Watch your strongest partner for a month. She joins every community call. She publishes under your methodology's banner, mentors the practitioners coming up behind her, and routes clients across the network without being asked. She is also paying attention to something you would prefer she did not notice: what you are willing to tolerate.
Because somewhere in that same network sits a certified partner who has quietly stopped performing. No engagements in two quarters. Satisfaction scores that have slid steadily since the certificate was issued. No community presence, no case studies, no contribution of any kind. Everyone can see it. And so far, you have not acted.
Founders dress this up as patience. The partner is "going through something." The numbers "should recover next quarter." But what feels like compassion operates as a tax, and the tax is levied on every partner who is actually delivering. Michael Michalowicz's logic applies directly to partner ecosystems: every resource you pour into a failing relationship is a resource taken away from a thriving one.
Alan Weiss refuses to soften the prescription: cut the bottom 15% of your relationships every 18 months. Michael Port's Red Velvet Rope is not just an entrance policy --- it governs who stays inside the rope, not merely who gets past it the first time. Baker and Enns arrive at the identical conclusion: underperformers must go. Not because they are bad professionals. Because carrying them injures the professionals who are performing.
What follows is the operating manual for that decision: how to spot the problem while it is still small, when a demotion beats a removal, and how to run an exit that defends your standards without torching the relationship.
01 — The Lesson You Never Meant to Teach
What Your Best Partners Conclude When Underperformance Goes Unanswered
Start with the people the avoidance actually harms. Your top performers have put real skin into the ecosystem. They show up to the monthly calls. They write articles and take conference stages under the methodology's name. They mentor incoming practitioners and consistently deliver at 4.5+/5.0 satisfaction. They have wired their professional reputation to yours.
Now put yourself in their seat as they watch a colleague bill hourly on branded work, skip the calls, freelance the methodology, and ship mediocre engagements --- all without consequence. They are not persuaded by your explanation that you are "giving it time." They read the situation accurately: the standards are decorative. The certification is a sticker. The founder will accept poor quality rather than sit through one uncomfortable meeting.
David Spinks, in The Business of Belonging, locates the breaking point of community health exactly here: the moment members perceive that the norms --- generosity, mutual help, belonging --- are being applied unevenly. When high contributors watch low contributors collect the same status and the same benefits, the social contract cracks. And a cracked social contract cannot be repaired by enforcing the rules later. The damage is structural, not cosmetic.
Seth Godin reaches the same destination from a different road: movements run on belief, not on incentives. Your partners participate because they believe they belong to something with a real bar. The instant they conclude the bar is negotiable, the belief that powers their engagement drains away.
"Carrying one underperformer broadcasts to every high performer that the bar is negotiable. Removing them is not cruelty --- it is the clearest available proof that your standards exist."
The withdrawal of your best people will not announce itself. Some eventually leave, but most simply dial down their investment first. They publish under their own name instead of yours. They attend fewer calls. The cross-referrals dry up. They start building a personal brand that can survive without the ecosystem --- a hedge against the day they walk. By the time you notice, the most valuable partners in your network have already half-left.
02 — The Invoice Arrives Late
How One Weak Partner Taxes the Entire Network
The economics are easy to ignore because the bill never arrives in the month the cost is incurred. Every hour of remedial coaching for a struggling partner is an hour of enablement your best partners did not receive. Every community call that gets dragged down to remedial questions is a call that failed to stretch your strongest practitioners. Every below-standard engagement a weak partner delivers is one that could have been routed to someone who would have made it sing.
But time allocation is the cheap part. The expensive part is reputational, and it compounds in silence. When a weak partner delivers a poor engagement under your brand, the client does not assign the blame to that individual. They blame the methodology itself. They blame the certification that was supposed to be the quality guarantee. They tell their peers the framework "did not work" --- and those peers are precisely the executives your strongest partners are trying to win. The negative review gets filed away as a reason to decline the next assessment invitation.
A single weak partner can close a market that every other partner needed open.
Parker, Van Alstyne, and Choudary document this pattern in platform economics: negative quality signals travel faster than positive ones, and they land hardest on the platform's highest-value producers. A marketplace that tolerates low-quality sellers loses its best sellers first, because the best sellers have the most alternatives and the most reputation at stake.
