited about that? People know that we’re growing, and so whenever we have a new client, everyone hears about it, and we celebrate it as a team.

So getting people involved in the bigger picture in all of those things will help drive engagement. It’ll drive passion because, at the end of the day, it might be my name and my hair over there on the logo, but ultimately we’re a team.

We are living and dying by our collective response and the way that we work together to help clients.