Entrepreneurs
Take Your Open Door Policy and Slam It Shut
It’s a check-in-the-box tactic that makes the leader seem engaged, concerned, and willing to listen
It seems like a gracious and genuine gesture for leaders in executive, senior, or supervisory roles everywhere. Extending a policy to their team that invites them to knock on their door to express concerns at any time they feel compelled to still feels like a forward-thinking servant leadership practice, and that’s probably why it’s still so popular.
It’s a check-in-the-box tactic that makes the leader seem engaged, concerned, and willing to listen. Perhaps that’s true and the leader genuinely is all of those things. Perhaps the leader sincerely expects the team to circumnavigate any direct chain-of-command in the company’s internal structure to take grievances, professional concerns, or personal issues directly to them at any time as a demonstration of support. I sure did.
I always established an open-door policy as a leader. Opening my office to my team was typically the first order of business for me in any new leadership role I accepted. Transparently, I also felt like it would make me more approachable and more connected. It seemed like a noble idiosyncratic trait to my modality of leadership until I began to notice some pitfalls and drawbacks to having an open-door policy:
1. It’s rarely used.
Every so often, I would field a genuine concern from a staff member who trusted me. Most of the time, however, my open door serviced general complaints and gripes about teammates and the threshold to my office would seem like a petri dish for one-sided toxic deposits of gossip and inappropriate remarks.
This did not promote healthy conflict resolution and disrupted productivity on several occasions. Real issues were discussed in my absence between teammates in the form of cynical remarks and apathetic expressions. Meanwhile, I was oblivious in my high tower assuming all was well in the kingdom.
2. In my efforts to be more approachable and connected I became the opposite.
I lost touch with what was happening down the hall. My relationships with my teammates eroded. My door was open, and the staff knew that if there were any issues, I was all ears. But I wasn’t always attentive and vigilant independent of my team alerting me to issues. You can’t sit in an office and notice the teammate who’s exhausted or struggling. You can’t reserve yourself to your desk and notice the teammates who are at odds with one another.
You can’t see burnout on your team’s faces no matter how open you keep your office door. You have to engage. You have to seek the staff that know what’s going on and initiate discussions with them. You have to get in front of your people and care.
“If everyone is moving forward together, then success takes care of itself.” – Henry Ford
3. Served as an unintentional override on the chain-of-command.
Undermining the lead workers in leadership positions underneath me by creating a teamwide dependency on my decisions created an atmosphere of micromanagement that I was vehemently opposed to. Micromanagement stilts growth. I always want my team to feel empowered, to trust their decisions, to learn from their choices, to develop themselves, and to discover their own greatness. Micromanagement provides unsustainable and infertile conditions for this type of growth.
Before I could recognize the instability this created, I had already stripped my first-line leaders of the team’s trust by indirectly and erroneously communicating to the team that I somehow didn’t trust the lead workers’ ability to address concerns so the team could take advantage of my open-door policy if they ever felt that the lead workers were ill-equipped to resolve issues as well.
Availability to your people shouldn’t be a passive action and should not come at the expense of the trust your team places in the leaders underneath you.
Best practice: don’t communicate an open-door policy.
Show up for your people in a way that you don’t have to communicate your support for them in a policy because they’ll trust you enough to follow expectations, make decisions, resolve conflicts, and address concerns appropriately in a way that supports the vision of the team.
If you’re there for them, they don’t need a policy that lets them know that you’re there for them.
Entrepreneurs
The Silent Killer of Entrepreneurial Dreams (And How to Make Sure It Never Takes Yours Down)
You started with fire in your belly. The vision was crystal clear. But somewhere along the way the doubts crept in. The “what if I’m wrong” thoughts. The comparison to everyone else’s highlight reel. The quiet voice that says maybe you should just play it safe and get a real job.
That voice is the silent killer. Not cash flow problems. Not bad hires. Not even market shifts. It’s self-doubt that quietly talks most entrepreneurs out of their biggest breakthroughs.
I’ve been in rooms with founders who’ve raised millions and still battle it daily. The difference between those who push through and those who fold isn’t talent or luck. It’s how they handle the internal noise.
The game-changer is learning to treat doubt as a signal, not a stop sign.
Every time that voice gets loud, it usually means you’re on the edge of something important. Growth lives right outside your comfort zone. The entrepreneurs who scale don’t silence the doubt—they thank it for showing up and then take the next step anyway.
Here’s how to make that practical.
Keep a “proof file.”
Every win, every positive customer note, every metric that moved in the right direction. When doubt hits, open it. Evidence beats emotion every single time. Most founders are terrible at remembering their own wins. They move the goalpost so fast that yesterday’s victory feels ordinary by today. A simple document or folder where you collect proof changes the internal conversation. It becomes harder to believe the doubt when you have a running list of times you were wrong about your own limits.
Surround yourself with people who are playing a bigger game.
Isolation breeds doubt. A strong peer group normalizes the struggle and reminds you you’re not crazy. The entrepreneurial path is full of invisible landmines. Having people who’ve stepped on a few of them—and lived to tell the tale… makes the journey feel less lonely and more possible. Find masterminds, find mentors, find founders a few steps ahead of you who are willing to be honest about the hard parts.
