Inside Fanatics Commerce’s Talent Strategy: Scaling Leadership in a Hypergrowth Business

Updated April 2026
By Kerry Summers (Content Marketing Coordinator, iVentiv)

Key Takeaways

  • Hypergrowth rewrites leadership rules
  • Structure must scale the business, not slow it down
  • Pace is the defining capability
  • Great leaders think beyond their function
  • Technology enables leadership, but doesn’t replace it

Hypergrowth changes everything. It reshapes how organisations operate, how leaders lead, and how talent functions deliver impact. Few companies embody this challenge quite like Fanatics, which has expanded from fewer than 2,000 employees in 2015 to over 20,000 today, operating across more than 200 countries. 

At the centre of this transformation is Yulia Denisova, VP Talent & Development, whose role is both clear and complex: introduce the structure required to scale, without diluting the entrepreneurial energy that made the company successful in the first place.

What emerges from her perspective is not just a story of growth, but a rethink of how leadership, talent, and learning must evolve in a business that is moving at extraordinary speed.

Hypergrowth Reality: What Breaks First?

In many organisations, rapid growth exposes weaknesses in processes, systems, or communication. At Fanatics, the reality is less about things breaking and more about the rules fundamentally changing.

As Yulia explains, success is no longer about narrowing focus to a handful of priorities. Instead, leaders are expected to operate across many initiatives simultaneously, often without knowing which will ultimately succeed:

“You don’t know which of 50 projects will win… so you have to move them all forward and observe what matures fastest.” 
-    Yulia Denisova, VP Talent and Development, Fanatics

This shift has significant implications for leadership, for example, Yulia tells us that traditional models emphasise clarity, prioritisation, and stability. In contrast, hypergrowth demands comfort with ambiguity, rapid decision-making, and the ability to continuously recalibrate. 

Leaders are not just executing strategy, they are actively discovering it in real time.

Walking the Line Between Structure and Agility 

Yulia joined Fanatics with a mandate that will feel familiar to many Talent leaders in scaling organisations: bring structure, but avoid bureaucracy.

The challenge is not simply operational, it is cultural. Introducing too much structure risks slowing the organisation down and undermining the very qualities that fuelled its growth. Too little, and the organisation becomes chaotic and inefficient.

Fanatics’ approach is intentionally pragmatic. The focus, Yulia explains, is on building systems that are scalable and practical, rather than overly engineered. Solutions are designed to be implemented quickly and refined over time, rather than perfected upfront.

This philosophy is reflected in the rollout of a cross-enterprise performance management system, which, Yulia says, was designed, built, and launched in just three months. At Fanatics, it achieved an 95% adoption rate in its first cycle, rising to almost full adoption in the second. 

The Defining Characteristic: Pace 

If there is one factor that truly differentiates Fanatics, it is pace. Even for an experienced global leader like Yulia, the shift can be striking:

“I always considered myself a fast learner… until I joined Fanatics. These people are not even running. They’re flying.” 
-    Yulia Denisova, VP Talent and Development, Fanatics

This level of acceleration has led Yulia to approach leadership development in a different way. Long, structured programmes struggle to keep up. Instead, Yulia says that organisations need learning that is immediate, practical, and directly applicable to real challenges.

Leaders are expected to absorb new concepts quickly and apply them instantly, often while still building the systems they are working within. The emphasis moves from theoretical understanding to execution under pressure.

Leading Across Complexity 

Fanatics is not a single, unified business. It is a collection of diverse operations spanning manufacturing, e-commerce, betting, gaming, and collectibles. Yulia describes it as “18 businesses in one.” 

This complexity raises the bar for leadership. She says that understanding one function or domain simply isn’t enough. Instead, Yulia wants leaders to develop a cross-enterprise perspective, recognising how decisions in one area affect outcomes elsewhere.

This requires a deeper level of business acumen, as well as a shift in mindset. Leaders, in her view, must think beyond their immediate teams and consider the broader system they are part of. In this context, siloed thinking quickly becomes a liability.

What Great Leadership Looks Like at Scale

While many elements of leadership remain consistent, their application changes significantly in a hypergrowth environment. At Fanatics, expectations are high.

Yulia references a guiding belief from the company’s founder: “A-class talent does not work for a B-class leader.” This, she says, sets the tone for the organisation’s approach to leadership development.

Strong leaders at Fanatics are therefore expected to combine commercial awareness with the ability to lead at scale. They must understand how the business creates value, while also building the structures and leadership layers needed to deliver that value across a much larger organisation.

Equally important, Yulia says, is their ability to engage and inspire. Leadership is not just about direction, but about creating followership, ensuring that people are motivated to contribute and aligned behind a shared vision.

Resilience also becomes critical. In an environment defined by constant change, leaders must sustain performance under pressure while remaining adaptable and open to new ways of working.

