Millman has spent more than a decade helping business owners bring structure, clarity, and support to the people side of their companies. In the episode, he explains what it usually means when a business says it is “fine without HR,” how that changes as the business grows, and why the real problem is often not the absence of HR as a department but the absence of consistent structure.
Enter Jason Millman’s central point: every business is already making people decisions. The question is whether those decisions are supported by structure.
That is the real tension in this episode. It is not “HR or no HR.” It is whether the business has enough consistency to keep growing without pulling leaders back into every people issue.
“We’re fine without HR” usually means the company is still small enough for the owner or a trusted leader to stay close to most people decisions.
Millman puts it plainly in the episode: it usually means nothing has gone seriously wrong yet. The company is hiring, paying people, handling issues as they come up, and making decisions through instinct and relationships. At the beginning, that can be efficient. The owner knows the team. The rules are understood informally. Employee issues can be handled quickly because everything is centralized.
That setup can work for a while. It is not automatically broken. In many small businesses, it is the natural first version of HR.
The problem is that informal systems depend on proximity. They work when the owner sees what is happening, knows who needs what, and can step into a situation before it gets complicated. As soon as the business grows beyond that point, the system changes.
More employees usually means more questions, more managers more judgment calls, more locations or departments means more chances for the same issue to be handled differently. At that stage, “we’re fine” can start to mean we have not yet measured the cost of inconsistency.
That is why the first warning sign is not always a lawsuit, complaint, or crisis.
Informal HR starts to break down when the owner can no longer be involved in every meaningful people decision.
Millman says the shift happens when managers step in. Most of those managers earned trust because they performed well, not because they were formally trained to manage people. He calls it a “talent-over-training situation.” His framework is simple: for someone to succeed in any role, they need tools, training, and follow-up. That applies to managers just as much as it applies to frontline employees.
This matters because managers are often the first version of HR inside a growing business. They interview candidates. They train new hires. They approve time off. They handle performance issues. They decide when something is “not a big deal” and when to escalate it.
Research supports the weight Millman puts on managers. Gallup’s 2025 workplace research, as reported by Business Insider, found that only 44% of managers globally said they had received management training. The same report found manager engagement dropped from 30% to 27% in 2024 and linked manager support to overall employee engagement. (Business Insider)
That is a problem for growing businesses because the manager role gets more complex as the company grows. The manager is no longer just supervising work. They are interpreting policies, handling sensitive conversations, making decisions that affect morale, and creating records that may matter later.
A business that promotes good performers into management without giving them tools is not staying lean. It is asking judgment to do the work of structure.
A lean business has made intentional decisions to stay simple while still keeping clarity and consistency underneath. An underbuilt business relies on memory, instinct, and individual judgment instead of structure.
This is the cleanest framework in the episode.
Millman’s test is practical: ask three managers how they would handle the same situation. If you get roughly the same answer, the business is probably lean. If you get three different approaches, the business is underbuilt.
That test works because it exposes the difference between simplicity and randomness.
A lean company may not have a huge HR department. It may not have an elaborate process for everything, but it still has clear expectations. Managers understand how to hire, onboard, answer employee questions, and handle performance issues. Employees are not left guessing who to ask or what answer they will get.
An underbuilt company can look efficient from the outside because there are fewer layers. But the inside feels different. One manager documents everything. Another documents nothing. One manager avoids conflict. Another addresses issues immediately. One employee gets flexibility. Another employee in a similar situation does not.
Millman’s phrase is the line to note: “Lean will scale. Underbuilt eventually creates friction.”
That friction has a cost. It pulls leaders back into decisions they thought they had delegated. It creates employee questions. It slows down hiring. It makes terminations harder. It turns basic people management into recurring cleanup.
Inconsistency creates risk because employees notice when similar situations are handled differently.
That is the part leaders sometimes underestimate. An inconsistent decision may make perfect sense to the manager who made it. They know the employee. They know the context. They remember what happened last time.
But employees do not see all of that. They see outcomes.
Why did one person get a warning and another person did not?
Why did one manager allow flexibility and another refused it?
Why was this employee terminated when a similar issue was handled differently before?
