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Please don’t disappear

Please don’t disappear

Please don't disappear

Watching the world right now has left me speechless. Every time I’ve sat down to write, any business topic I considered sharing has felt trivial in light of the suffering we are witnessing.

We are living through a moment of profound violence and rupture. Years of ongoing genocide live streamed to our phones. Videos of innocent civilians shot in the street for exercising their right to peaceful protest. Journalists targeted and intimidated for telling the truth. Families torn apart. Entire groups of people dehumanised and demonised because of the colour of their skin or their desire for a better, safer life. The rise of fascism is no longer abstract or theoretical. It is visible, organised, and moving frighteningly fast.

To witness this is a lot to hold.

I have felt grief, rage, fear and utter disbelief. A sense that the ground beneath us is no longer solid. That what once felt unthinkable is now being normalised in real time.

Alongside all of this, there has been a quieter question, one I hear echoed again and again in my work.

What does it mean to talk about business at a time like this?

I see thoughtful, conscious business owners struggling to focus. To create. To sell. People questioning whether it is ethical to want stability, income, or success when there is so much suffering in the world. People going quiet because they do not want to be seen as frivolous, complicit, or disconnected from reality.

I want to name that this response makes sense.

This is what happens when people with compassionate hearts and intact moral compasses are exposed to ongoing injustice and violence.

But this is not the whole story.

Alongside the horror, I am also witnessing so much hope. People mobilising around their neighbours and communities. Mutual aid networks forming and strengthening. Ordinary people showing up for one another, refusing to look away. Acts of courage that will never make headlines, but matter deeply all the same.

There is fear. And there is also resistance.

And in this context, I want to be explicit about something that matters deeply to me.

When businesses rooted in care, ethics, and collective wellbeing go quiet or disappear, it creates even more space for those who are willing to exploit fear, amplify division, and prioritise profit over people.

In a piece I wrote years ago called Conscious Business: What It Is and Why It Matters, I shared my vision for a better world and the role conscious business plays in shaping it. In that piece I wrote:

“Imagine for a moment a world where business was a force for good rather than greed. A world where the primary concern of business was the betterment of humanity and the furtherment of equality, health, and wellbeing for all people. A world where business owners genuinely care for their clients and customers and have their absolute best interests at heart. A world where the business owners who operate with the highest levels of integrity are the most prosperous. A world where meaningful business takes priority over the meaningless.

This is the world of conscious business. When we change the way we do business, we change the world.”

A world where the business owners who operate with the highest levels of integrity are the most prosperous. Sit with that for a moment.

It is precisely in moments like this that businesses committed to positive impact, that care for people and planet and integrity must thrive. These must be the businesses with reach. The ones shaping narratives and culture.

This is why I believe that your business thriving is not a luxury. It is a necessity.

Where money flows matters. Who holds resources matters. Who has the capacity to keep going, to support others, to fund care, and to choose values matters.

This is what I mean when I say: when we change the way we do business, we change the world.

Not in some grand, idealistic sense, but in the everyday choices about how we earn, how we sell, how we treat people, and how we refuse to replicate the very systems we are resisting.

And it is not only how you do business that matters. It is what you are doing with your work. The coaching. The healing. The therapy. The teaching. All of it contributes to a better society. A kinder, more compassionate, healthier world.

I am not here to pretend everything is fine or to offer business as an escape from reality. I am here to build, and to support others in building, work that contributes to the kind of world we actually want to live in.

Hope, for me, is not passive optimism. It is active participation. It is choosing to keep showing up, to keep resourcing ethical work, and to support those who care to succeed. 

This is not business as usual.

This is business as a practice of care, resistance, and possibility. I hope you are with me.

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Once a week, in the form of an e-letter, I share the best of what I know about building a business with integrity for conscious business owners.

The intention behind these letters is to be a voice for integrity within your (undoubtedly) cluttered inbox. To be the one email you can count on to contain strategic and soulful advice for building a business without selling your soul.

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Why It’s Sometimes Necessary to Break the Rules

Why It’s Sometimes Necessary to Break the Rules

“Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist.”

~ Pablo Picasso

As a business coach, I’m often asked about the rules we need to follow in order to become successful in business. It’s not uncommon for people to begin a question with “am I allowed to…?” or “is it acceptable to…?” or “Is it okay if I…? Questions around how to connect with clients, how to create and share content, how to price offerings, how to do just about anything within the context of building and growing a business.

It surprises people often that I rarely come down on the side of any given rule. I realised early on in my entrepreneurial journey that whilst we are constantly bombarded with different rules we should follow in order to be successful, there are in fact no rules. Allow me to explain.

