
How Business Owners Can Gain Greater Freedom, Fulfillment
& Fortune
Your goal as a business owner should be to design a company that is distinct
from you and quite candidly, works in your absence. You should create a separate
cash flow entity, not merely a job for yourself. It should pay you a healthy
salary plus a return on your investment of money, time and effort. You should
build equity! You should build wealth! Bottom line, your role as owner should be
to shape, manage and grow this independent and enduring asset - your business.
Your enterprise should function without you, not because of you. I know this
sounds bizarre, but hear me out. While you can be the brains behind the
enterprise, you should not be like Hercules trying to hold up the entire weight
of the company! You will be crushed!
Your business should work harder so you don't have to. You should be able to
make money everyday without having to work everyday. You should invest more
brain equity and leadership equity and much less sweat equity into your company.
Your business should be a product of your brain, not your brawn.
You should strive to build a business that does not enslave you and does not
rely on your being present every minute of every day doing all the thinking,
deciding, worrying, and working. You must adopt a new way of thinking and
acting.
In short, you must become a strategic business owner. Specifically, you must
learn to adopt a CEO mindset; systematize and document your business; lead more
and work less; create a simple business plan; utilize the leverage of marketing;
effectively manage your greatest asset, your people; and learn to let go. You
must transform the way you see yourself and your business. You must begin to
think differently.
As a strategic business owner, your primary aim should be to develop a
self-managing and systems-oriented business that still runs consistently,
predictably, smoothly, and profitably while you are not there. You should shape
and own the business system (an integrated web of processes) and employ
competent and caring employees to operate the system.
You should document the work of your business so that you can effectively
train others to execute the work. You must make yourself replaceable in the
technical trenches of your business. To repeat, define and document the specific
work to be done and then train and delegate. This is how you begin successfully
to beat the blues, escape death by details, and gain greater freedom.
With a documented operating system, your employees should be able to carry on
the work of the business while you focus on big picture priorities, even if you
should take a break. You should be able to escape the daily drudgery. In fact,
your company should run on autopilot status even while you're on an extended,
work-free, guilt-free vacation. If it does, you will have designed and built a
business that truly works and is worth a fortune. More importantly, in the
process, you will have gained back a personal life that is fulfilling.
To maintain freedom, independence and fulfillment, as your business grows, so
must your leadership effectiveness and operating systems. You must stop
micromanaging and start leading (macro managing). You must become more
purposeful and proactive. Specifically, we suggest business owners and managers
follow the following life-changing process:
- Step one: learn to work on yourself by transitioning to a new way of
thinking and behaving. Re-program yourself and your habits. Stop acting like
an employee and start thinking like a CEO. Learn to work on your business,
not in your business.
- Step two: systematize your company by creating, documenting and
continually improving all your key processes, procedures and policies. Trust
the business system and personnel you put in place and remove yourself from
the company's daily details. Be more hands-off and more brains-on. Replace
yourself with other people. Define and document the work to be done. Train
others and delegate the work. This operating system is your foundation for
freedom.
- Step three: increase your leadership capabilities. Excel at leadership,
not doer-ship. Your business needs a clear vision and strong leader to hold
others accountable, not another employee doing technical work. Help build
and direct your team.
- Step four: develop clarity of direction for your business and employees by
creating a simple business plan and an effective implementation process.
- Step five: learn to effectively manage your people, your greatest asset.
- Step six: instead of incremental growth, engage the leverage of marketing
to achieve substantial, profitable growth.
- Step seven: learn to let go, delegate, and truly enjoy business ownership,
your relationships, and your life.
By working less in your business, you gain more time to work on your business
and make those essential changes necessary to optimize your company and your
life. You may well be skeptical. That's normal. However, let me ask you
"Are your current paths and strategies working"? If so, you wouldn't
be reading this article. If not, I invite you to acknowledge the problems in
your business, take responsibility for them, and dare to try new approaches.
Ken David is the president of The Growth Coach® in Haslett, MI, a business coaching firm dedicated to helping business owners get more out of their businesses and personal lives.
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