Fix My Business

I Thought I'd Have This Figured Out By Now

10 min · 14. juli 2026
episode I Thought I'd Have This Figured Out By Now cover

Description

Joe writes: "I'm seven months in. I thought I'd have this figured out by now. I'm working harder than ever, and the results aren't there. Is this normal?" Yes. Welcome to the muddy mile. The hardest part isn't starting—it's sustaining. The newness is gone. The initial excitement is gone. You're in the grind. The lag: The results from today's effort might take months to appear. But if you stop and restart, you're back at zero. The Gap and the Gain: Dan Sullivan's concept. Stop measuring forward to the goal. Measure backward to where you started. That's the gain. The lie: The startup opportunists say you'll crush it from the get-go. They don't tell you about the muddy mile. The physics: Momentum takes time. A rocket starts slow. A plane builds speed. You're building the foundation. The prescription: Lower your expectations on the timeline. Raise your expectations on daily effort. Ask: What can I do today that keeps me moving toward the goal? The lacrosse story: Scott's son was playing lacrosse. The team had the ball, approached the goal, and froze. A dad on the sidelines yelled: "Move your feet." They started running. That's the answer—don't freeze. Move your feet. The close: You're right where you need to be. This is why only 6% of the population own businesses. Keep moving. Got a business question? Ask Scott here: scotttodd.net/ask [https://www.scotttodd.net/ask]

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Fix My Business community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

74 episodes

episode I Thought I'd Have This Figured Out By Now artwork

I Thought I'd Have This Figured Out By Now

Joe writes: "I'm seven months in. I thought I'd have this figured out by now. I'm working harder than ever, and the results aren't there. Is this normal?" Yes. Welcome to the muddy mile. The hardest part isn't starting—it's sustaining. The newness is gone. The initial excitement is gone. You're in the grind. The lag: The results from today's effort might take months to appear. But if you stop and restart, you're back at zero. The Gap and the Gain: Dan Sullivan's concept. Stop measuring forward to the goal. Measure backward to where you started. That's the gain. The lie: The startup opportunists say you'll crush it from the get-go. They don't tell you about the muddy mile. The physics: Momentum takes time. A rocket starts slow. A plane builds speed. You're building the foundation. The prescription: Lower your expectations on the timeline. Raise your expectations on daily effort. Ask: What can I do today that keeps me moving toward the goal? The lacrosse story: Scott's son was playing lacrosse. The team had the ball, approached the goal, and froze. A dad on the sidelines yelled: "Move your feet." They started running. That's the answer—don't freeze. Move your feet. The close: You're right where you need to be. This is why only 6% of the population own businesses. Keep moving. Got a business question? Ask Scott here: scotttodd.net/ask [https://www.scotttodd.net/ask]

14. juli 202610 min
episode I Don't Have the Cash—Partner or Borrow? artwork

I Don't Have the Cash—Partner or Borrow?

Tony writes: "I found a deal, but I don't have the cash. Should I bring on a partner or borrow the money? How do you decide?" The reframe: This isn't a finance question. It's a control question. Borrowing (debt): * You keep 100% ownership * You owe payments regardless of performance * Lender doesn't care if the deal works—they want their money back * Risk: Deal fails, you still owe When to borrow: When the cash flow covers the debt and you have confidence in the deal. If you're confident, you want full control. Partnering (equity): * You give up ownership and control * No payments if the deal doesn't work * Partner shares the risk—and the upside * Risk: You're married to this person for the life of the deal When to partner: When you need expertise, connections, or credibility—not just cash. Scott's story: Considered a retail strip center. Talked to an experienced partner. Numbers didn't work. Walked away. Had the numbers worked, he would've partnered for the expertise. The diagnostic question: Do you need capital—or capital and capacity? Cash only = borrow. Cash plus expertise = partner. The warning: A bad partner is worse than bad debt. Debt ends when you pay it off. A bad partnership drags on for years. Treat it like a marriage: * Get to know them first * Written agreements * Exit terms, breakup terms * "You need a prenup" The close: "They're great until they're not." Got a business question? Ask Scott here: scotttodd.net/ask [https://www.scotttodd.net/ask]

9. juli 20268 min
episode My Spouse Doesn't Support My Business—What Do I Do? artwork

My Spouse Doesn't Support My Business—What Do I Do?

