Have you ever stopped to apply the strengths test to your business task list? In other words, actually asked yourself whether or not you’re any good at web design, or making freebies, or course editing?
You know you have to do those things. You’re on board with all that.
What you *don’t* know is how much time it’s going to take you to update your website when every time you log into WordPress, you’re squinching your eyes shut against the blaring notifications that this many plug-ins are broken. (Sure sign you’re not an IT person!)
Want to guess what the cure is?
Outsourcing *some* of your essential biz to-do tasks – like all the ones you feel like the dumb student in class about.
I was just talking to one of my clients about this, and here’s what I told her:
Look how much biz work you can get rid of when you allow yourself to hire help and NOT force yourself to be good at everything! (Unbusy business for the win!)
Insane, right? Yet how often do we forget that this tool is at our disposal?
- You need a website, yes. But you don’t have to code it yourself.
- You need lead magnet templates, definitely. But you don’t have to sit there in Canva, struggling to make something semi-professional from scratch.
- You need each video lesson in your program edited, for sure. But who said you had to do it yourself?
Lean on a professional – in another business – to do some of this for you. (Preferable the stuff that you just can’t seem to get right, no matter how many hours you pour into it. That’s a huge red flag that you need to outsource, right there.)
And what’s going to be left after you get some help with these things?
All the biz tasks you’re either good at and love, or you’re pretty decent at. THAT, you can do.
What’s going to change in your business when you buy that website template plus installation fee, or hire a one-off graphic designer to make you a course workbook template, so you never have to do that again?
Let’s get you that unbusy business to-do list – emails, graphics, and systems included – and get you on your merry way to a work week you *actually* enjoy.