Reframe failure as data.
Every setback is just information about what to do differently next time. The fastest learners treat mistakes like tuition, not tragedy. This doesn’t mean you celebrate failure or become reckless. It means you extract the lesson quickly and move forward without carrying the emotional weight longer than necessary. The founders who win long-term are the ones who fail fast, learn faster, and keep their identity separate from any single outcome.
Get brutally clear on your “why.”
Not the surface-level money or freedom story. The deep one that still lights you up even when the work sucks. Reconnect with it daily. When doubt shows up, it’s often because you’ve lost sight of the deeper reason you started. Spend time with that reason. Write it down. Say it out loud. Let it remind you that the discomfort is temporary and the mission is bigger than the fear.
And finally, give yourself permission to be in process.
Most entrepreneurs compare their chapter one to someone else’s chapter ten. They see the polished results and forget the messy middle that every successful founder had to walk through. Your story isn’t over. It’s not even close. The doubt you feel today might be the exact thing that forces you to get clearer, stronger, and more intentional than you’ve ever been.
The path of entrepreneurship was never meant to feel safe. That’s the whole point. It forces you to become the kind of person who can handle bigger problems and bigger wins. Doubt will show up. It always does. But it doesn’t get to drive.
You do.
Entrepreneurs
The One Brutal Mistake That Keeps Most Entrepreneurs Stuck at Six Figures (And the Fix That Unlocks Seven)
You built something real. Customers are coming in. Revenue is growing. But no matter how hard you grind, it feels like you’re hitting an invisible ceiling. The business owns you more than you own it, and scaling feels like a distant dream instead of the next logical step.
I’ve seen it destroy too many sharp founders. They’re doing everything “right”—working longer hours, chasing every opportunity, saying yes to every client. And yet the growth stalls while their stress skyrockets.
The mistake isn’t effort. It’s identity.
Most entrepreneurs still see themselves as the indispensable hero who has to touch every single part of the business. They built it with their own hands, so they believe only they can run it at the highest level. That belief is exactly what caps them at six figures.
The shift that changes everything is deciding you are now the leader of a system, not the worker inside it.
You stop being the best operator and start becoming the best owner. That means ruthlessly auditing where your time is spent and handing off everything that doesn’t move the needle on growth. Yes, it feels scary. Yes, it feels like you’re losing control. But the entrepreneurs who break through are the ones who trust the process more than their ego.
Here’s what that actually looks like in practice.
First, identify your $10,000-an-hour activities
The ones only you can do that truly grow the company. Everything else gets documented, delegated, or deleted. Most founders I know are shocked when they finally track their time for two weeks straight. They discover they’re spending 60-70% of their week on things that could be handled by someone else at a fraction of the cost. The ego loves to whisper that “no one can do it as well as me.” That voice is expensive. It costs you leverage, it costs you time with your family, and it costs you the mental bandwidth to actually think strategically about the future of the business.
Second, build repeatable systems for the rest.
Not fancy software. Simple checklists, processes, and people who own outcomes. Your team stops waiting for your approval on every little thing. This is where most entrepreneurs get stuck—they hire help but never actually transfer ownership. They create bottlenecks because every decision still funnels back to them. The fix is to document the process once, train someone thoroughly, then step back and let them own it. Yes, there will be mistakes in the beginning. That’s the cost of building something that can eventually run without you. Every mistake becomes a better system.
Third, measure what matters.
Revenue per employee. Customer acquisition cost. Lifetime value. Stop celebrating busywork and start obsessing over leverage. I’ve watched founders go from celebrating “we’re so busy” to celebrating “we added three new team members and revenue per person went up 40%.” That’s the shift. When you start measuring the right things, your decisions change. You stop hiring to offload tasks and start hiring to multiply output.
The hard truth is that most entrepreneurs never make this transition.
They stay the bottleneck in their own business. They become the ceiling. And the business grows to the exact size that one person can manage with heroic effort… then it plateaus. The ones who break through are willing to feel uncomfortable for a season so they can build something that actually scales.
You didn’t start this journey to trade one boss for another… especially when that boss is you. Let go of the need to be the smartest person in every room. Your job now is to build something bigger than yourself. The ceiling isn’t real. It’s just the point where your old identity stops serving you. The question is whether you’re willing to let that old version of you die so a new one can lead.
Business
Scaling a Business? Here’s What Usually Goes Wrong
Before you hire, expand, or chase bigger revenue, here’s what every founder needs to fix to scale without losing control, culture, or quality.
Growing a business is the dream. But scaling one? Honestly, that is a completely different reality. (more…)
Business
Why Most Financial Plans Fall Apart (And How to Fix It)
Most financial plans fail due to poor risk management, lack of strategy, and emotional decisions – here’s how structured advisory keeps you on track.
Advisory services are redefined into a mandate for individuals and corporates seeking enhanced financial planning capabilities. (more…)
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