CEO Stories: Entrepreneurship, Business Strategy, and Online Marketing

CEO Stories 054: Cutting the Excess From Your Business

09.04.2018 - By Kate Boyd, Virtual CMO and Launch Strategist at Cobblestone Creative Co.Play

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Alison Beierlein used to only plan in the short term, but a problem abroad shifted the way she plans, makes decisions, and -- now -- executes in her business too.   At about the age of 19, on a rebellious path, she decided she did not want to end up like her mom spending all her time working a very boring business job. In 10th grade she learned Germany had free college.  She knew this was her path. She learned to speak German so she could move over there, take the tests, and enroll in school.   She had no idea what she wanted to do, and on a whim she decided she would major in horticulture.  After a year of studying this, she had an epiphany, “What in the world am I doing? My immature teenage rebellion led me to this stupid choice.”  She thought she could quit now and lose a year of her studies or continue. She continued in this degree getting the highest grades possible. She got a job in the field but always knew her skills could probably be used better elsewhere.  She ended up moving up the ladder into quality control and actually liked the business side. After all of the negative questions in her head, she decided to push through, be all in, and prove to herself she could do it.   This has been the number one lesson that helped her in her business.  Being all in is the driving force to keep her going every day. Looking back she has impressed herself with the things that she accomplished without ever having a mentor or a guide growing up.   After all of these times of having just a short term goal and not knowing what to do next, she has learned to focus more on the details and ask the question “What comes next?” She uses a decision making tree to help.  What is the motivation behind the yes or no?  If it is fear based, then what’s the worst that can happen?  She continues this process to get to the root of the decision making to keep her decisions from being based on self-conscious feelings. Coming from a place of lacking self-confidence, she knows she has to check in with herself on a regular basis.   Take the emotions out of it when making a decision.  If you really don’t need it, don’t buy it! Look at the actual results and numbers from purchases.  Take out the excess!

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