In this episode of our eCommerce Podcast, host Matt Edmundson sits down with David Braithwaite, a strategic coach and entrepreneurial expert, to discuss the crucial aspects of successful ecommerce entrepreneurship. They delve into the art of mastering time, money, relationships, and purpose, offering a wealth of knowledge for both budding and experienced entrepreneurs.
Show Notes:
1.The Four Key Freedoms in Entrepreneurship:
2. Entrepreneurial Challenges and Solutions:
3. Practical Tips and Wisdom:
Listen now and transform your entrepreneurial experience! 🎧🚀
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Hello and welcome to the ecommerce Podcast with
Matt Edmundson:me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:Now this is a show all about helping you deliver ecommerce wow.
Matt Edmundson:Oh yes, it is.
Matt Edmundson:And to help us do just that, today I'm chatting with the mesmerizing,
Matt Edmundson:no doubt, David Braithwaite.
Matt Edmundson:We're going to get into all things entrepreneurship, which
Matt Edmundson:I'm super looking forward to.
Matt Edmundson:We're just going to chat what it is to run a business, all those things.
Matt Edmundson:We're gonna get into them.
Matt Edmundson:Oh, yes, we are.
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Matt Edmundson:Since about 2002, which in digital years, if you do digital years like dog years.
Matt Edmundson:is a really long time.
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Matt Edmundson:Okay, let's talk about David.
Matt Edmundson:A leap of faith taker since 1994.
Matt Edmundson:And a business wizard with a zest for life's small movements, or small
Matt Edmundson:movements, should I say, get that one right owner of Citrus Financial Management
Matt Edmundson:and co owner of three other businesses.
Matt Edmundson:He is all about empathy, turning clients dreams into reality and grooving to the
Matt Edmundson:behind the scenes stories that shape us.
Matt Edmundson:He is a strategic coach, veteran and a believer in the power of story.
Matt Edmundson:Love that.
Matt Edmundson:David's just the guy to guide you and I to the best versions of ourselves
Matt Edmundson:all the while keeping it real and having a lot of fun in the process.
Matt Edmundson:David, great to have you on the show, man.
Matt Edmundson:How are we doing today?
David Braithwaite:Very good, thank you.
David Braithwaite:And I love the fact that you say it's all about fun as well, because
David Braithwaite:business should be, if it's not fun, you're probably in the wrong business.
David Braithwaite:So I love the intro.
David Braithwaite:So thank you for being so kind.
Matt Edmundson:Oh, no, great to have you all the way from Sevenoaks as well
Matt Edmundson:in the good old South of England there.
David Braithwaite:yeah, yep, all the way down here, but it's handy for me.
David Braithwaite:It's an easy commute into London to go and see people and for the coaching that I do.
David Braithwaite:But equally, if I'm flying anywhere, everywhere is under an hour, the coast
David Braithwaite:is under an hour, and it just works.
David Braithwaite:So I haven't moved.
David Braithwaite:I was born, bred, grown up and always lived here.
David Braithwaite:So I'm very happy here and very proud to be a Kent boy.
Matt Edmundson:Kent boy.
Matt Edmundson:Absolutely.
Matt Edmundson:And why would you not be?
Matt Edmundson:Why would you not be?
Matt Edmundson:I'm as we were talking before we hit the record button, I'm here
Matt Edmundson:in sunny Liverpool, actually very stinkingly windy Liverpool.
Matt Edmundson:The sky is clear, but the wind is going crazy.
Matt Edmundson:I don't know whether you've got this storm going on down in the South of England
Matt Edmundson:at the moment, but it is crazy here.
David Braithwaite:Yeah, we had it all last night and at one point I thought.
David Braithwaite:Was it the Film Wizard of Oz, isn't it?
David Braithwaite:Dorothy?
Matt Edmundson:She just takes off,
David Braithwaite:exactly, so we could have been doing this podcast live from
David Braithwaite:Kansas, maybe, I don't know, but it certainly was a bit blowy, it's fair
Matt Edmundson:Yeah,
David Braithwaite:was that was a windy day, but it's quite funny, isn't it?
David Braithwaite:I always think that no matter what's going on in The weather always wins.
David Braithwaite:It's always the boss, and it controls us more than we think a lot of the times,
David Braithwaite:and it dictates what we can and can't do.
