Working ON vs. IN Your Business: The 4D Mix Framework
Doing, Deciding, Delegating, Designing. Most founders spend 80% in Doing mode and 0% Designing. Michalowicz's framework shows you where your time actually goes.
Michael Gerber drew the sharpest line in business literature: working ON the business versus working IN the business. Mike Michalowicz sharpened it further with a four-part framework that reveals, with uncomfortable precision, exactly where your time actually goes. Together, their insights expose the structural reason most service businesses never scale past the founder.
The distinction sounds simple. In practice, it's the single hardest behavioral shift a service business founder will ever make. Because working IN the business feels productive. Working ON it feels like you're neglecting the very clients who pay your bills.
It's not about working harder. It's about working in the right mode.
01 — The Gerber Distinction
Why "Working ON the Business" Became the Most Cited Advice in Entrepreneurship
In The E-Myth Revisited, Michael Gerber identifies three warring personalities inside every business owner. The Technician does the work. The Manager organizes the chaos. The Entrepreneur sees the future. In most service businesses, the Technician wins --- not because the Technician is right, but because the Technician is loud. There are client calls to take, proposals to write, workshops to deliver. The Manager's systems feel like overhead. The Entrepreneur's vision feels like distraction.
So the founder defaults to delivery. And the business becomes a one-person delivery machine --- efficient, perhaps, but fundamentally unscalable.
Gerber's distinction between working ON and working IN the business is powerful because it reframes growth as a time-allocation problem rather than a talent problem. You're not failing to scale because you lack skill. You're failing to scale because you spend every available hour exercising that skill directly rather than encoding it into systems that others can operate.
"Working IN the business means delivering a workshop today. Working ON the business means building the system so that someone else delivers that workshop tomorrow --- and next month, and next year."
Working IN includes: delivering client projects, conducting assessments, facilitating workshops, writing reports, running coaching sessions, handling administrative tasks, attending every client meeting personally.
Working ON includes: building systems, documenting processes, training others to deliver, creating intellectual property, designing marketing that works without you, and building a brand that attracts clients to the firm rather than to you personally.
The problem with Gerber's distinction is that it's binary. It tells you there are two modes but gives limited guidance on the gradient between them. That's where Michalowicz's 4D Mix becomes indispensable.
02 — The 4D Mix Framework
Four Modes of Founder Time --- and the Ratios That Matter
Mike Michalowicz, in Clockwork, refines Gerber's ON/IN distinction into four specific modes. Each mode describes a fundamentally different relationship between you and the work that needs to be done. Understanding all four is the first step. Measuring your current mix is the second. Shifting it is the third --- and the hardest.
The four modes:
- Doing (target: less than 20%): Delivering the work yourself. Running the client workshop. Writing the assessment report. Coding the platform feature. Doing is the default mode for every service founder because it produces immediate, visible, billable output. It's also the mode that scales the least. Every hour you spend Doing is an hour that can't be replicated, leveraged, or sold without your direct involvement.
- Deciding (target: less than 10%): Making decisions that others should be making. Approving proposals that a trained associate could approve. Choosing fonts for the website. Deciding which restaurant to book for the team lunch. Deciding feels faster than teaching someone else to decide, and that's precisely the trap. Every decision that flows through you is a bottleneck that slows the entire organization.
- Delegating (target: less than 20%): Assigning work to others while retaining oversight. Delegating is better than Doing, but it's still founder-dependent. You're the assignment engine, the quality checker, the air traffic controller. If you disappear for a month, delegated work stalls because nobody knows what to do next without your instructions.
- Designing (target: 50% or more): Building systems, creating processes, developing intellectual property, planning strategy, training others to do and decide autonomously. Designing is the only mode that compounds. A system you design this quarter still operates next year. A process you document this month still trains people next year. Designing is the only founder activity that builds equity.
Read those targets again. Michalowicz is not suggesting a minor adjustment. He's proposing a complete inversion of how most service founders spend their time. Fifty percent or more on Designing. Less than twenty percent on Doing. The typical service business founder operates at roughly the opposite ratio.
The 4D Mix isn't an aspiration. It's a diagnostic. Until you measure your current mix, you can't change it. And until you change it, your business will remain dependent on you.
