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šŸ“ā€ā˜ ļø The Founder Who Couldn’t Retire

This week in Chief Rebel news... how boredom, regret, and identity loss hit harder than taxes post-exit.

Brady Retire GIF by The Undroppables

Mark sold his company for $12 million. It was clean. No earnout or drama. He should’ve been celebrating.

Instead, he woke up every day more anxious than when he was running payroll and negotiating vendor deals. He thought he was tired of the grind…turns out he was addicted to the rhythm.

After two years of golf, he came back to me and said:

ā

ā€œI thought the exit was the endgame. But no one warned me how quiet it gets when the calls stop. I’m not done.ā€

This is what most people don’t tell you about the moment after ā€œfreedom.ā€

Let’s break it down.

Best Links

šŸ’°Sales: We can’t just be founders who sell. We have to be ā€œthe sales founder,ā€ according to Rob Snyder (Harvard Innovation Labs fellow & serial founder who's brought 10+ startups from $0-$1M ARR.)

Industry Trends:
In the last 90 days, I’ve had 237 discovery calls with business owners and their closest advisors. Nearly all of them plan to sell in 3–5 years. And yet… 7 out of 10 couldn’t sell today if they tried. Before ā€œtoo busyā€ turns into your favorite excuse, make your company’s value part of your quarterly review. I’ll run a free outside-in valuation so you don’t find out the hard way. Here is a sample.

šŸ Extra Credit:
Our brain’s can’t tell the difference between survival and threats to the ego. Leaders today can’t thrive in survival mode, hence ā€œlocatingā€ where you are in an interaction. My favorite resource on leading from trust vs. threat.

Why Selling Doesn’t Always Feel Like Success

You sell your business, the money hits your account, and for a moment…everything feels weightless.

Then the restlessness sets in.

You miss the urgency. The texts. The adrenaline. The meaning.

Because even when business was overwhelming, it gave your day structure and your identity purpose.

The myth: Selling a business fixes everything.
The reality: It forces you to confront what you’ve ignored.

Mark thought he wanted rest. What he really needed was reinvention.

What No One Tells You About the Emotional Fallout

Here's what hit Mark hardest in year one post-sale:

  • He couldn’t stop checking the company’s Instagram

  • Every holiday felt emptier, even with family around

  • His wife noticed he was more irritable, not less

  • His health didn’t magically improve like he thought it would

  • He didn’t know how to answer the question ā€œSo what do you do now?ā€

When you’ve been a founder for 15+ years, you're not just running a business. You are the business.

Selling it without a plan for what replaces that identity can feel like a death without a funeral.

How to Plan for Identity and Time Before the Wire Hits

Here’s what we helped Mark do in his second chapter — what I wish we’d done before the sale.

1. Design a new weekly rhythm

We co-created a ā€œpost-exit scheduleā€ with time buckets for:

  • Learning (he started mentoring founders)

  • Movement (cycling replaced golf)

  • Meaningful work (he became an LP in a local accelerator)

2. Identify where his value still mattered

Mark didn’t need another business. He needed a room to feel useful in.
We mapped out advisory boards and selective consulting, not to fill time, but to rebuild confidence.

3. Anchor his future in purpose

Together, we built a decision matrix:

  • Will this make me proud at 60?

  • Does this help someone else win?

  • Can I do it without losing time with my family?

Most founders only build an exit strategy.
Mark finally built an exit life.

Action Steps This Week:

Before you sell, ask yourself:

  • What will I actually do when I don’t have to do anything?

  • What part of my day gives me energy, not just money?

  • What problem do I still want to solve?

  • What community will I stay anchored to?

  • What version of me do I want my family to see next?

This is the work that keeps you from boomeranging back into something misaligned.

Before You Go

If you’re 1–3 years from selling, don’t just model the valuation.

Model your post-exit life.
Because nobody regrets selling the business.
They regret selling their identity without building a new one first.

See you next week.

-Kinza

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