David Braithwaite:But every now and again it just says, I'm the boss around here.
David Braithwaite:So it's an interesting reminder, as I look out over my camera and I can see
David Braithwaite:there's chairs from our little patio set and stuff have blown across the lawn.
David Braithwaite:It looks like there's been a fight outside at the moment.
Matt Edmundson:hopefully they don't disappear, if we have to just pause
Matt Edmundson:the show whilst you run out and collect them, do let me know, wow, great to have
Matt Edmundson:you with us, joining us, and we said there in the intro, David, that you've
Matt Edmundson:been a business, I think the phrase was a business wizard since 1994, is that?
Matt Edmundson:Is that when you started your own venture for the first time?
David Braithwaite:Yeah, it was.
David Braithwaite:I was always I was never very good at school, to start off with I didn't see
David Braithwaite:the point of school being truthful.
David Braithwaite:It's probably hard for people to explain, but I was there and I had
David Braithwaite:lots of friends of mine all said I'm going to be, I don't know, a
David Braithwaite:solicitor or a lawyer, so therefore I've got to do these qualifications,
David Braithwaite:and then I've got to do this, and everything else, so they knew a path.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
David Braithwaite:I had no path, but I did quite fascinate myself with,
David Braithwaite:if you want something doing, often do it yourself, or make it happen.
David Braithwaite:So at one point, I was talking about this with somebody in the office the
David Braithwaite:other day, I think I had four jobs.
David Braithwaite:So I had a full time job during the week, I still had a paper round during
David Braithwaite:the week, I had a Saturday early morning job in the kitchen, and a Saturday
David Braithwaite:afternoon job in an electrical store.
David Braithwaite:So I was all about trying.
David Braithwaite:Yeah I was very busy, but I was all about trying to earn money because my
David Braithwaite:most important thing when I was that sort of late teens was got to buy a car.
David Braithwaite:And I was always under the, my parents were never ones to give it away, it
David Braithwaite:was always if you want something, go out, work for it, earn it, and
David Braithwaite:then A- you'll appreciate it more and B- you'll learn about life.
David Braithwaite:Some people may have said it's child cruelty but I was really happy with that.
David Braithwaite:I went off and earned the money that I could and also helped with other things
David Braithwaite:along the way like my grandfather was a bit of a wheeler dealer, he worked for
David Braithwaite:a car company down on the south coast and used to bring back these secondhand
David Braithwaite:cars that I could then do up and sell.
David Braithwaite:And we split the profit 50/ 50.
David Braithwaite:So I was always one of these people that was geared around, forge
David Braithwaite:your own path, do your own thing.
David Braithwaite:So as soon as I could leave school, I did and had various employed positions, but
David Braithwaite:never quite found my way in any of them and almost I think probably people that
David Braithwaite:are self employed already know this you aren't, you're unemployable pretty much
David Braithwaite:so I think that from my point of view I found my own path and fell into financial
David Braithwaite:services really almost by accident so I like to say that I'm an entrepreneur
David Braithwaite:first I just happen to specialize in financial services if that makes sense.
David Braithwaite:So I never set out to be the best of everything in terms of financial
David Braithwaite:planning and oh I'm running my business.
David Braithwaite:It was always for me the other way around.
David Braithwaite:It was having something and ultimately as well, it sounds a bit soppy, I wanted
David Braithwaite:to do something because I was never that academic at school with exams
David Braithwaite:that would make my mum and dad proud.
David Braithwaite:So that I had something that I could say, but look, I wasn't good at school.
David Braithwaite:I was a bit rubbish, but I've done this and now they do
David Braithwaite:tell me that they're proud.
David Braithwaite:It's taken 29 years maybe to get there, but it's good.
David Braithwaite:Everyone's got their reasons, but that was one of mine.
Matt Edmundson:fantastic, wow, it's interesting, it's a fascinating story
Matt Edmundson:because listening to you talk about that and, the work in the four jobs
Matt Edmundson:and the hustle and the growing, the ability to graft I think about the
Matt Edmundson:environment my kids are growing up in now.
Matt Edmundson:My eldest is 22.
Matt Edmundson:My youngest is 16.
Matt Edmundson:And Zach's in the middle of those ages.