03 — The Typical Founder's Actual Mix
70-80% Doing, 0% Designing --- and Why It Feels Like Progress
When most service founders honestly track their time for a week, the results are sobering. The typical 4D Mix looks something like this: 70-80% Doing, 15% Deciding, 5% Delegating, and nearly 0% Designing.
That ratio is the trap. And the reason it persists is that it feels like the right allocation. Consider a typical Tuesday for a service business founder:
- 8:00 AM: Client call to review assessment results. (Doing)
- 9:30 AM: Writing a proposal for a new engagement. (Doing)
- 11:00 AM: Approving an associate's deliverable with revisions. (Deciding)
- 12:00 PM: Lunch with a referral partner. (Doing --- business development)
- 2:00 PM: Facilitating a workshop. (Doing)
- 4:30 PM: Reviewing invoices and approving expenses. (Deciding)
- 5:30 PM: Responding to emails. (Doing)
Every item on that list is productive. Every item generates revenue or maintains client relationships. And not a single minute was spent Designing --- building a system that would allow someone else to do any of those things.
Michalowicz identifies three psychological forces that maintain this pattern:
The Doing Addiction.
Busyness feels productive. Delivering a workshop, running a coaching session, presenting to a client --- these activities produce immediate, visible results. Building a system, documenting a process, training someone else to do what you do --- these feel abstract and slow. The Doing Addiction keeps you on the hamster wheel because the hamster wheel feels like progress.
The Hero Complex.
Being the person everyone calls when things go wrong is intoxicating. "No one can do this like I can" is the most dangerous sentence in a service business. It validates your identity. It makes you feel important. And it ensures that your business can never operate without you.
The Efficiency Illusion.
You get faster and better at the tasks you do repeatedly. So you convince yourself that doing them yourself is more efficient than training someone else. This is true in the short term and catastrophically false in the long term. Getting faster at a task you should not be doing at all isn't efficiency --- it's optimization of the wrong activity.
"The Efficiency Illusion is the most seductive of the three. You genuinely are faster. That is the problem. Your speed at a task you should not be doing becomes the justification for never teaching someone else to do it."
All three barriers feel rational in the moment. None of them are. They are the enemy of scale, and recognizing them by name is the first step to overcoming them.
04 — The One-Week Audit
How to Measure Your Current 4D Mix in Five Days
Michalowicz proposes a deceptively simple exercise: track your time for one week. Categorize every hour into one of the four D's. Don't rely on memory --- use a timer, a spreadsheet, or even a paper notebook. The goal is accuracy, not elegance.
The classification rules:
- Doing: Any task where your personal effort produces the deliverable. You wrote the report. You ran the workshop. You answered the client email. You built the slide deck. If the output wouldn't exist without your hands on it, it's Doing.
- Deciding: Any moment where someone brings you a question that they could answer themselves with the right training, process, or authority. "Should we use template A or B?" "Can we extend the deadline by a week?" "What color should the banner be?" If someone else could have decided with clear guidelines, it's Deciding.
- Delegating: Any time you spend assigning, briefing, reviewing, or correcting someone else's work. Delegation is the middle ground --- you're not doing the work, but the work still requires you to initiate and verify it.
- Designing: Any activity that creates a system, process, template, training material, or strategic plan that will produce results without your ongoing involvement. If the output of your work today means less work for you next month, it's Designing.
At the end of the week, tally the hours in each category and calculate the percentages. Most founders who do this for the first time experience a moment of genuine shock. They know intellectually that they spend too much time in delivery. Seeing the actual numbers makes it visceral.
One common mistake: classifying client strategy sessions as Designing. If you are personally facilitating a client session, that's Doing --- regardless of how strategic the content feels. Designing means building the system that allows someone else to facilitate that session using your methodology. The test is simple: if you didn't show up, would the activity still happen? If the answer is no, it's not Designing.
Do the audit. This week. Before you read another word about scaling. The 4D Mix is useless as theory. It only works as measurement.
05 — Shifting the Mix
From 80/0 to 20/50 --- Without Losing Revenue
The gap between a typical 80% Doing / 0% Designing mix and Michalowicz's target of 20% Doing / 50% Designing is enormous. Closing it overnight is impossible, and attempting to do so will crater your revenue. The shift has to be gradual, deliberate, and funded by the very Doing work you are trying to reduce.