Erin writes: "My husband supports me, but he really doesn't get it. He doesn't understand why I'm working nights and weekends on something that isn't paying off yet. I feel like I'm losing him." This is one of the hardest parts of entrepreneurship that most people don't talk about. Scott's story: Built a business for 17 months while suspecting his corporate job was ending. When it did, his wife asked: "Are you sending out resumes?" She didn't freak out—but she had concerns. The belief shift: Your spouse is not the enemy. They are scared. Their resistance is often about love—disguised as doubt. The Visibility Trap in relationships: They can't see what you see. They hear about your business—they don't live it. Money leaves the account. When is it coming back? What not to do: * Don't pitch them on the dream before understanding their concern (Episode 70 callback) * Don't hide the business—that breeds resentment * Don't make them the villain What to do: * Show them what's happening—talk about small wins, tangible progress * Give them a role, even a small one The pilot analogy: Passengers feel out of control. Give them a job—"help me look for other planes." Now they feel involved. Same with your spouse. The ask: "Can we just go 90 days on this? Let's revisit then." The hard truth: Some spouses will never get on board. You have to decide what matters most. The resistance from people who care about you piles onto the resistance you're already facing. Scott's perspective: "I would want to protect the relationship more than the business." Got a business question? Ask Scott here: scotttodd.net/ask [https://www.scotttodd.net/ask]

7. juli 202612 min
episode I Can't Afford Ads—How Do I Get Leads? artwork

I Can't Afford Ads—How Do I Get Leads?

Derek writes: "I'm bootstrapping. I can't afford paid ads. How do I get leads without a marketing budget?" The belief shift: Marketing isn't about money. It's about attention. You can buy it or earn it. The trade-off: Time or money. When you're bootstrapping, you trade time. Scott's Craigslist story: Free platform, but not free—it cost time. Wrote the ads. Posted the ads. Played whack-a-mole with Craigslist's spam filters. Today it's Facebook Marketplace and groups. Same concept. Other ways to earn attention: Direct outreach (LinkedIn), referrals, partnerships, content creation. The Visibility Trap: You don't need more money. You need to know who you're talking to. Most people try to talk to everybody—and talk to nobody. The ladies' night analogy: Before dating apps, bars had ladies' nights. Women got in free. Men paid the cover. That's how paid platforms work—you're paying to access the room where your customers already are. When you move to paid: Pick the cheapest option. Lowest commitment. Start there. The prescription: Pick one channel. One audience. One problem. Go deep until you get it dialed in. Scott's example: This show lives in the muddy mile—people who've launched but are figuring out how to scale. That's the niche. That's going deep. Got a business question? Ask Scott here: scotttodd.net/ask [https://www.scotttodd.net/ask]

2. juli 20269 min
episode I Hate Selling—How Do I Get Better at This? artwork

I Hate Selling—How Do I Get Better at This?

Lena writes: "I know I need to sell, but I hate it. I feel pushy. How do I get better at this?" Scott's confession: For years, he hated selling too. He did it to pay the bills, but he didn't love it. The belief shift: Sales isn't convincing. It's solving problems. Where the sleaze comes from: Pitching before diagnosing. If you start selling before you understand the problem, it feels pushy—because it is. The reframe: You're not asking for money. You're offering to help someone solve a problem they already have. That's what doctors do. The financial advisor story: Pitching bonds didn't work. Asking "Are you hoping to grow your money for future generations?" did. The shift: stop pitching products, start diagnosing problems. You already sell every day. When a family member asks for advice, you give it. You even push them a little. The only thing missing is the money exchange. The Starbucks exercise: If you're terrified of asking for money, go to Starbucks and ask: "Can I have a discount on this because I'm having a rough day?" The word "because" increases compliance. Practice asking for something. The prescription: * Stop pitching. * Start asking: What's going on? What have you tried? What would solving this mean to you? The close: It's a mindset problem first. Solve that, and your business takes off. Got a business question? Ask Scott here: scotttodd.net/ask [https://www.scotttodd.net/ask]

30. juni 202611 min