The counter-example worth studying is the EOS Implementer network. Gino Wickman scaled it past 500 certified practitioners by enforcing quality without sentiment. Client feedback routes straight to the certification body. An implementer whose clients report a substandard experience is flagged immediately. Peer accountability happens in the open, not behind closed doors. The payoff is consistency at scale --- and that consistency is exactly what lets every implementer in the network charge premium fees without flinching.
03 — Read It Off the Dashboard, Not the Vibes
If an Exit Surprises You, Your Measurement Failed Months Ago
A partner removal should never feel sudden. It should be the last entry in a file you have been building for months. If you find yourself shocked that someone needs to go, the breakdown happened earlier --- in your tracking, long before your governance.
Six signals tell you the exit conversation is approaching:
- Silence in the community for six or more consecutive months. Call attendance is the single most dependable engagement metric; when it drops under 60%, the relationship is already decaying. A partner who has been absent for half a year has mentally resigned --- the formal conversation just files the paperwork.
- Delivery volume under the minimum threshold for two straight quarters. A partner who is not delivering is not practicing, and a partner who is not practicing is letting their competence rot.
- Satisfaction under 3.5/5.0 across three or more engagements. One low score is a difficult client. Two might be a rough quarter. Three is a pattern, and your methodology's brand cannot afford to absorb patterns.
- Deviation from the methodology after compliance coaching. Editing the diagnostic tool, skipping assessment steps, improvising the delivery sequence --- after being coached on it --- says the partner ranks their own judgment above the shared standard.
- Sliding back into hourly billing on branded work. A partner who reverts to hourly after value-pricing coaching is sawing at the pricing discipline that protects everyone else's margins. Baker's test applies: around a third of prospects should walk away on price --- if nobody ever does, the fees are too low.
- Conduct that damages the ecosystem itself. Poaching clients from fellow partners, misrepresenting credentials, publicly attacking the methodology or its people. This category skips the improvement plan entirely. Act immediately.
None of this works as anecdote. Put the signals on the partner health dashboard from Day 1, next to the numbers that already matter: activation rate, cross-referral volume, revenue per partner, satisfaction scores. When a warning fires, the leadership team should see it on a screen --- not hear about it in a hallway.
Firms that measure rigorously prune rarely, because the data forces intervention while the problem is still fixable. Firms that measure loosely prune abruptly, because the problem only becomes visible once it is terminal.
04 — Try the Demotion Before the Door
Reclassification Holds the Line Without Closing the Relationship
Not every performance problem ends in removal. If your certification has tiers, you hold a middle option most founders forget they have: move the partner down a level.
A Partner who no longer clears renewal requirements --- fewer than 20 engagements a year, nothing published, no speaking, no mentoring --- may still be a perfectly sound Consultant. A Consultant who cannot secure the peer recommendation may still do good work as a Practitioner under supervision. Reclassification keeps the standard intact and the relationship alive at the same time.
Blair Enns supplies the principle underneath this: expertise has a shelf life, and the expert who stops developing forfeits the claim to the title. Baker supplies the evidence: firms whose leaders go quiet --- no publishing, no speaking --- lose their competitive position within 18-24 months. Renewal requirements are not paperwork for its own sake. They are the mechanism that keeps the network's authority current enough to be worth certifying against.
The demotion conversation sounds nothing like the exit conversation:
"Your delivery volume and community contribution no longer meet the Partner-tier criteria. Rather than remove you from the program, I want to move you to the Consultant tier. You keep delivering assessments and standard engagements, but training Practitioners and representing the methodology at conferences pause until you requalify. Can you work with that?"
One move, three messages. The demoted partner hears: the standards are real, and the door is still open. The performing partners hear: requirements get enforced even on longtime members. The wider ecosystem hears: tier placement reflects demonstrated capability --- not tenure, not friendship, not politics.
By Year 2, once the network outgrows the founding cohort, tier transitions --- including the downward ones --- should run through a Partner Council rather than the founder's desk. Richardson, Huynh, and Sotto observe the underlying dynamic in community governance: a decision handed down by elected peers reads as fairer than the identical decision handed down by an authority. Same outcome, less personal sting, more legitimacy.
05 — The Three-Phase Exit
A Warning, a Written Plan, and a Departure --- Each on a Clock
When removal is the right call, it is still not a single conversation. It is a protocol with three phases, each with its own timeline, its own paper trail, and its own defined outcome. Run properly, it protects you legally, lets the partner leave with dignity intact, and shows the rest of the network that the standards have teeth.
