Why the way founders communicate shapes culture, trust, and growth
Most founders think strategy builds companies. In reality, communication does just as much.
The words you use every day with employees, customers, investors, and even yourself quietly shape the direction of your business. Over time, those words become habits. Those habits become culture. And culture eventually becomes momentum, either positive or negative.
That was the core theme in a recent conversation between entrepreneur and Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. author Colin C. Campbell and entrepreneur Michael Gilmour. The discussion wasn’t about motivational slogans or surface-level positivity. It was about something much more practical.
“Communication is not separate from leadership. It is leadership.”
How founders speak directly affects how companies operate.
And once you start noticing it, you see it everywhere.
A founder says, “I’ll try.”
Another says, “I will.”
One creates uncertainty. The other creates confidence.
Small shift. Massive difference.
Great entrepreneurs speak differently
One of the most interesting parts of the conversation was how much language affects mindset itself. Colin explained that years ago, after hearing a speaker discuss “power talking,” he began intentionally changing the phrases he used in everyday business conversations.
Not because it sounded better.
Because it changed outcomes.
Instead of saying, “I have to get back to you,” he started saying, “I’d be happy to get back to you.”
Instead of saying, “I’ll try,” he began saying, “I will.”
Instead of using “but,” he replaced it with “and.”
The effect was immediate.
The tone changed. The energy changed. Even his own confidence changed.
Most founders underestimate how quickly negative language compounds inside a company. Teams absorb it. Customers feel it. Investors notice it. A founder who constantly speaks in uncertain or defensive language eventually creates uncertainty throughout the organization.
Positive communication isn’t about pretending problems don’t exist. It’s about approaching challenges with clarity, confidence, and ownership.
That’s leadership.
Trust is built in small moments
Entrepreneurs love talking about big wins. Funding announcements. Product launches. Growth milestones.
But trust is rarely built in those moments.
Trust is built quietly.
It’s built when you deliver something earlier than promised. It’s built when you communicate delays before customers have to ask. It’s built when people realize your word actually means something.
During the conversation, Colin shared a story about an ecommerce company whose reputation collapsed because leadership consistently overpromised delivery timelines. Customers were told products would arrive quickly. Instead, delays stretched into months.
The issue wasn’t just operational.
It was emotional.
Customers stopped believing the company.
That’s why the old principle of “underpromise and overdeliver” still matters so much in startups. It sounds simple because it is simple. But very few companies consistently do it.
Founders often overpromise because they want to impress people. In reality, reliable communication is far more impressive than exaggerated promises.
Great operators understand this instinctively.
They protect trust at all costs.
Listening is one of the most underrated startup skills
Most people spend conversations waiting to speak.
Very few actually listen.
Michael Gilmour talked about using a communication technique called mirroring, where you repeat the last few words someone says back to them as a question. It sounds simple, but it changes conversations immediately because people feel heard.
And that matters more than founders realize.
Customers want to feel understood before they want solutions. Employees want to feel respected before they want direction. Partners want to feel heard before they commit.
The best entrepreneurs aren’t always the loudest people in the room.
They’re often the best listeners.
One story from the discussion stood out. Michael explained how he intentionally used listening techniques with his daughters during dinner one evening instead of dominating the conversation or offering advice. Afterwards, they commented on how connected they suddenly felt to him.
Nothing dramatic changed.
He simply listened.
That’s a powerful reminder for founders who spend most of their lives pitching, presenting, and persuading. Sometimes the strongest move in business is slowing down long enough to truly hear people.
Optimism without honesty destroys credibility
There’s a fake version of positivity that shows up constantly in startup culture.
Blind optimism.
The “everything is amazing” founder who ignores reality eventually loses trust from employees, customers, and investors alike. The best leaders don’t avoid hard truths. They face them directly while remaining confident they can solve the problem.
That distinction matters.
Colin shared a story about walking into a tense meeting with Vodafone after major technical issues impacted customers. Instead of defending the company or avoiding responsibility, he immediately apologized and presented a plan to fix the issue.
The dynamic in the room changed instantly.
Because honesty changes conversations.
Customers can handle problems. Teams can handle setbacks. Investors can handle delays.
What people struggle with is silence, excuses, and spin.
Transparency builds confidence even during difficult moments.
In many cases, especially in startups, the way you handle mistakes matters more than the mistake itself.
Integrity compounds faster than revenue
One line from the conversation captured the entire philosophy perfectly:
Integrity over money.
Not sometimes.
Always.
Colin talked about firing a salesperson who lied to a customer even though the lie initially appeared to save the company money. Short-term wins built on dishonesty eventually become long-term liabilities.
Founders who compromise integrity early almost always pay for it later.
The culture weakens.
Trust disappears.
Good employees leave.
Customers stop believing what they hear.
Strong companies are built on consistent behavior, not clever messaging.
That’s why communication matters so much. The words leaders choose reveal what the company actually values.
And teams notice everything.
The founders who last communicate with intention
The entrepreneurs who build enduring businesses usually have one thing in common. They communicate intentionally.
They understand that leadership is not just strategy meetings and decision-making frameworks. Leadership is how you show up during difficult conversations. It’s how you respond under pressure. It’s how you speak to customers when something breaks. It’s how you treat employees when mistakes happen.
Words shape culture long before policies ever do.
That’s why positive communication is not soft leadership. It’s operational discipline.
The best founders understand something many people miss:
Every sentence either builds trust or weakens it.
And over time, those moments define the company.