Once those questions start, the business has to explain its reasoning.
That explanation is much easier when policies, handbooks, and manager guidelines reflect how the business actually operates. Millman says those tools are not just paperwork. They help make sure everyone is working from the same playbook. Without them, the company is relying on individual judgment rather than a system.
External compliance processes make that practical reality even clearer. If an EEOC charge is filed, the agency may ask the employer to submit a position statement, respond to requests for information, provide personnel policies, produce personnel files, and make witnesses available for interviews. The EEOC also states that the average time to investigate and resolve a charge was about 11 months in 2023. (EEOC)
That is why consistency matters before there is a charge. Once the business is asked to explain what happened, the issue is no longer just what the manager remembers. It is what the company can show.
An underbuilt termination is one where the company knows internally that the employee is not meeting expectations, but the employee was never clearly told, coached, or documented along the way.
Millman walks through the pattern in the episode. The business has an employee who is not meeting expectations. Leadership knows it. Maybe the manager knows it. But there was never a formal expectation set, no clear record of performance conversations, and the only documentation is the final event that led to the termination. The employee is caught off guard. What should have been straightforward becomes complicated.
The key line is: “It’s not the decision that creates the problem. It’s the lack of consistency that led up to it.”
That sentence is the difference between a termination decision and a termination process.
A company may have a legitimate reason to let someone go. But if it cannot show the path to that decision, the situation becomes harder to defend and harder for employees to understand. That can affect more than the terminated employee. Millman notes that other employees who witness a poorly handled termination may wonder what happened, whether the standards are clear, and whether their own jobs are at risk.
The recordkeeping piece is not abstract either. EEOC regulations require employers to keep personnel or employment records for one year, and personnel records for an involuntarily terminated employee must be kept for one year from the date of termination. If a charge is filed, employers must retain relevant personnel or employment records until the final disposition of the charge or related lawsuit. (EEOC)
That makes documentation more than an internal habit. It is the company’s ability to reconstruct decisions after the fact.
When a business reaches the HR tipping point, Millman recommends tightening three areas first: hiring, onboarding, and employee issues.
Those three areas matter because they shape the employee experience from the beginning and determine how consistently managers make decisions later. Millman is not arguing for bureaucracy. He is arguing for alignment. Managers and employees need to know what to expect so decisions are not being made in a vacuum.
Start with hiring.
A lean hiring process does not need to be complicated. It does need clear role expectations and a consistent interview approach. If every manager has their own strategy based on instinct, the company is not just hiring differently. It is creating uneven expectations before the employee even starts.
Then onboarding.
Onboarding is where the business translates the job description into actual expectations. What does good performance look like? Who does the employee go to for questions? What policies matter most? What does the first 30, 60, or 90 days look like?
Finally, employee issues.
This is where manager training matters most. Managers need to know when to address performance issues, how to document conversations, when to involve HR, and how to apply policies consistently.
The goal is not to make the company feel bigger than it is. The goal is to stop reinventing the same decisions every time.
A growing business should decide based on complexity, growth, and capacity.
That is Millman’s decision framework. Complexity means asking how many employees, locations, roles, and compliance requirements the business is managing. Growth means asking whether hiring, onboarding, new managers, and employee issues are changing faster than the business can absorb. Capacity means asking whether the company has the internal time and expertise to build HR infrastructure, not just react to the next issue.
This is stronger than asking, “Do we need HR?”
The better question is: what capability does the business need right now?
Some companies can build that capability internally. Others can use technology for certain workflows. Others need a partner model that gives them structure and expertise without building everything from scratch.
NAPEO describes PEOs as providers that handle payroll, benefits, compliance assistance, and other HR services for primarily small and mid-sized businesses. Its industry overview says more than 200,000 businesses use PEO services and that PEO clients grow two times faster, have employee turnover that is 12% lower, and are 50% less likely to go out of business than comparable businesses that do not use a PEO. (Napeo)
That does not mean every business needs a PEO. It does mean the partner model should be evaluated as an operational capacity question, not just a cost line.
Millman’s point is especially useful here: many companies hire their first HR person, but that person spends most of their time reacting to issues instead of building the structure the business actually needs.
