Technology turnarounds often fail before they begin. Not because the business is beyond saving, not because the market has moved too far, but because leadership starts in the wrong place. They look for someone to blame. They assign fault to sales, product, delivery, or the market itself, and in doing so, they guarantee they will solve the wrong problem with complete confidence.
Gus Byleveld, a chief executive officer (CEO) and chief revenue officer (CRO) with over 25 years of experience leading technology companies through inflection points across early-stage companies, scale-ups, and mature businesses, has walked into enough high-stakes turnaround situations to know what separates the ones that work from the ones that do not. “Most turnarounds fail because leadership jumps to who or what is to blame instead of doing the harder work,” Byleveld says, “returning to first principles and rebuilding the system.”
Stop the Blame Game. Stabilize the System
The first thing Byleveld does when entering a distressed technology business is not review the financials or assess the leadership team. It resets the rules of how the organization is allowed to talk about its problems. In underperforming companies, the cultural default is self-protection. People manage optics. They construct narratives that preserve their position and deflect responsibility. If that dynamic is allowed to continue, every diagnosis that follows will be contaminated by it. “In an underperforming company, people protect themselves,” Byleveld says. “If you let that continue, you will solve the wrong problem with high confidence.” The reset he implements is deliberate and explicit. The organization is not convened to assign fault. It is convened to find constraints and follow evidence. “That single move changes the quality of every conversation that follows,” he says. Without it, no amount of analytical rigor produces an accurate picture of what is actually broken.
Return to First Principles
With the conditions for truth established, the second step is the one most turnaround efforts skip entirely, because it feels too foundational for an organization already under pressure. Byleveld insists on it precisely because the pressure makes it necessary. “Asking why we are underperforming is not enough,” he says. “It invites blame and surface-level explanations.” The more penetrating questions go further back:
- What problem does this business exist to solve? For whom?
- Why is it meaningfully better than the alternatives?
- What must be true for customers to buy, renew, and expand?
When those answers are unclear or inconsistent across the leadership team, the underperformance is not a sales problem or an execution problem. It is a fundamentals problem. “Sometimes the business is not failing because execution is weak,” Byleveld says. “Sometimes it is failing because the value proposition has drifted, the market moved, or the company is trying to be too many things to too many people at once.” No sales hire or product sprint fixes that. Only an honest return to first principles does.
Walk the Entire Value Chain
Once the fundamentals are clear, Byleveld reviews the entire system, not just the function under the most pressure. Demand creation, sales motion, onboarding, delivery quality, support, retention and expansion, cash and unit economics, leadership incentives and decision-making. Everything. The question he is trying to answer at each stage is where value breaks down reliably, and why. The answer is rarely where leadership assumes it is. “I have seen companies with flat revenue where the actual constraint was delivery quality, time to value, mis-sold deals, or a product that created churn faster than sales could replace it,” he says. Turnarounds accelerate the moment the organization stops guessing at the constraint and starts following the evidence to find it. “Turnarounds speed up when we stop guessing and identify the true bottlenecks,” Byleveld says.
One Plan. Clear Owners. Explicit Trade-offs
With the constraint identified, the fourth move is the one that tests whether the leadership team is genuinely aligned or just cooperating under pressure. Byleveld forces a single plan: one target customer, one primary motion, a small number of priorities, clear owners, and explicit trade-offs that everyone understands and has agreed to. “A turnaround cannot survive a leadership team running multiple agendas,” he says. The energy loss from confusion and misalignment in a distressed business is not a soft cost. It is a structural drag that prevents recovery regardless of how hard individuals are working. “Accountability is not punishment,” Byleveld says. “It is clarity. It is making sure the business stops leaking energy through confusion and misalignment.” One plan with clear ownership is how that clarity gets enforced.
Rebuild Momentum With Real Wins
Momentum is the final element that determines whether the organization can sustain the turnaround beyond the initial stabilization. It is built not through vanity metrics or performative progress, but through measurable wins the team trusts. “Technology companies do not die from a bad quarter,” Byleveld says. “They die from a loss of belief, internally and in the market.” Winning back that belief, one visible, meaningful result at a time, is how a turnaround becomes permanent.
Follow Gus Byleveld on LinkedIn or follow his website for more insights on technology turnarounds, revenue recovery, and commercial transformation.