From Founder Culture to Scalable Leadership 

One of the most significant transitions in hypergrowth, Yulia says, is the evolution of leadership itself. In early-stage organisations, leadership is often highly personal. Leaders know their teams closely, communication is direct, and culture is built through shared experience.

As organisations scale, this model becomes unsustainable. The shift, she says, is not about abandoning the culture, but about evolving it. Leaders must build strong teams beneath them, delegate effectively, and rely more on systems and data to maintain visibility.

At the same time, she argues that organisations must find ways to preserve the human elements that define the organisation’s identity. This balance, Yulia believes, is one of the most challenging aspects of scaling leadership.

The Role of AI in Leadership and Accountability 

Like many organisations, Fanatics is exploring how AI can support leadership at scale. Yulia sees clear benefits, particularly when it comes to accountability:

“What technology can give you is data that you cannot argue with.”
-    Yulia Denisova, VP Talent and Development, Fanatics

Technology provides access to data that is difficult to ignore. Insights from engagement surveys, feedback mechanisms, and performance metrics are all things that, Yulia stresses, can help leaders make more objective decisions and address issues more confidently.

AI also opens up new possibilities for development, including always-on coaching and scenario-based learning; tools that can help leaders prepare for difficult conversations and improve their effectiveness in real time.

However, Yulia is clear that technology has limits. She tells us that AI can provide insight and efficiency, but:

“AI cannot create trust, psychological safety, or human connection.”  
-    Yulia Denisova, VP Talent and Development, Fanatics

Trust, empathy, and psychological safety remain firmly in the domain of people.

In practice, the value of AI lies in creating space. By automating tasks and providing data-driven insights, it allows leaders to focus more on coaching, influencing, and building relationships.

Keeping Leadership Human at Scale 

As organisations grow, maintaining a sense of connection could become increasingly difficult. Yet many L&D and HR leaders would argue that it is also more important than ever.

Yulia highlights the importance of simple, intentional practices, such as skip-level meetings, to maintain direct connections with employees. These interactions provide unfiltered insights and help leaders stay grounded in the reality of their teams’ experiences. For Yulia:

“I would always coach leaders to retain that connection… get that unfiltered perspective.”
-    Yulia Denisova, VP Talent and Development, Fanatics

These interactions, she says, also reinforce alignment, ensuring that employees understand how their work connects to the organisation’s broader strategy. In a fast-moving environment, this clarity is essential.

Technology can support these efforts, but it cannot replace them. Human connection remains a core component of effective leadership.

A Provocation for Learning and Development 

Perhaps the most thought-provoking aspect of Yulia’s perspective is her challenge to traditional Learning and Development:

“If you don’t want to learn, no one can help you. If you want to learn, no one can stop you.” 
-    Yulia Denisova, VP Talent and Development, Fanatics

In an era where information is abundant and easily accessible, the role of L&D is shifting. Rather than acting as the primary source of knowledge, Yulia’s efforts suggests that L&D functions are increasingly becoming enablers of learning.

This requires a change in mindset, with Yulia suggesting that, instead of designing and delivering structured programmes, organisations must focus on creating environments that encourage curiosity and self-directed growth.

The question is no longer just what people should learn, but how so leaders empower them to take ownership of their own development.

Scaling Without Losing What Matters

Fanatics’ approach to Talent and Leadership development offers a clear message for organisations navigating hypergrowth. Success does not come from choosing between structure and agility, or between technology and humanity. It comes from balancing these elements deliberately.

The goal, as Yulia describes it, is to remain a “mature start-up” - combining the energy and ambition of an entrepreneurial business with the discipline required to operate at scale. 

For Talent leaders, this is the challenge and the opportunity. Scaling leadership is not just about building capability. It is about redefining what leadership looks like in a world where speed, complexity, and change are the new normal.

Yulia Denisova is VP, Talent and Development at Fanatics Commerce, the leading designer, manufacturer, and seller of licensed fan gear. She has nearly 25 years of HR leadership experience building, empowering, and managing global high-performing teams of varying scale, type, and autonomy. Prior to joining Fanatics in August 2024, Yulia spent more than 11 years with The Coca-Cola Company where she held HR, talent, and development roles, and reengineered talent practices enterprise wide.

FAQs 

What is leadership in a hypergrowth company?

Leadership in a hypergrowth company requires the ability to operate at speed, manage ambiguity, and lead across rapidly evolving priorities while maintaining alignment with the overall business strategy.

How do you scale leadership in a fast-growing organisation? 

For Yulia, scaling leadership involves building strong leadership pipelines, introducing scalable systems and processes, and developing leaders who can operate effectively across larger, more complex teams.

How can organisations introduce structure without losing agility?

Yulia tells us that structure without losing agility comes with focusing on simple, practical systems that are easy to adopt, prioritising speed over perfection, and avoiding over-engineered processes that slow decision-making.

How does AI support leadership development and performance management?