That is the trap. A business may hire HR and still not build HR capability.
HR technology falls short when a business needs judgment, context, and guidance through a specific people situation.
Millman is not anti-technology. He simply draws a line between tools and judgment. HR situations may look similar on the surface, but the details matter: who is involved, what was said before, what the policy says, what the manager documented, how the employee may receive the conversation, and what the legal or compliance context looks like.
That is where technology can help but not fully replace human guidance.
This is especially true for sensitive employee conversations. Millman says he would want someone to walk him through what to say, what to avoid, how the employee may react, when to hold the conversation, and how to respond if the conversation goes in different directions.
That kind of support is hard to reduce to a template.
Technology can store policies, automate workflows, track onboarding, centralize documents, and make routine administration easier. But the hardest HR moments usually involve interpretation and timing. They require someone to understand the facts and help the leader move from uncertainty to a better decision.
Manager training is the leverage point because managers are where HR becomes real.
A handbook can be well written. A policy can be legally reviewed. A system can be modern. But if managers do not know how to use those tools, employees still experience inconsistency.
Millman’s story near the end of the episode makes the point more powerfully than a statistic. After one manager training session, a man told him, “I’m 46 years old, and no company has ever gotten this information to me before. I’ve been managing people for 20 years, and this is the first time someone took the time to explain this to me.”
That is not a small detail. It shows how many businesses assume managers know how to manage because they have been given the title.
Research points in the same direction. Gallup’s 2025 workplace research, as reported by the Financial Times, found that managers account for 70% of the variance in a team’s engagement. The same report said 44% of managers had received no training. (Financial Times)
That lines up directly with Millman’s framework. People need tools, training, and follow-up. When managers do not get those three things, inconsistency is not surprising. It is predictable.
Leaders should look for repeated friction in hiring, onboarding, manager behavior, employee questions, and documentation.
Millman’s episode gives a practical checklist. The business may need more HR support if:
Those signs do not mean the business is failing. They mean the business has outgrown a system that worked at an earlier size.
This is the charitable reading of the problem. Most owners did not start a company because they wanted to manage HR. They started because they believed they could build something meaningful. The people side becomes part of that responsibility as the business grows.
That is the real shift: every business is making people decisions whether it has HR or not. The difference is whether those decisions are supported with structure.
Small businesses need HR support when people decisions start depending on managers who do not have shared tools, training, or follow-up. As Jason Millman explains, “we’re fine without HR” often means nothing serious has gone wrong yet, but the business may still be relying on informal decisions that will not scale.
A lean business keeps things simple by design, but still has clarity and consistency behind the way it operates. An underbuilt business relies on individual judgment and memory instead of structure. Millman’s test is simple: ask three managers how they would handle the same situation. If you get three different answers, the business is probably underbuilt.
The first signs often show up in hiring, onboarding, performance management, employee questions, and terminations. Millman points to hires that do not work out because expectations were unclear, managers who hesitate to address performance issues, and leaders getting pulled back into employee issues they thought had been delegated.
The decision should be based on complexity, growth, and capacity. If the business has the internal expertise and time to build HR infrastructure, an internal hire may work. If the business needs structure, expertise, and support without building everything from scratch, a PEO partner may make more sense.
Manager training matters because managers make many of the people decisions employees actually experience. They hire, onboard, document, coach, approve, and escalate. Millman’s framework is that managers need tools, training, and follow-up. Without those, inconsistency becomes likely.
HR technology can help with workflows, records, policies, and administration, but it does not fully replace human judgment in sensitive people situations. Millman argues that leaders often need someone to walk them through what to say, what to avoid, how an employee may respond, and how to handle the conversation in context.
Millman recommends starting with three areas: how you hire, how you onboard, and how you handle employee issues. Those are the places where consistency creates the biggest difference fastest because they shape employee expectations and manager behavior from the beginning.
Questco helps growing businesses build the structure behind better people decisions, including HR support, compliance guidance, payroll, benefits, employee relations, and manager support.
If your business is still relying on memory, instinct, or one overextended person to handle HR, it may be time to look at what kind of support your next stage of growth actually requires.