Forum Discussion
travisshepherd
14 days agoContributor 5
When you run a solo business, the biggest trap is thinking that because you can work anytime, you should work all the time. If you aren’t careful, the business will swallow your personal life whole.
Drawing a hard line between the truck and the kitchen table comes down to a few non-negotiables—while still making sure I protect the time to give back to my community and help out the people who matter most.
My Family & Community Non-Negotiables
- The "Hard Stop" Clock: Business hours end at a specific time every day. When that clock hits, the work phone goes on "Do Not Disturb." Customers can wait until 8:00 AM the next morning.
- Intentional "Giving Back" Blocks: I love using my skills and spare time to give back to my community, help out friends, and support family when they need a hand. But to keep from burning out, I schedule this time intentionally. It ensures I can be 100% generous with my labor and advice without sacrificing the paid work that keeps the lights on.
- Undivided Attention Zones: Dinners and family time are completely phone-free. If I'm physically present but staring at a quote request, I’m not actually there.
- Guaranteed Days Off: At least one full day a week is completely sacred. No scheduling quotes, no organizing equipment, and no "just checking real quick" on the business.
My Business Non-Negotiables
- No "Accidental" Freebies: When I do work for friends, family, or community projects, it goes on the schedule as a dedicated block of time. This keeps my business structured and prevents "quick favors" from bleeding into time meant for paying clients.
- Physical Separation of Work: Keep the business out of the living spaces. Paperwork, tools, and equipment stay in the office, shop, or truck. When I step out of that space, I am officially off the clock.
- Automated Gatekeepers: Letting technology do the heavy lifting. Using automated text reminders, online booking portals, and clear "Business Hours" on my Google profile sets expectations for clients so I don't have to answer texts during my personal time.
The Reality Check: Your business can replace a lost customer, but your family can’t replace a lost father, spouse, or friend. You scale your business to serve your life and allow you the freedom to give back—not the other way around. You only get one time to get it right. Prioritise the ones you love it's worth it!!!
- BrandenSewell13 days agoJobber Ambassador
Love your feedback.