Taking Control of Your Business Sikeston MO

If you're married to your business, take my advice: Get a divorce. Your business doesn't need a husband; it needs someone to be the boss.

Local Companies

4Semo Home Improvements & Remodeling
(573) 472-3900
Sikeston, MO
Lanyon Phillip D
(816) 941-9085
11910 Pennsylvania Ave
Kansas City, MO
Bill's Painting
(573) 374-1701
283 Purvis Rd
Sunrise Beach, MO
Reasonable Construction
(314) 382-2200
7322 Natural Bridge Rd
Saint Louis, MO
Consolidated Construction Group Inc
(314) 647-9077
2719 Sutton Blvd
Saint Louis, MO
Seward Bill Seamless
(417) 673-2215
6550 County Rd 200
Webb City, MO
Precision Decks & Framing
(816) 363-5998
Kansas City, MO
Maintenance Solutions of Kc
(816) 801-8190
12402 NW Porter Rd
Kansas City, MO
St Clair Corporation
(573) 442-1183
1400 Heriford Rd Ste 106
Columbia, MO
Van Cleave Construction
(816) 390-7976
Saint Joseph, MO


If you're married to your business, take my advice: Get a divorce. Your business doesn't need a husband; it needs someone to be the boss.

Marriages are for partners; businesses are for bosses. (I'm talking about sole owners here — partnerships are a different matter.) Being in a marriage means making decisions together with a partner; owning a business by yourself means you're in charge. No one takes the same risks, no one has equal responsibility. The buck stops at your door and no one else's. An employee who can't listen to the boss can't be part of the business.

By the time I opened my design/build company, I had learned what not to do from previous jobs. I knew that the only way to assemble a strong team was to create a structured company. I wanted procedures to be the backbone of the business environment, so I laid out the rules and then did the unthinkable: I demanded that everyone follow them.

Friend to Friend

I was a boss before I was a friend. My employees didn't have to like me, they just had to follow my rules. That's not easy in an industry where we often hire our buddies and relatives to staff a company. It's not that these people don't make good employees, but the big unknown is whether someone accustomed to being your pal outside of work will follow your orders when it comes to business. The key is to establish clear rules from the outset that distinguish the business relationship from the friendship.

Click here to read full article from Remodeling


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