When it comes to creating content, for example, we’re overwhelmed with rules from how many words to use to what kind of headlines work best and to the absolute necessity of using images, after all “a picture is worth a thousand words” so they say. In this article, we’re helpfully told the ideal length of everything online, backed by research including the fact that the ideal length of a blog post is 1,600 words. Any longer and people’s attention span can’t bear it, too much shorter and we risk not getting ranked by google and missing out on sales conversations and subscribers. That’s a pretty daunting word count for a newbie entrepreneur trying to figure out what the heck to write about in the first place.

But I have good news. For every so called rule we can find, it’s possible to find a rule that argues the opposite as well as someone who broke the rule and succeeded anyway. It’s my pleasure to introduce you to some of my favourite, highly successful, rule breakers.

There’s Seth Godin who regularly posts articles with a super short word count. You can read a recent one here that comes in at a measly 76 words but has had to date well over 7000 likes. Or Mark Manson, who has a readership of “millions”, whose recent post clocked in at 4,442 words.

It has often been argued that we should publish blog posts daily. While this article from another well respected expert on blogging vehemently argues the opposite. It never harmed Seth to post daily and there are countless others who have succeeded just fine without doing so.

Then there’s Authentic Business Coach George Kao, with nearly 6000 followers on Facebook, who flouts the “a picture is worth a thousand words” rule and rarely uses images in his Facebook Posts and/or (shock horror) his Facebook adverts and gets a great deal of traction regardless. In fact he argues that he actually gets better engagement by not using images, because the people who interact with his posts do so, not because they like a pretty picture, but because they appreciate the content.

Another area where people like to spout out rules like they are sacrosanct, is pricing. We’re told by some so-called experts to never discount our products or services as it devalues our work, yet the highly successful, Kelly Rae Roberts, holds sales frequently and I personally (and gratefully) have bought ALL of her painting courses at sale price! And heaven help anyone who breaks the charge what you’re worth rule and offers pay what you can pricing like established business experts, Tad Hargrave and Mark Silver do.

And then there’s branding. How often are we told that in order to succeed we must cultivate the perfect image, have the perfect website and a carefully crafted brand. Check out Steve Chandler, a renowned and highly successful coach and author whose website clearly hasn’t had a branding makeover any time recently (sorry Steve!) or back again to successful, Business Coach, George Kao who openly admits that he hasn’t paid any attention to branding as he’s built and grown his 6-figure business.

There are countless more “rules” and successful rule-breakers I could share but hopefully that’s enough to make the point that there are, in fact, no real rules to follow and more importantly that when we try to follow the rules, we end up tying ourselves in knots because when we focus on the rules, oftentimes, what we end up doing is give ourselves an out.

I would write a weekly post but I don’t have time to write 1600 words.

I would post on social media every day but I struggle to find nice images.

I would share my website but I’m waiting till I can afford to pay for branding.

Sound familiar? So what are we to do if we don’t follow the rules?

Instead of trying to follow a gazillion, conflicting and oftentimes, unhelpful set of rules instead we can tune in to what feels right for us. We can embrace the adage “better done than perfect.” We can ask ourselves, what rules am I trying to heed that are actually holding me up? We can embrace values and principles instead like integrity and connection. Like putting the person before the sale, like being of service and producing meaningful content. These are the things that hold up in the long term, not a cleverly crafted headline or slick branding. If we struggle to even adhere to the so-called rules, then you can bet that our audience tire of being on the receiving end of them.

Consider forgetting about the rules and create meaningful content (at whatever length your heart desires!) and share it with love. Price your offerings from the heart, with your clients and customers best interests in mind and above all be authentic in your business. Show up genuinely and with honesty and that will serve you and your bottom line far greater than any silly rule will. Having said all that, if there is a rule that you’ve been following in your business that is working for you, great keep at it. Heaven forbid that I should create a rule about breaking rules here!

What do you think about what I’ve shared here? Are there any rules you’ve been trying to follow without success, have you found certain rules have been stifling your ability to show fully in your business? Or have you found certain rules helpful? If so, please share them in the comments, I’d love to hear your perspective.

SIGN UP FOR MY SOULFUL STRATEGIES WEEKLY

 

Once a week, in the form of an e-letter, I share the best of what I know about building a business with integrity for conscious business owners.

The intention behind these letters is to be a voice for integrity within your (undoubtedly) cluttered inbox. To be the one email you can count on to contain strategic and soulful advice for building a business without selling your soul.

If you want to receive the Soulful Strategies Weekly, simply share with me your name and email address below and you’ll start recieving emails right away.