Don't start with a business idea and force your life to conform. Instead, define how you want to spend your days—your desired lifestyle. Then, operate within that box to find a business model that achieves your financial and impact goals. This ensures long-term alignment and fulfillment.
When your business no longer feels aligned, trust your instincts to make a change. The required pivot may be disruptive and risky, especially if the current model is commercially successful, but your internal wisdom is the most reliable guide for long-term fulfillment and integrity.
Entrepreneurs often chase novelty and chaos. However, building a predictable, system-driven, 'boring' business is a strategic choice. It eliminates work chaos, freeing up mental and emotional energy for a richer, more creative, and impactful personal life.
Canva CEO Melanie Perkins plans using "Column B" thinking: envision a perfect, magical future state without constraints, then work backward to build a ladder of small, actionable steps to get there. This contrasts with "Column A" thinking, which starts with current resources and limits vision.
Many founders treat their startup as a temporary vehicle to an exit, which can lead to an identity crisis after they "win." A healthier approach is to build a company as a "way of life"—a system of activities you want to engage in for the long term, regardless of specific outcomes.
Instead of adding more goals, use a three-part filter to audit them. A goal must support your nervous system (peace), meaningfully advance the business (profit), or align with your desired impact (purpose). This ruthless audit eliminates energy-draining tasks that were never truly yours.