I recently received a long email from Leonie Dawson
explaining why she was clawing back her business.
Since 2009, this creative Australian entrepreneur has built
a successful global business but instead of owning her business, she’s found
that it owned her.
She’d grown the
business organically with one strategy/product/project leading to another and
it all worked.
But not for her.
Leonie talks about being totally taken over by OPO (other
people’s opinions), which led her down a path of exhaustion, burn out and
frustration as she was no longer doing what she loved.
I applaud her for having the courage to step back and
reflect on what she wants out of life.
Not only that, she’s shared what she is going to do and why she is
taking such drastic steps to refocus, to simplify her business and get back to
her original mission.
So often we can find ourselves on a path we never planned to
take. I remember in the One Red Lipstick
project interviewing a successful young entrepreneur who when faced with a large,
business-changing contract, chose to turn it down.
It wasn’t the right time for her or her young family and as
she reflected on her skill set, she was an entrepreneur, not a manager. She didn’t want to be managing a large team
which she would have needed if she’d moved forward. Instead of a creative enterprise, she would
have built herself an empire and that was not what she wanted.
Yet in North American culture, the mantra is “go big or go
home.” But maybe not.
In his book Small
Giants, Bo Burlingham, shares stories of successful business owners, who
have chosen to be great instead of big.
He interviewed business owners who had rejected the pressure of endless
growth to focus on more satisfying business goals. Goals like being great at what they do,
creating a great place to work, and making great contributions to their
communities.
Burlingham calls this route “the road less travelled” and it
could be that those on that road, catch more of the scenery and are less
exhausted when they reach their destination.
As you enter 2017, I encourage you to look closely at your
goals. Bigger isn’t necessarily
better. Take into consideration why you
started your business in the first place.
Revisit your mission. Give
yourself permission to tailor your business to suit your lifestyle and your
family, and ignore the pressures around you to make more, do more.
Remember this is YOUR business. Own it.
1 comment:
Love it Anne, we get overwhelmed with advice that we stop listening to the most important person - ourselves.
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