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7 Conversations That Can Save a Business Partnership Before It Starts
By Entrepreneurs Organization | Inc | May 31, 2026
Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen
3 key takeaways from the article
- Starting a business partnership is exciting. There’s energy, optimism, and a sense that together, you can accomplish more than either of you could on your own.
- Many partnerships begin with a handshake and the belief that things will work themselves out. Sometimes they do, but more often, cracks appear when partners realize they’ve never discussed some of the most important questions shaping how the business and the relationship will function.
- Before you finalize the deal, there are a handful of conversations every partnership needs to have. They aren’t always comfortable, but answering them early can save a lot of stress later. Taking the time to answer these seven questions won’t eliminate every challenge. However, it will create clarity, align expectations, and help you and your partner build a stronger foundation. Why are you doing this together? What does success look like for each of you? Who is responsible for what? How will you make decisions when you disagree? How will you communicate when something isn’t working? What happens if one of you wants out? How will you protect the relationship itself?
(Copyright lies with the publisher)
Topics: Entrepreneurship, Startups, Partnership
show moreBefore you finalize the deal, there are a handful of conversations every partnership needs to have. They aren’t always comfortable, but answering them early can save a lot of stress later. Taking the time to answer these seven questions won’t eliminate every challenge. However, it will create clarity, align expectations, and help you and your partner build a stronger foundation.
Why are you doing this together? At first glance, the answer seems obvious. You’re launching a company or pursuing an opportunity, but the deeper motivation matters more than most people realize. One partner might be chasing financial upside while the other is motivated by flexibility or purpose. Neither is wrong, but misalignment creates tension. Partnerships work best when both people understand what the other truly wants out of the journey.
What does success look like for each of you? Success is one of those words everyone assumes means the same thing—until it doesn’t. For one partner, it may mean scaling quickly and selling. For another, it could mean building a stable, long-term business. If those visions aren’t discussed, partners may start rowing in different directions. Clarity here ensures decisions move the business toward a shared destination.
Who is responsible for what? In the early days, roles often feel fluid. That works for a while, but as the business grows, lack of clarity becomes friction. When two people think they own the same decisions—or neither does—things fall through the cracks. Healthy partnerships define ownership, so each person knows where their leadership begins and ends.
How will you make decisions when you disagree? Every partnership encounters disagreement. The issue isn’t whether or not it will happen, but what happens next. Some partnerships debate endlessly. Others rely on one partner to break ties, and some divide decision authority. There’s no single right approach, but the process should be clear before a major decision is on the table.
How will you communicate when something isn’t working? This may be the most important question, and the one most often avoided. Early on, communication feels constant. Over time, frustrations can build quietly. If partners don’t have a shared way to raise concerns, those issues stay buried until they become much bigger problems. Strong partnerships create space for honest conversations, even when they’re uncomfortable.
What happens if one of you wants out? No one starts a partnership expecting it to end, but priorities change. One partner may want to pursue something new or step away from day-to-day operations. Thinking through exit scenarios early doesn’t mean you expect them. It means you’re prepared. Discussing buyouts or transitions ahead of time prevents rushed, emotional decisions later.
How will you protect the relationship itself? Business partnerships combine professional collaboration with personal trust. The success of the company often depends on that relationship. Protecting it should be intentional. Some partners schedule regular check-ins. Others build simple habits that encourage transparency. The specifics vary, but the principle is the same: The relationship requires ongoing attention. When people think about launching a company, they focus on the opportunity, the product, or the numbers. Those things matter. However, in a partnership, the relationship shapes nearly every outcome.
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