The team wants to look good. The board wants results. Advisors want to be hired again. Their significant other wants reassurance. Every one of them has different goals, aspirations and worldviews that are different than yours, which means what they tell you may not be in your and the company's best interest.
Add to that the isolation that comes with the role itself. There are things a CEO can't say to the team, can't say to the board, can't say at home. Doubts that sound like weakness. Questions that expose uncertainty. Decisions that carry consequences too significant to think through alone.
Vistage groups exist because that isolation is real, and because the cost of it, in bad decisions and missed opportunities and slow growth, is higher than most CEOs realize.
years of Vistage dues returned to a single member from one idea, in one meeting. It happened inside one of Jed's groups: one conversation, one insight. Results like that are why CEOs stay in their Vistage groups for six years on average.
Guided multiple business owners all the way to successful exits.
The questions that get asked in a Vistage room are no holds barred and can be uncomfortable. The ones that surface assumptions the CEO didn't know they were making. The ones that reframe the problem in ways that make the answer suddenly obvious.
This works because of one thing: nobody in the room has anything to gain from the wrong answer. No equity stake. No reporting relationship. No contract on the line. Just experienced peers who want the same thing for each other that they want for themselves: clarity, growth, and the right outcome.
"16 brains are smarter than one. And hundreds of years of combined CEO experience sit in that room every month."
Real changes, inside companies whose leaders show up and do the work.
The most expensive decisions are the ones made without enough perspective, or delayed too long out of uncertainty. A room full of people who've faced the same decisions before changes both problems at once.
Clarity leads to action. Accountability sustains it. The leaders who grow fastest aren't the ones with the best strategy, they're the ones who execute most consistently. That's what the room produces.
The room accelerates one thing above everything else: delegation. When the CEO stops doing the work they are already paying others to do, time opens up: for the thinking, the relationships, and the life that got squeezed out.
The company that gets built in the Vistage room, with a strong team, a healthy culture, and systems that run without the owner, is worth more when it's time to sell. It generates more while reducing stress, and it creates the life the CEO set out to build in the first place.
No pressure, no pitch. A conversation to find out whether the room might be right for where you are.
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