How solopreneurs can break free from a corporate mindset
You quit the 9-to-5 to have more control over your time . You wanted flexibility , autonomy , and the freedom to structure your days around your life instead of someone elseâs schedule. Yet here you are, apologizing to a client for not responding to a message immediately. Feeling guilty on a Tuesday afternoon when youâve only worked for four hours that day. Checking Slack at 9:00 PM because thatâs been your routine for most of your working career. Many solopreneurs donât realize theyâve inadvertently recreated corporate life until theyâre already living it. You traded a demanding boss for a dozen demanding clients. You swapped mandatory meetings for back-to-back Zoom calls. That freedom you craved? Doesnât exist in your solopreneur world. To find actual freedom as a solopreneur, you have to recognize that youâre following a corporate playbook â and make a conscious decision to change. Identify your âcorporate workdayâ habits Corporate habits are deeply ingrained. Weâve worked that way for so long that they just feel like âhow work is supposed to be done.â For me, it was the instant email (or Slack) response. In my corporate job, quick replies signaled that I was on top of things, engaged, and reliable. When I started freelancing, I brought that habit with me. If a client sent me an email, Iâd reply immediately â even if I was in the middle of the grocery store. Hereâs something to try: What would happen if you took an entire day off, unplanned? Not a vacation day you scheduled weeks in advance, but a spontaneous decision to step away from your client work on a Wednesday. Does that break your clientsâ expectations around your response time? Does the idea make you feel a bit squeamish? Those feelings are your corporate habits talking. To embrace your freedom, you have to undo the rigid 9-5, âalways onâ mentality. Structure your work for outcomes, not time spent Corporate life is built around a 40-hour workweek. Even if you finish your work in less time, youâre often expected to fill the bucket of the workweek with more work. As a solopreneur, if you price your work by the hour, youâre invariably still tied to the amount of time you work â which has its limits. Youâll have more freedom if you can earn the same amount (or more!) even if you work less. Clients pay you for your expertise and outcomes, not the number of hours you put in. Over time, youâll get more efficient, and each project will require fewer hours. Youâll have a shorter workweek (if you choose), and can break free from a 9-5 schedule even more. Build systems that protect your boundaries Corporate life often has no boundaries. Someone else dictates your workload, schedules your meetings, and approves your PTO. Iâll never forget the time a CEO texted me on a Saturday morning because he found a typo on a blog post and wanted me to fix it right that minute. No boundaries. When...
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