📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

3 Tips for Successfully Running a Company When You Are Married to the Co-Founder Building a successful company as a married couple requires a few key components to navigate how the partnership operates.

By Jay Gould Edited by Dan Bova

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

I met my wife Caitlin after selling my second startup to a company in New York City and becoming its president. Caitlin was an unbelievable sales woman, and her drive and compassion immediately drew me to her. A few months after we met, I had an idea for a new business and knew she was the right person to build it with me. Together, we founded our location-focused video advertising company Yashi, which we recently sold to Nexstar Broadcasting for $33 million.

When I tell people my co-founder is my wife, they often react with skepticism and surprise, but these reactions forget that business partnerships are essentially a marriage. When you are married, your business motives are naturally aligned. When we look out for each other, we look out for ourselves.

Building a successful company as a married couple requires a few key components to navigate how the partnership operates. These elements must be clearly defined and held together by absolute trust between both people.

Related: How to Make It Work When You're Married to Your Co-Founder

1. Define how decisions are made

Control is a tricky concept to navigate in both marriage and in business. You want to establish an equal partnership, but without someone in the driver's seat, too much time gets wasted on back and forth. In a business partnership and in a marriage, the first step is to establish a clear process for making decisions and decide who gets the final veto.

My previous experience guided the direction of the company and Caitlin's fresh perspective and relentless perseverance pushed us forward. In our partnership we separated our duties and responsibilities largely between strategic and operational, where I was strategic and she was operational. Part of having control is knowing that you'll have to relinquish it sometimes and trust that the other person will pull their weight. There should be nobody you trust more than your significant other. If you have any doubt, it won't work.

2. Sync your vision

In business and marriage alike, both partners' goals and vision for the future need to be aligned. This helps you stay focused. Caitlin and I agreed that it was important not to waste our power years and established our commitment to the company from the outset.

Related: 5 Tips on How to Maintain a Relationship While Starting a Business

In the early days when we were a two-person operation, there was no vacation. Even on our honeymoon we worked all morning and checked email all afternoon. Our united vision and our resolve kept us together and pushed us forward during those formative years. Yes, our personal and professional lives became blurred, but for us this was a good thing. Dealing with obstacles that arose only drove us closer together. Our passion for each other and for the company we were building together reduced problems and saved time. However, this only works when both partners are on the same page and are willing to sacrifice certain things (e.g. free time).

3. Channel each other's strengths

The strongest partnerships are made up of people with complementary skill sets. Each person's skills offset the other's. This strengthens your team, makes you more efficient and easier to delineate each partner's area of responsibility.

For example, I was more strategic, dealing with fundraising and the eventual acquisition of the business. Caitlin was more transactional and operational, focusing on sourcing and closing deals, customer service and everything related to revenue. Together, we had the full package needed to successfully get our company off the ground.

Of course, being a co-founder couple can be tough at times, but so can all marriages and all business relationships. In both cases, they take hard work, clear communication and an alignment of skills, personalities and vision. For us, being married has made us better founders and our startup has strengthened our marriage.

Related: 4 Secrets of Blissful Entrepreneurial Power Couples

Jay Gould

CEO and Co-Founder, Yashi

Jay Gould is CEO and co-founder of Toms River, N.J.-based Yashi, a location-focused online advertising technology company. He is also manages Gould Ventures, a technology investment fund.

 
 

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Culture

Want to Improve Your Productivity? These 7 Types of Music Will Help You Focus

Listening to the right music can help you concentrate when you're on a deadline, studying for an exam or just trying to increase productivity.

Side Hustle

These Coworkers-Turned-Friends Started a Side Hustle on Amazon — Now It's a 'Full Hustle' Earning Over $20 Million a Year: 'Jump in With Both Feet'

Achal Patel and Russell Gong met at a large consulting firm and "bonded over a shared vision to create a mission-led company."

Leadership

You Might Think You're a Great Leader — But Do Your Employees Agree? Here's How to Harness Empathy to Drive Team Success

True empathy is the mixture of unfiltered honesty with a deep understanding of an individual's narrative.

Growing a Business

If You Aren't Betting on the Media Industry, You Are Losing a Competitive Edge — Here's Why.

Building or acquiring media assets is an increasingly popular strategy adopted by creative entrepreneurs and startups looking to leverage the industry's unique characteristics.

Productivity

Want to Be More Productive? Here's How Google Executives Structure Their Schedules

These five tactics from inside Google will help you focus and protect your time.

Resumes & Interviewing

6 Traits to Look For in Your Next Boss

These are the characteristics you need to look for to find a manager who understands they're in service to their teams — not the other way around.