AI can provide data-driven insights, support decision-making, enable continuous feedback, and offer on-demand coaching, helping leaders become more effective and objective.

How can leaders maintain human connection at scale?

Leaders can maintain connection by, according to Yulia’s work, creating opportunities for direct interaction, such as skip-level meetings, encouraging open communication, and staying visible and accessible to their teams.

What skills are essential for leaders in high-growth businesses?

Key skills include commercial acumen, adaptability, resilience, cross-functional thinking, and the ability to lead through uncertainty.


 

Thumbnail: 
News category: 
Talent Management

More Insights

Jay Moore, Global Learning and Culture Leader, GE references the importance of coaching at GE, how the company 'spends a great deal of time with our most senior leaders for them to be better coaches' and how it 'continues to be a needed and necessary skill for leaders'. In essence, it is the tailored approach to development that coaching offers, that can help executives improve their leadership skills and achieve their goals, making it an attractive option for learning, talent, and leadership executives to invest in. Read more here.

Adeline Looi, Global Head of Integrated Leadership Development at Nestlé is responsible for helping 30,000 people leaders and 273,000 full-time employees in over 180 countries grow in leadership. Speaking to iVentiv's Temi Bamgboye, Adeline discusses about the Nestlé Leadership Framework, her own philosophy on leadership, and why it is that fewer people now want to be leaders. Watch the full interview.

Employees should be more than satisfied, they should thrive. Increasingly, CxOs see their success with Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging (DEIB) as key to achieving that.

In 2022, 21% of the Global Heads of L&D, Talent Management, and Executive Development who attended iVentiv events selected DEIB as one of their priorities. This is one part of HR's wide range of priorities, but more and more leaders in learning and talent are looking to make DEIB a key part of what makes them successful going forward. Read more about why and how leaders are incorporating DEIB into their HR strategies here.

Phil Rhodes is the Head of Learning and Leadership Development at WM, the largest environmental services company in North America, and is a frequent conference keynote speaker on topics ranging from organizational effectiveness, leadership development, change management, and learning trends. He has specific expertise in crafting dynamic Learning and Development (L&D) solutions that enable data-driven decision-making and help employees reach their full potential. Ahead of his breakout session at Learning Futures New York, Phil blogged for iVentiv sharing his perspectives on the trends shaping L&D. Phil writes about skills, partnering with business functions, making the most of AI, and measuring the impact of L&D on business outcomes. .Read the full blog here.

What are the priorities driving global Heads of Learning, Talent, and Leadership? Before every iVentiv event, we ask you to tell us what areas you're focusing on, and what questions you want to ask your fellow participants. We've pulled together those responses into a report summarising the big themes and key questions driving HR as we head into 2023. This blog summarises the key takeaways, and the full report includes commentary from experts in learning, talent, and leadership.

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, corporations have taken a range of steps to support Ukrainian employees and customers. Speaking to iVentiv ahead of her session at Talent Management Zurich in October 2022, Nataliia Gorbenko, Global Head of Talent, Performance and Rewards Management at Luxoft, spoke about how businesses have the opportunity to support Ukrainian talent with real benefits to both parties. Read more and watch the full interview here.

Ahead of his session on hybrid working and exclusivity at iVentiv's Learning Futures California in 2022, Uli Heitzlhofer, Director of People Learning & Development at Lyft, gives a preview of the topics he plans to cover in this short interview.

Uli discussed the pivot to a hybrid model of work and the opportunities and challenges that presents for leadership, for new employees, and for the business. Read more and watch the full interview with Uli to hear about how Lyft made the transition to a fully hybrid model.

Matt Smith is an Executive Coach, Leadership Advisory, and former Chief Learning Officer at McKinsey & Company. Speaking to iVentiv's Temi B, Matt discussed the habits that make a successful learner, techniques for developing intentional learning, plus ideas to help CLOs work with business leaders. For Chief Learning Officers, these are perennial questions, but Matt says they are tractable ones as well. To find out more about Matt's tips for creating a culture of intentional learning, read and watch the full interview.

iVentiv events are all about community and collaboration. By bringing together senior executives from global companies to share knowledge, iVentiv provides the platform for you to connect with peers in the same roles and take away new ideas that make a real business impact. Over the years, we have been very fortunate to bring that conversation to some of the world's most iconic corporate venues.

Corporate hosts enhance the iVentiv experience by providing inspiring spaces to connect and develop. A fresh environment and a different business culture helps participants think about their challenges in new ways. In short, hosts inspire the iVentiv community to experiment, innovate, and do more. Find out more about hosting iVentiv here.

Events, conferences, expos, seminars. Whatever you want to call them. Attending is one of the best ways to meet decision-makers in big companies and do some networking, whether that's Chief Learning Officers, Heads of Talent, or Executive Development leaders.

But there are a lot of events out there, and making the most of them is tough. To get started, read iVentiv's top ten tips for networking with decision-makers at events and conferences.

Pages