Showing posts with label entrepreneur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label entrepreneur. Show all posts

Monday, December 6, 2010

Business & Balance

At our monthly tea this past Saturday, we had a great group discussion sharing the business habits that we are going to carry into 2011 and searching for alternatives to the things that we'd rather leave behind.

In a room full of women, with most of us being job-and-household-and-family-and-business juggling moms , it's no wonder that we spent some time discussing how we can better balance it all in the new year.

Here are a few tips to keep all of the balls in the air at once.

Define your new normal.

Accept that your situation has changed. If it used to take you twenty hours a week after working your day job to take care of home and family and now that you've started your business, you only have five hours a week...something has to give. Maybe you can use the crockpot and paper plates a few times each week to cut down on a messy kitchen. Perhaps hubby can get the kids ready for bed at night and fold the laundry. This new season of your life calls for a new plan.

Set limits.


It's very easy to renege on the schedule that you set for yourself. "I'll just finish cleaning up this room," or "I'll just make a few more phone calls" can easily turn into moving all of the furniture around in the house or working very late into the night. These extreme actions in one area leave you lacking in another and scrambling to make up for it the next day. Learn how to complete the task, be satisfied with the accomplishment and move on to the next thing. Between family and friends, there will be enough pressing issues that get you a little off track from time to time. Maintain the schedule when you can and it will help in the long run.


Live in the moment.

You are more effective when you are focused. Reading emails while watching a movie with the family takes away from the family time. What would it be like if everybody in the room was doing it? Inform close friends of your at home "work" hours. You can't talk to them any more after work than you could during the day. You're busy. Give your company the respect that it deserves. Multi-tasking is not always a good thing.

Happy Holidays! May your upcoming year be 2011 times better than your last!

Adrienne Adams is an author and business coach. She is passionate about helping women earn an income doing what they love to do -- and are probably already doing for free!

Would you like more information? Visit www.itsnotenoughtodream.com

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Are you google-licious?--Three Things Entrepreneurs Can Learn From Google

It seems fitting that Labor Day signals the start of a new work season. The kids go back to school and adults say goodbye to the long days of summer, hunkering down and keeping busy until more vacation time with the family rolls around during the winter holiday season.

In business, being busy doesn't always mean progress. We can get stuck in 'busy mode,' and our efforts don't yield results. How many times have we researched the same thing over and over again? Edited and re-edited an article? Planned an event until we couldn't plan anymore?

Upon coming back from the long weekend, I was at a loss as to what I should write about. I headed to Google's homepage to do a search for one reason or another and was instantly entertained by a 'google ' of colorful bubbles. And then. It hit me.

Here are three things that entrepreneurs can learn from Google to ensure that their labor is productive. Enjoy!

--- Be YOUnique. It keeps people coming back to see what you're doing next.
Okay. I know that I'm not the only one who checks out Google during the holidays to see how they've managed to manipulate their letters to make a cool picture. We lose something when we try to be like someone else. Whatever flair, talent, know-how, or individuality that you possess, use it! It helps you to stand out from the pack. People remember when you do something well. They also remember when you do something different.

---- Get involved.
So, this is tied to the really cool pictures. Google partnered with the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum and started a competition called Doodle 4 Google. Talented students K-12 had the opportunity to enter and have their drawing displayed on Google's homepage. The winner this year received a $15,000 college scholarship, a netbook computer and a $25,000 technology grant for a new computer lab at her school. We reap what we sow. Giving is essential.

---- Diversify.
I've had a Gmail account for some years now. I also have a Google Voice number. My sister loves her Google Chrome toolbar and is trying to sell me on Google Talk. You get the point, I'm sure. Offer your clients a service or product. Make sure it's great. Then, figure out what else they need and offer it. Make sure that's great too. Repeat. Multiple income streams are what millionaires are made of.


Visit us at www.itsnotenoughtodream.com where we encourage women in entrepreneurship and faith!

Monday, August 16, 2010

Morning Cup of Inspiration: Moms--- Turn Excuses Into Something You Can Use

I am a wife. I'm also a mother of five. My days are filled with cleaning, running errands, paying bills and driving the children to and from their various extracurricular activities. Evenings will find me doing laundry, cooking, helping with homework, combing hair and preparing to do it all over again the next day.

I know what it's like to be sitting on a vision, and not be able to work toward it because we're bogged down with the responsibilities of everyday life. I've gotten over the hump. You can too. Read on to learn how you can easily turn those excuses into something that you can use.


--I don't have the time.

We choose how we spend our time. We make the time to do daily tasks. It's three times as important that we make the time to do what needs to be done so that we can get ahead.

When I first began to write my business plans into my daily schedule, some things had to go. A few times a week, I wouldn't turn on the television or pick up the phone because I would researching or writing. I did it until it became a habit and now, I have to make myself sit down and watch a television show. Each time that I sat down to work on what is now my completed novel, I would remind myself that I was spending time working on something that would add value to my life and as a result, the lives of my husband and children. It's important that we break out of the day-to-day monotony and make it a point to dedicate time to those things that will enrich our lives.

Positive Affirmation: What I'm spending my time on is positively impacting the lives and future of myself and my family.


--I don't have the money.

"Empty pockets never held anyone back. Only empty heads and empty hearts can do that." --Norman Vincent Peale

Where there's a will, there's a way. When we hear entrepreneurial success stories, rarely do we hear about the million dollars that someone had to invest in their business to get it started. Start with what you have where you are and move on faith. My sister and I started working together six years ago in different states, around my hectic mom schedule and her nine-to-five job. We endured through my pregnancies, breastfeeding, my sister's graduation from college and her eventual cross-country move and the death of our mother. My husband used our mortgage money to buy my first shipment of books. I had to get out there and sell like a mad woman to get the money back. There were plenty of times that we had to come out of our own pockets. We've had to pay business and licensing fees, purchase marketing materials and there have been too many miscellaneous expenses to count.

Now, with a book tour under my belt, a flourishing small business circle for women, a magazine that debuts this fall and my sister working next to me in our own office space, I have to say that it was worth every single penny.

Positive Affirmation: I am making an investment in myself, my family, and our future.


--My children will suffer if I have to take time away from them to work on my business.

As a stay at home mom, this is an excuse that I struggled with for a long time. But what I discovered was that many of the things that I'm teaching my children can be demonstrated through my journey of faith and entrepreneurship. They see me living God's purpose for my life and standing on His promises. I don't just tell them they can reach for the stars. They see me reaching and hitting the mark. They are learning about vision, work, goal-setting, marketing, customer service and writing their own paychecks. I'm teaching them that we can work hard and play harder.

Positive Affirmation: My children don't have to look any further than their own home to find a role model.



Visit www.itsnotenoughtodream.com and schedule a membership appointment to learn more about how you can go from dreaming a dream to creating your future.