A practical approach in three phases:
Phase 1: Reclaim 10% for Designing (Weeks 1-4). Block two hours per day --- ideally in the morning before client work begins --- exclusively for Designing activities. During these hours, you document one process, create one template, or train one person on one task. You are not reducing Doing yet. You are adding Designing on top of it, which means longer days temporarily. This is the investment phase.
Phase 2: Eliminate Deciding (Weeks 5-8). Review every decision that came to you in the audit week. For each one, create a simple decision rule or escalation guideline. "If the client requests a deadline extension of less than one week, the project manager can approve it without my input." "If the proposal is under a certain value threshold, the associate can send it." Every decision you remove from your plate permanently reduces Deciding time and increases organizational velocity.
Phase 3: Convert Doing to Delegating, Then Delegating to Designing (Weeks 9-16). Take the processes you documented in Phase 1 and use them to hand off Doing tasks. The first handoff will be imperfect. The second will be better. By the fifth, you will have a trained person who can handle a task at 80% of your quality --- which, for most tasks, is more than sufficient. As Doing decreases, replace it with more Designing. As Delegating matures into autonomous operation, it transforms from Delegating into a system that runs itself.
"The goal is not to stop working. The goal is to shift the type of work you do from activities that produce revenue today to activities that produce revenue forever."
There is a critical financial nuance here. As you reduce personal Doing hours, your direct billable revenue may temporarily decline. That's expected and acceptable --- but only if the Designing work you do instead creates systems that generate revenue through others. Every hour you invest in Designing must eventually produce more revenue than the hour of Doing it replaced. If it doesn't, the shift is destroying value rather than creating it.
Track your 4D Mix monthly. Post it where you can see it. The ratio tells you more about the health and scalability of your business than any revenue report ever will.
06 — The Four-Week Vacation Test
The Ultimate Diagnostic for Whether the Mix Has Shifted
Michalowicz offers one definitive test for whether your 4D Mix has truly shifted: the Four-Week Vacation Test. It's not a reward for building a good business. It's a diagnostic tool for revealing whether you've built one at all.
The question is straightforward: if you disappeared for four weeks, would your business continue to serve clients, generate revenue, and maintain its reputation?
If the answer is no --- if revenue would drop, clients would be underserved, and operations would stall --- then the 4D Mix hasn't shifted enough. You're still the bottleneck. The business is still a practice wearing a business disguise.
If the answer is yes --- even partially, even imperfectly --- then Designing has begun to compound. The systems you built are producing results without your daily involvement. The people you trained are making decisions autonomously. The processes you documented are guiding delivery without your oversight.
Consider the test in terms of each D:
- Doing: If you are the only person who can deliver the work, four weeks of absence means four weeks of zero delivery. The vacation test fails immediately.
- Deciding: If every significant decision requires your input, four weeks of absence means four weeks of organizational paralysis. Nothing moves forward because nobody has the authority or the guidelines to choose.
- Delegating: If your team can execute only when you assign and review tasks, four weeks of absence means work in progress stalls. Existing tasks may get completed, but no new work gets initiated.
- Designing: If you have invested enough in Designing, the systems operate autonomously. Work gets assigned through processes, not personal direction. Decisions get made through guidelines, not escalation. Delivery happens through trained people following documented methodologies.
Alan Weiss puts it differently but arrives at the same conclusion: "Process expertise is more valuable than content expertise." What you know matters less than the system through which you deliver what you know. The 4D Mix is the mechanism for converting your content expertise --- the knowledge in your head --- into process expertise --- the systems that operate without your head in the room.
"A business that cannot survive four weeks without the founder is not a business. It is a practice. There is nothing wrong with a practice --- but confusing the two is the single most common mistake in professional services."
You don't need to take the vacation to run the test. Simply ask the question honestly: what would break? Which clients would be underserved? Which decisions would stall? Which deliverables would miss their deadlines? The answers point directly to the areas where Designing is most urgently needed.
The 4D Mix isn't a one-time exercise. It's an ongoing discipline. Measure it monthly. Shift it deliberately. And use the Four-Week Vacation Test as your north star --- not because the vacation matters, but because the answer reveals whether you have built a business or merely created a sophisticated job.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.