What you don't know might kill you...or your business
I started hunting in my 20s. I didn’t have anyone to teach me, so I did a lot of my own research and learned as I went. I was young, scrappy, and didn’t have a lot of money, and my gear reflected that.
As a runner with a very slow resting heart rate, I very quickly learned how cold it was to sit still for hours in the woods in frigid temperatures. So logically I began layering up. Looking somewhat like the Michelin Man in camo, I’d wobble out to the woods, climb a tree using my climbing stand, and hunker down.
One particular cold December morning, I teetered on the edge of hypothermia. It was no laughing matter. I almost didn’t have the strength to climb down the tree. What I 'didn't know' put me in a very dangerous position.
Through additional conversations and research, I would later find out the very thing I was doing to protect myself was the very thing escalating me toward a potentially dangerous outcome. Fully layered with the wrong materials, I’d built up a sweat heading to the stand. Because of the lack of breathability and the wrong materials, the sweat stayed against my skin, negating the protection of the many layers I wore.
"...the lack of breathability and the wrong materials, the sweat stayed against my skin, negating the protection of the many layers I wore."
What started as countless layers of cotton is now just 3; wool base, fleece, and jumpsuit. Thanks to feedback from other more experienced hunters, my experience and comfort are now completely different. Counter-intuitively, especially when it’s really cold, I travel to my spot with minimal gear on, allowing myself to completely cool down before layering up in the stand. I now commonly sit comfortably for the entire day.
I watch many small business CEOs wrestle with similar conundrums. They have a general idea of what needs to be done, but lack the experience and expertise to understand the pitfalls. Well-intentioned, they move forward, often causing more harm than good.
"Well-intentioned, they move forward, often causing more harm than good. "
But there are things every leader can do to dramatically increase their odds of success.
- Surround yourself with other leaders in similar positions and at a variety of points in their business journeys - The power of a trusted group with an expansive skillset can’t be overstated. It’s a resource you can lean on, candidly share details with, and trust to challenge your assumptions and fill in gaps in your expertise. Whether a formal group or not, EVERY leader needs to surround themselves with other leaders they can learn with.
- Get specific about what you’re trying to do - If you don’t have a north star, no amount of talented individuals can help propel you forward. Intelligence without a strategy and supporting culture is, well, just intelligence. Get specific about where you’re going and what you need to get there…because then you have something specific to discuss and get feedback on.
- Get intentional about going there - Define your path. Define the timeline. Define your successful outcomes. Measure them. Report on them. Be transparent with your supporting leadership group/mentors/peers to drive your own accountability.
Leadership is hard, as is building a strong and growing business. You don’t have to have all the answers and you don’t have to journey alone.
Remember—a successful future transaction starts now. Worst case, you hold onto it and end up with a stronger, more valuable, and more predictable business. If I can help, let me know.






