Glide’s Big Bet: Four-Day Weeks, B Corp Values, and a Sales System That Actually Works

Interview: Travis McAshan on building a purpose-led agency without burning out

Behind the Agency Podcast with Travis McAshan, Founder & CEO of Glide Design Agency (Austin, TX)

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Prefer the highlights? Key takeaways and summary below.

TL;DR – Key Takeaways

  • Glide started the way a lot of real agencies start: panic + passion (Travis had negative money in his bank account and needed to make rent).

  • Travis’s biggest “early mistake” wasn’t strategy — it was staying stuck as the do-everything founder until he learned to replace himself role-by-role (E-Myth style).

  • He ran Glide with contractors only from 2003 to 2019 — then realized a “real company” needs people who are shoulder-to-shoulder, not a floating freelance bench.

  • The shift to employees wasn’t just operational, it was moral: he didn’t like the idea that contractors helped build the agency but got zero long-term upside.

  • Glide rolled out the 4-day workweek (32 hours as full-time). Profitability dipped at first, so they had to get way more intentional and efficient.

  • They became a Certified B Corp (2023) and committed to “prove it” moves like giving 5% of gross revenue to vetted nonprofits.

  • Travis said their marketing has a gap: they built an affinity (we want purpose-led clients) but haven’t fully named the expertise (a branded, specialized approach/framework).

  • Sales breakthrough: Win Without Pitching training changed everything—proposals went from 20–30 pages to one page with 3 options, time spent dropped ~10x, close rate up ~3x (his words).

Meet the Guest

Travis McAshan is the Founder & CEO of Glide Design Agency in Austin, Texas. He’s been running Glide since 2003, after a startup he co-founded shut down unexpectedly while he was literally driving across the country.

Glide is known for building digital experiences (websites, strategy, design) and for running the company differently: purpose-led, people-first, and willing to make bold structural bets like the four-day week.

Episode Summary

1. The origin story: “Necessity + passion”

Travis’s agency didn’t start from some perfect plan.

His startup (Pixana) died. He found out while driving across the country. When he got home, he had negative $200 in his bank account.

So he did what a lot of founders do:

  • borrowed money from his mom

  • got internet (a cable modem)

  • called everyone he knew

  • sold whatever he could (“stick figures for $25” energy)

The deeper thread though is he’d wanted an agency forever—he had “companies” as a kid and bought the Glide domain long before he used it.

2. The main tension: success that still burns you out

This part hit.

In 2015, Travis was so burned out he was ready to shut down Glide and become a high school football coach.

He wasn’t failing. He just felt like the work was repetitive and empty:

“Make great websites, get results, make clients happy”… and still miserable.

That’s what pushed him into the “why” journey (Simon Sinek). He landed on a simple personal purpose:

  • help people

  • spend time with people he loves

And then he turned that into company mandates:

  • work-life balance (as a defense against overworking)

  • purpose-led work (so the output matters beyond “a nice website”)

3. Their unique way of solving it: prove purpose with structure

A lot of agencies say they’re purpose-led.

Travis wanted Glide to prove it.

So they did two big structural moves:

1) Certified B Corp (2023)

He described it like “a journey up a mountain.” Tons of policy work, accountability, standards.

2) Impact business models

  • Design to Give: commit 5% of gross revenue to vetted nonprofits/charities (he notes that’s a meaningful chunk of profit in agency math).

  • Supporting Purpose-Driven Enterprises: a 10-year goal to shift Glide’s revenue so 75% comes from purpose-led orgs (B Corps, NGOs, public benefit corps, minority/women-owned, etc.).

That’s the “walk the talk” part.

4. Framework, method, or mental model

Travis dropped a few that are super usable:

A. E-Myth “replace yourself”

  • make an org chart

  • put your name in every box

  • replace boxes one at a time as you grow

He replaced himself first in design because it was painful and unsustainable.

B. Client satisfaction = expectation management

His relationship recipe (business, marriage, friendships) was basically:

  1. Set clear expectations

  2. Make sure everyone agrees

  3. Deliver faithfully

  4. When life happens and expectations break → communicate and reset

He said unmet expectations are the root of most conflict.

C. “Don’t solve conflict in email”

If expectations are off, get on a call. Face-to-face if possible.

He claimed communication is “like 85%” of client satisfaction.

D. Super Communicators idea (Duhigg)

Sometimes the client doesn’t want a fix—they want to be heard. Not every upset call is a “what are we going to do” conversation.

5. Common mistake or ‘cringe’ moment

Two big ones:

1) Building a “real company” on contractors only

He did it from 2003–2019 and regrets thinking he could build something lasting that way.

Not because contractors are bad—because the business lacks shared purpose and people don’t get upside.

He basically said: you need some folks with skin in the game.

2) Death-by-proposal in sales

The classic agency move: 20–30 page proposals filled with free strategy.

He called out how much time that burns and how it lowers the power dynamic.

6. Where the founder/leader still belongs

This was quietly a leadership episode.

Travis is the founder, but he’s not romantic about martyrdom.

He’s trying to build a company that supports a full life:

  • being a husband

  • being a dad (he has 4 kids)

  • not building a business that requires 60-hour weeks

He also openly said he’s working through his own “expertise” question (inspired by David C. Baker’s thinking): what are the repeatable insights Glide can own, name, and sell?

That’s founder work.

7. Hiring, scaling, or process lessons

The most concrete “scaling” piece was the four-day workweek.

He said:

  • profitability and billable hours dipped at first

  • they had to get way more efficient

  • but it became the most loved benefit by far

He framed it like: someday we’ll look back at 40-hour weeks like we look back at smoking.

Notable Quotes

“One of my favorite definitions of an expert is someone who’s failed in every possible way in a narrow field.”

“If you really want to build a lasting company… you cannot do that off the back of contractors.”

“It should be one page. If it’s an unpaid proposal, it should be one page with three options.”

“If there are unmet expectations, you are not solving that in an email.”

Learn More / Get in Touch

Visit → glidedesign.com

Connect with Travis → LinkedIn (Travis McAshan, DM him)

He also invited people to reach out if they want to dig into:

  • 4-day workweek

  • defining core values

  • EOS at Glide

  • purpose-led agency ops

  • positioning / business strategy

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Building an Agency That Lasts: Partnership, Planning, and People-First Design