7 Reality Checks for Building a Prosperous and Meaningful Business
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Title: 7 Reality Checks for Building a Prosperous and Meaningful
Business
Author: Molly Gordon
One of the themes that run through my teleclass, Believe! How to
Work With Your Beliefs to Grow a Prosperous and Meaningful
Business, is the tension between the creative power of thought
and resource-depleting habits of wishful thinking. I offer the
following 7 Reality Checks to help you reconcile your dreams with
reality so that you can build your dream into a thriving
business.
1. In spite of your best intentions you will make mistakes. To
the best of your ability, which may sometimes be slim, welcome
these occasions as an opportunity to let go of perfectionism.
Pause to review your offer to your clients. Are you positioning
yourself as a know-it-all or as a responsive partner and learner?
Are you putting yourself on a pedestal? Reflect on the
distinctions among honesty, reliability, and perfection. Meditate
on the difference between apology and accountability. Muse on the
difference between significance and integrity.
2. Things go "wrong." I put "wrong" in quotes because stumbling
blocks teach me things I need to know in order to serve and
thrive. Hey, I'd rather learn without failing too, but however
the lesson happens, there you are. Every time you look with
humility and trust for your personal lesson, you are helping to
create the possible dream. (Note: Sometimes the lesson is simply
to let go of your idea of what should have happened. Lessons are
not code for "There's something wrong with you.")
3. Not everyone wants or needs what you have. That's good news
because odds are that you can't respond to every one anyway.
Cultivate the courage, integrity, and clarity to listen deeply to
prospective clients and decline to work with those whom you are
not ideally suited to serve. Ask questions, especially scary ones
(Can you afford this? Do you have any reservations? What will it
take for this to be a good investment for you?). Ask first; sell
later. Actually, when you do this, the selling takes care of
itself. That's the premise behind coach Kendall SummerHawk's tape
series, What to Say When You Hate to Sell.
4. Humbly welcome opportunities to profit. I did not have
Kendall's tapes in mind when I wrote the item above, but they are
a perfect fit, so I was happy to include the link to her work (in
the article version placed on my site.). Will I profit if you buy
them? Yes, I'll earn a 20% commission on every sale from that
link.
5. Customers have bad days, too. Some times they're going to take
it out on you. That doesn't mean you have to slink home licking
your wounds, nor does it you get to strike back. It certainly
doesn't mean you have to accept abuse. When you feel unfairly
used, take a few deep breaths, notice what you wish were
different, and remember that we're all human. Maybe it's time to
do some boundary maintenance. Are you pretending that you need to
please everyone or that everyone needs to like you in order for
you to thrive? Look to yourself, not because you are to blame,
but because you are the only one whose behavior you can manage.
(Customers are always right where they are.)
6. Sometimes whole systems go wrong or you find out too late that
a new project was not quite ready for prime time. (Just ask me.)
At times like this you get to practice being available and
responsive to customer needs while also taking care of yourself.
Sometimes you won't (yet) know how to solve or resolve the
problem and you may resent the time you're using to reassure
clients instead of getting things on track. BREATHE. Learn to
say, "I don't know and I do care and I will get back to you as
soon as I can." Practice saying it with dignity, conviction, and
patience. Take some time to wonder what you would need to believe
in order for all of this to feel right and true.
7. Owning a business can be isolating. Many entrepreneurs are
natural soloists. That doesn't mean we don't need or want
support, though we may be the last to realize it. Spend some time
wondering why other people might want you to thrive. Let your
imagination run free as you speculate on what kinds of
collaboration could work for you. Turn your complaints about
networking into dreams of your ideal support system. What would
your business look and feel like if you knew you did not have to
have it all together because there was lots of help at hand?
The secrets to creating the possible dream are all related to
accepting what is, which includes accepting the support that is
everywhere around you and accepting your own desire to build a
business that adds real value in the world and allows you to
thrive. Some days it will be easier than others to believe that
reality and your dream can co-exist. But if you persist with
humility, passion, and trust, your dream will teach you how it
wants to be made real. I know because my own dream teaches me
every day.
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About the author:
Molly Gordon, MCC, is a leading figure in business and personal
growth coaching, writer and frequent presenter at live and
virtual events worldwide. Visit her websites
www.mollygordon.com/coaching/ and
www.shaboominc.com/coaching/ to join 12,000 readers of her
Authentic Promotion® ezine and receive a free 31-page guide,
"Principles of Authentic Promotion."
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