Leadership Principles
Chris Sneed applies engineering discipline to enterprise leadership.
These principles guide how he builds companies, evaluates risk, and operates under pressure.
Structure Before Scale
Growth without architecture creates fragility.
Systems, financial separation, margin clarity, and accountability must exist before expansion.
Durability Over Optics
Peak numbers are meaningless without repeatability.
Revenue spikes, like dyno pulls, do not define strength. Sustained performance does.
Accountability Is Non-Negotiable
Failures are owned.
Decisions are analyzed.
Pressure is absorbed, not redirected.
Responsibility defines leadership.
Design for Stress
Operational strain, legal complexity, supplier volatility, and market shifts are inevitable.
Strong systems anticipate pressure rather than react to it.
Margin Is Strategy
Revenue is vanity.
Margin and cash flow determine survival.
Capital allocation must be disciplined.
Operators Over Narratives
Execution precedes marketing.
Reputation follows delivery, not storytelling.
Build for Optionality
A well-structured enterprise should withstand scrutiny, scale intentionally, and operate independently of personality.
Optionality is leverage.