Toronto, ON — October 2025 — Veteran emerging-tech strategist Audrey Nesbitt is taking aim at one of Silicon Valley’s most persistent myths: that the person who builds a product should automatically lead the company. Her new book, “Why You Shouldn’t Be the CEO (And Other Ways to Save Your Startup),” explores how leadership blind spots, [...] The post Audrey Nesbitt’s New Book Urges Silicon Valley Founders to Fire Themselves Before It’s Too Late appeared first on Blockonomi.Toronto, ON — October 2025 — Veteran emerging-tech strategist Audrey Nesbitt is taking aim at one of Silicon Valley’s most persistent myths: that the person who builds a product should automatically lead the company. Her new book, “Why You Shouldn’t Be the CEO (And Other Ways to Save Your Startup),” explores how leadership blind spots, [...] The post Audrey Nesbitt’s New Book Urges Silicon Valley Founders to Fire Themselves Before It’s Too Late appeared first on Blockonomi.

Audrey Nesbitt’s New Book Urges Silicon Valley Founders to Fire Themselves Before It’s Too Late

Toronto, ON — October 2025 — Veteran emerging-tech strategist Audrey Nesbitt is taking aim at one of Silicon Valley’s most persistent myths: that the person who builds a product should automatically lead the company. Her new book, “Why You Shouldn’t Be the CEO (And Other Ways to Save Your Startup),” explores how leadership blind spots, rather than market forces, derail many promising ventures.

With 25 years of experience, including the past decade in Web3, and as founder and CEO of SPINNOVATE Tech, Nesbitt examines why technical brilliance can turn into a liability once a startup begins to scale. The same obsession with control and perfection that brings a product to life often ends up stalling growth. Research indicates that nearly two-thirds of high-potential startups fail due to founder conflict, rather than weak products or inadequate markets.

Many founders, she writes, never stop to ask whether they’re the right person to lead their own company at every stage of its growth. They may be the best fit in the early days, but not when it’s time to scale. Having launched several Web3 projects, Nesbitt has seen how technical founders often mistake innovation for leadership. The market, she reminds readers, doesn’t care if your code is poetry, only whether you’re solving a real problem people are ready to pay for. That realization often comes too late, when internal friction and poor alignment sink an otherwise brilliant idea.

When Leadership Becomes the Bottleneck

Nesbitt’s background in blockchain and decentralized ecosystems gives her a rare perspective on what she calls “founder myths that refuse to die.” She recounts building an early Web3 social media platform that was technically groundbreaking yet commercially premature. “Many years ahead of its time,” as she puts it, a reminder that market reality always trumps technical dreams.

She also observes that even great companies slow down when leaders can’t let go. Whether in traditional startups or decentralized autonomous organizations, Nesbitt argues, founders who fail to evolve with their company’s growth often become its biggest obstacle.

Her book, “Why You Shouldn’t Be the CEO,” serves as both a mirror and a manual, outlining ten common ways startups lose direction and how to avoid them. It highlights common pitfalls, such as skipping market validation, rushing equity splits, micromanaging decisions or delaying launches in pursuit of perfection.

Sustainable leadership, she notes, isn’t about personal authority but about building systems that keep working long after the founder leaves the room. Letting go isn’t a sign of weakness; it’s what allows a company’s vision to grow beyond the person who first imagined it.

A Field Guide for the Next Generation of Builders

Nesbitt combines behavioral insights with hard data, citing CB Insights’ finding that 42% of startups fail due to a lack of market need and Startup Genome’s estimate that nearly 90% eventually collapse. Her writing moves fluidly between analysis and personal insight, shaped by decades of watching the same mistakes repeat through crypto cycles, fintech booms, and AI hype waves. Across every frontier, she argues, technology evolves quickly, but founder psychology rarely does.

“Why You Shouldn’t Be the CEO (And Other Ways to Save Your Startup)” offers a timely reality check for a new generation of Web3 and AI founders determined not to become their own company’s biggest obstacle. Now available in paperback and digital formats.

About Audrey Nesbitt

Audrey Nesbitt is a CEO, marketing strategist and advisor specializing in emerging technologies, including fintech, blockchain, and AI. She holds an MBA from Heriot-Watt University and is a PMP-certified professional. As founder and CEO of SPINNOVATE Tech, she has led the launch and scaling of multiple fintech and Web3 solutions while mentoring women in technology leadership. Nesbitt has been nominated for the Women in IT Award for Tech Startup of the Year (2023) and Outstanding Leadership at the Marketing 2.0 Conference (2024).

The post Audrey Nesbitt’s New Book Urges Silicon Valley Founders to Fire Themselves Before It’s Too Late appeared first on Blockonomi.

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