Phase 1 --- The early conversation
The moment metrics cross a threshold, talk to the person. Privately, by voice --- never by email, never in a chat thread. Your first job is to understand what is going on, because some performance dips have real causes: a health problem, a family crisis, an anchor client whose departure gutted the pipeline. Situations like these call for support, not sanctions.
The conversation itself follows a simple shape. Name the data: "Your delivery volume has sat below the minimum for two quarters." Ask with genuine curiosity: "Walk me through what is happening." Offer help: "What would actually get you back on track?" Then set the expectation: "I need to see movement within 90 days." Afterward, write a summary and send it. The documentation is not only legal cover --- it gives both of you an unambiguous record of what was said and what was promised.
Phase 2 --- The written plan
If 90 days pass without improvement, the friendly phase is over. Issue a formal improvement plan: a professional document, not another chat. It names exactly what "better" means --- deliver a set number of engagements by a set date, clear a satisfaction floor on the next three deliveries, attend the next four monthly calls, submit two case studies. These are not stretch goals. They are floors that any partner who still wants to be here can clear.
Give the plan a hard deadline of 60-90 days. Long enough for genuine effort to show. Short enough that the situation cannot drift indefinitely while everyone pretends progress is coming.
Phase 3 --- The departure
If the plan's targets are missed, the partner exits. The conversation is direct, professional, and final. No extensions. No renegotiation. No reopening the plan for "one more quarter" --- that single concession converts your entire protocol back into theater.
Say it plainly: "We set specific targets together in [month], and they have not been met, so the certification ends here. That speaks to the fit between your current practice and this program's requirements --- not to your worth as a professional. I will do what I can to make the transition smooth."
Then move fast on logistics. The certified designation stops being usable. Access to the partner community and the toolset ends. Any live client engagements running under the methodology brand get an explicit transition plan. A crisp ending preserves more goodwill than a long, ambiguous fade ever will.
06 — Build the Machinery Before the Emergency
Councils, Gates, and Cadence Turn an Exit from a Verdict into a Consequence
Everything above gets dramatically harder if you wait until you need it. Without published criteria, every exit looks arbitrary. Without documented warnings, every exit feels ambush-like. Without a Partner Council, every exit reads as a founder settling scores.
So build the governance before the first crisis. A Partner Council of 5-7 members, elected from the certified base on demonstrated contribution, supplies the legitimacy a solo founder's judgment never can. The Council owns peer-review criteria, delivery quality thresholds, and cross-referral dispute resolution. The founder keeps what must stay central: admitting new partners, removing underperformers, protecting the IP, and setting commercial terms.
The spine of the whole system is the set of quality gates at each tier transition:
- Entry to Practitioner: foundational training completed, methodology knowledge assessment passed, at least one assessment delivered under supervision.
- Practitioner to Consultant: 10+ assessments delivered, satisfaction above 4.0/5.0, 2+ published articles, a peer recommendation.
- Consultant to Partner: 30+ engagements, 4.5+/5.0 satisfaction, active thought leadership, demonstrated revenue growth, visible community contribution.
- Partner to Master: recognized industry authority, original research contributed, proven ability to train and certify others. By invitation only --- nobody applies.
Once these gates are published, enforced, and applied the same way every time, an exit stops being the founder's personal judgment and becomes the system doing what it said it would do. A partner who cannot produce Consultant-level evidence is not being punished. They are failing to meet a documented standard they accepted on the day they joined.
Verne Harnish's meeting rhythm gives the machinery its heartbeat. Monthly partner calls surface engagement. Quarterly reviews score performance against the Big Rocks. The annual summit resets strategic direction. When performance data gets reviewed at every one of those cadences, underperformance becomes visible early --- and early visibility is the entire precondition for early intervention.
Write the governance charter now, even if the community is still too small to activate it. A community without formal governance does not stay ungoverned --- it grows informal power dynamics, and those are reliably worse than the formal kind.
07 — The Harder Conversation Is the One You're Risking
Who the Exit Actually Serves
The reframe that finally makes this conversation possible is realizing who it is for. Not your ego. Not an abstract devotion to "standards." It is for the partners who deliver --- the ones investing reputation, energy, and belief in the thing you built together. They are owed an ecosystem that defends the bar they clear every day.
Because the exit conversation is not the hardest one in your future. The hardest one is your best partner telling you they are leaving --- because they stopped trusting the network to protect its own standards.
The first conversation is awkward for a day. The second one costs you for years. Have the first so you never have to sit through the second.