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You are here: Home / Female Entrepreneurs / Why Consultants Suck

Why Consultants Suck

September 13, 2013 By Leona Charles

I know what you’re thinking…I’m a consultant so either this is a self-loathing mea culpa or I have a point. Bear with me because I do in fact have a point. The thing about consultants is that we generally are really skilled at something, that’s why we’re consultants. But we are workers, fixers, problem solvers. We aren’t business owners and that is something that I have come up against recently, so here’s what we need to do if we are going to stop being consultants and start being business owners.

You can’t work the contract and run the business

I know that we are small businesses but the truth is that we can’t keep thinking small if we want to succeed. We have to have a game plan, a future strategy that will keep on us on target. If we always think in terms of us keeping the lights on, we will never move past that point. So work on the project for now, but focus on securing the contracts and building a staff that can complete them.

You are not a business owner if you move from one 40 hour contract to another

I have sat through many heated ‘conversations’ about consultants being business owners, and the one thing I know is this… You cannot do everything. If you are working a full-time gig (project or not) you aren’t working on your business. If you only accept things that are 40 hours you are looking for employment not projects. Most of the consultants that I know chose to be consultants because of the flexibility and because we worked projects; so if you are working full-time anywhere, temporarily or not, you are an employee. Plain and simple.

Growing a business is a full-time job

Everything you’ve given up for this dream, everything you’ve lost and everything you’ve gained makes this something you cannot do part-time. It’s like poker, either you’re all in or you’ve folded. You can’t take gradual steps to committing to your business.  Do or don’t but for God’s sake make a decision. You can do whatever you want, whatever works for your life but know that you will have to do something. You will have to choose.

Being a business owner is a lot of things, but easy it’s not. People will judge your worth based on nothing solid but that won’t stick if you’ve made the commitment to see this thing out. To just be bold and go all in. It’s scary and it’s intoxicating, but you know what? It’s so worth it.

Leona Charles

Leona Charles began SPC Business Consulting Ltd in 2007 to help businesses of all sizes get the most out of their performance. As a Six Sigma Black Belt, she brings a fresh and unique approach to Operations Consulting drawing on her 10 years of combined experience in law enforcement, government contracting, property management, customer service, non profit industry, and education.

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Filed Under: Female Entrepreneurs Tagged With: business leadership, business women, female business owners, female CEOs, Female Entrepreneurs, female entrepreneurss, Female Executives, female leaders, female leadership tips, female small business owners, females business owners, females in management, Leadership, small business owners, small business tips, Women Business Owners, Women In Leadership, Women On Business

Comments

  1. Len says

    September 22, 2013 at 9:51 am

    Valid point and well stated. I don’t think, however, that this is an issue confined to consulting practices. Gerber’s e Myth books detail the challenge that all entrepreneurs face in balancing “working on the business with working in the business”.

  2. Ted Garrison says

    September 24, 2013 at 10:49 am

    Great article and very truthful. Michael Gerber wrote the E-Myth in 1980’s and said that most businesses are merely working in their business – not on it. They are doomed because of that – or at least never reach their potential. Someone has to do the marketing and someone has to do the consulting. It’s hard to do both.

  3. Leona Charles says

    September 25, 2013 at 9:54 am

    Hi Ted,

    Thank you for the comment and the praise! You make a great point. You know at first I wasn’t sure about the book, but as I have grown and encountered the very challenges the book talks about it has been one heck of a resource.

  4. Richard says

    October 21, 2013 at 8:31 am

    I just want to share one thing, since this article is all about business owner and consulting.I am a small business owner, and was in a sinking boat, thought to hire consultant to get a fresh perspective on things, but it turned out to be a bigger hole in my sinking boat(business) , the i decided to take up a consultant training myself to take my own consultant decisions and get the knowledge i was seeking from other consultants.Now i am in a better position.

  5. Leona Charles says

    October 21, 2013 at 4:25 pm

    Hi Richard,

    you touch on a great point, would you be willing to share how the consultant wasn’t able to help you?

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