
Breaking the Mold, One Reinvention at a Time
Business Owners Tell All · Jamie Seeker
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Show Notes
Hank shares his unconventional path into IT leadership — beginning with time on Capitol Hill, renewable energy work at the Department of Energy, military service as an infantry officer, oil & gas, and private equity acquisition through a search fund. He eventually returned to Kentucky and found the role at NetGain through LinkedIn.
The conversation focuses heavily on hiring in a highly competitive industry, why culture fit beats technical skill, and NetGain’s emphasis on developing people from within. Hank explains that nearly everyone at NetGain is client-facing, which means they must hire engineers who not only know technology but can “talk like humans to humans.”
Hank discusses their improved onboarding process, his personal 60‑day check-ins with new employees, and how EOS (Entrepreneurial Operating System) helps keep six offices across five states aligned. He shares how creative HR initiatives — like themed scavenger hunts and employee appreciation events — build unity between “the nerds” (engineers) and “the jocks” (sales).
The episode closes with Hank’s perspective on modern leadership: stay humble, surround yourself with the right team, build systems, and ask “dumb questions” to get to better answers faster.
📝 KEY SHOW NOTES (Producer-Style)
1. Hank’s Background & Journey
- Started career in politics and renewable energy.
- Joined the Army; transitioned to oil & gas afterward.
- Moved into private equity via a search fund (buy → grow → sell).
- Relocated to Kentucky for family.
- Found the NetGain CEO role on LinkedIn, which becomes a running joke throughout the episode.
2. HR & Hiring in Tech
- Hiring in cybersecurity is very difficult and highly competitive.
- Strategy:
- Grow from within whenever possible.
- Prioritize culture fit over skills (“You can learn any skill”).
- Hire people who can “talk like humans” since everyone is client-facing.
- Avoid rushing to fill seats — get “the right people in the right seat.”
3. Culture & Retention
- NetGain maps traits of their top 5 employees to guide hiring.
- Strong mentoring mentality at all levels.
- Exit interviews help refine their retention strategy.
- Leadership’s philosophy: treat people like family, build trust, coach them.
4. Onboarding & Employee Development
- Developed a structured onboarding journey with HR and managers.
- After 60 days, Hank personally meets with every new hire to get feedback.
- Uses fresh eyes to identify broken or outdated processes.
- Employees appreciate clarity, KPIs, and knowing what their day looks like.
- EOS provides organizational structure across multiple regions.
5. Culture Building Across 6 Cities
- Host appreciation events, team building activities, and themed experiences.
- HR runs creative morale initiatives (e.g., Harry Potter scavenger hunts with butterbeer, casino days).
- Hank travels frequently to maintain culture and visibility.
6. Leadership Philosophy
- Adapt leadership style to individual personalities and motivations.
- Lessons from the military: different people require different forms of instruction and motivation.
- Humility is foundational: “You don’t have all the answers.”
- Ask questions — even dumb ones — to get clarity faster.
7. What It Takes to Be a Business Owner
- Be humble.
- Build systems and processes.
- Surround yourself with people smarter than you.
- Ask a lot of questions — especially the obvious ones.
- Create an organization where constant improvement is normal.
💬 MEMORABLE QUOTES
Pull-ready for social media, promos, or newsletter highlights:
On Hiring & Culture
- “You can learn any skill, but hiring for the culture of the company is way more important.”
- “Everyone in the company is client-facing, so we need engineers who can talk like humans to humans.”
- “We modeled our 5 best employees and asked, ‘How do we find this in our applicants?’”
On Onboarding & Feedback
- “You have fresh eyes — tell me if something’s dumb. When you’ve been here 3 or 15 years, you forget what dumb looks like.”
- “There’s nothing worse than showing up day one not knowing where the bathroom is or not having a computer.”
On Leadership
- “My job is to make the nerds and the jocks work together.”
- “Everyone’s motivated differently — you have to adapt your leadership style.”
- “Treat people like they’re part of the family.”
On Culture & Team Unity
- “The common ground is the most important thing — getting people together who impact each other’s work.”
- “We spend more money than we’d like getting everyone in the same place, but it’s worth it.”
On What It Takes to Be a Business Owner
- “Be humble — you don’t have all the right answers and no one should expect you to.”
- “Surround yourself with the right team — with people who do have the answers.”
- “Ask a bunch of really dumb questions. They get you to yes or no a lot faster.”