You might expect your role as a business owner to consume your life completely. After all, isn't the entrepreneurial spirit about taking control of your life and working on your own time?
You're not alone if you feel overwhelmed by the daily grind as a leader. In a 2022 study of small business owners conducted by Capital One, 42% reported burnout, chronic stress, overwhelming exhaustion, or dissatisfaction with job performance.
Depending on your current position in the growth process, you may have already found new hires to take on important roles in marketing, accounting, or HR. Even if that's true, you can still be deeply entrenched in business operations.
This blog aims to help business owners transition out of day-to-day operations by partnering with a professional employer organization (PEO). The exploration below might help you address some of the most common pain points of business ownership, like:
If you feel stuck in your role as a business owner, read on to learn how to blaze a trail to a brighter, more satisfying, and more prosperous future.
In this episode, Victoria Kreutzkamp, BBSI Business Partner, discusses how business owners can step out of day-to-day operations with a . Victoria has built a career centered around helping business owners better manage their operations and be more successful. Listen in to learn how you can begin to step back from day-to-day operations and spend more time on new ideas to grow your business.
The business owner's role moves through four distinct phases:
Before a business owner can successfully move through the phases above, they need to become comfortable with these fundamental changes:
Of course, becoming comfortable with these phases of change won’t happen overnight. It can be challenging to give up the reins, especially if the business began as a passion project.
It is important to remember that every step will take time. The timeline can look different for every business, so avoid becoming tempted to regress to previous phases as you overcome the hurdles inherent in transition.
If you need more time to step into a new phase, focus on building a solid foundation to support your company when you are ready to transition.
Business owners often feel like the business can only operate with them in it. There are many reasons why they get stuck in this perspective:
When business owners stay entrenched in operations for any reason, they can become too busy to invest time in strategic planning for the future, causing their business to stagnate rather than grow.
Here's a process you can lean upon:
Investing in this process can help business owners develop confidence in their team and feel more comfortable handing over the reins when the time comes.
In business ownership, an inflection point refers to a critical moment or turning point in the business's growth trajectory. The business experiences a significant positive or negative change that can have a lasting impact on its future.
Inflection points can take many forms. An inflection point might occur when a small business experiences rapid growth that requires the owner to change how they manage the business, delegate more responsibility to others or make strategic decisions about the business's future.
Common inflection points for businesses:
By recognizing inflection points and adapting strategies and operations accordingly, business owners can position their business for long-term success.
Failure to recognize inflection points and adapt strategy and operations accordingly can result in the following:
Instead of ignoring inflection points, business owners should respond with strategic planning to position themselves for long-term success.
During our conversation with Victoria Kreutzkamp, she shared an example of a business owner who was resistant to addressing inflection points:
"I had a client who had been doing this for 20 years. I had him come in for a strategy meeting. He told me he was going through a legal dispute over a contract and owed $150,000. He was just at a breaking point.
We dug into every aspect of his business: his pipeline, his people, his processes, his systems, and how he was building toward the future. After gathering that information, we created an action plan.
About six months later, he said to me, 'When I walked away from that strategy meeting, I thought I was going to have to close my doors. I thought it was the end, and those 20 years were for nothing.'
He said that taking a step back, getting what was in his head onto that whiteboard, and talking it through helped him feel a sense of control. He looked at me with a tear and said, 'Thank you for helping me save my business.'
I thought that that was the most incredible gift — to hear that from him."
When owners plan to transition to the next stage of the ownership process, they invest in the long-term development of their business.
That investment can produce positive results:
By looking ahead and planning strategically, business owners can position their business for long-term success.
Victoria understands why people start businesses: "They want financial freedom. They want to be their own boss. They don't want to work for somebody else."
She also understands that it doesn't behoove most business owners (or their companies) to stay at the helm forever.
"You have to decide: Do you want a lifestyle business — more than a full-time job? Or do you want something that will be a sellable asset?"
When it's time to transition to a new leadership phase, the following steps can help you embrace the future of your business.
Most importantly, move at the best pace for you and your organization. But as your business grows, plan to support your company once it's time to pull back from operations, assume an executive role, or even retire.
Business owners don't have to accept burnout as the norm. Instead, they can invest in strategic planning and transition preparations that will lay the groundwork for long-term business success, even as they move away from day-to-day business operations.
When you need a professional employer organization partner for your business success, turn to BBSI. We help businesses large and small navigate:
We'll become your trusted partner and complement your in-house strategic team because when you succeed, we succeed.
If you're ready to achieve your business goals, find a local business unit near you.