Matt Edmundson:And I look at the timeframe that they've grown in and actually there's a lot said
Matt Edmundson:about Gen Z, which is what they would be or Gen Z to our American cousins, but
Matt Edmundson:there's a lot said about that generation.
Matt Edmundson:One of the things that I've noticed about that generation is it is
Matt Edmundson:incredibly entrepreneurial, right?
Matt Edmundson:And more so than ever, people are starting side hustles, these sort of businesses
Matt Edmundson:where they do things on the side.
Matt Edmundson:It's become the sort of the thing to do in the modern world.
Matt Edmundson:And we'll get into that.
Matt Edmundson:I think when I was younger, entrepreneur was almost seen as a bad word.
Matt Edmundson:I don't know anybody that would have called themselves an entrepreneur, quite
Matt Edmundson:often they would, the people that I know that were in business would try and would
Matt Edmundson:call themselves a managing director.
Matt Edmundson:How we dressed it up, call themselves a managing director.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, which is really funny.
Matt Edmundson:Whereas now it's like a badge of honor.
Matt Edmundson:And I think it's interesting how times have changed.
Matt Edmundson:So when I was a kid like you had a lot of jobs.
Matt Edmundson:As my kids have grown up, I'm listening to you talk about your
Matt Edmundson:parents and saying they're brilliant because we've done that with our kids.
Matt Edmundson:We've, it's always easy to give them everything.
Matt Edmundson:It's harder not to when you've got the means to, I think.
Matt Edmundson:And actually just going, no, you've got to go earn some, I will pay
Matt Edmundson:half if I think it's worthwhile.
Matt Edmundson:Other than that, you've got to go figure it out.
Matt Edmundson:And I think it's taught them the value of a pound, for want of a better expression.
David Braithwaite:It definitely has.
David Braithwaite:I had an example literally this weekend.
David Braithwaite:My son is quite, he loves his photography.
David Braithwaite:He's 14.
David Braithwaite:He loves photography.
David Braithwaite:And he got a drone a couple of years ago that was quite
David Braithwaite:a decent investment to make.
David Braithwaite:And of course, now he wants a better one.
David Braithwaite:He was talking to me and I was explaining to him, Look, actually you
David Braithwaite:don't have to buy these things brand new, you can find them second hand on
David Braithwaite:auction websites and things like this.
David Braithwaite:So now, teaching him what's an auction.
David Braithwaite:And then he came to me and he said, Oh, I'm really interested in this
David Braithwaite:particular make and model of drone.
David Braithwaite:I said, Yeah, but you've got your other one there, you need to sell that.
David Braithwaite:He said, Yes, I'll sell that.
David Braithwaite:I said are you going to do that?
David Braithwaite:Yeah, I'm going to do that.
David Braithwaite:Then, during the week, I've got a message from him saying, Dad, can you bid on
David Braithwaite:this for me on this auction website?
David Braithwaite:I said, yeah, I can.
David Braithwaite:I said, who's paying for it though?
David Braithwaite:And he said I'll do it when I sell that, and I'm willing to do jobs
David Braithwaite:around the house to make up the difference, if you let me know.
David Braithwaite:And that's the difference, is that it wasn't a gimme.
David Braithwaite:It was look, I'll do it, but I recognise that there's work involved.
David Braithwaite:I've got to give something of myself.
David Braithwaite:Rather than just take and I think that he's also, he's grown up his whole
David Braithwaite:life with me, running my own business.
David Braithwaite:And I think it's become more natural, but as you say it's different now.
David Braithwaite:And I'm thinking as you were saying, that when people had their own
David Braithwaite:business before, maybe they were more.
David Braithwaite:Tradespeople or they had a shop.
David Braithwaite:And I think also what's changed is in here we are talking about
David Braithwaite:e-commerce, and the word ecommerce wasn't probably even around.
David Braithwaite:So 30 years ago it probably wasn't really invented.
David Braithwaite:Certainly the internet wasn't really there.
David Braithwaite:And the opportunities are there, but also the rate at which these kids, dare
David Braithwaite:I call them that, can get information, and things like the TikTok and Instagram,
David Braithwaite:all the, so they're seeing people earning money through different routes, off
David Braithwaite:their own back, than what was available to us before, things like YouTubers
David Braithwaite:that are making millions of pounds, it's like, what, even I don't understand
David Braithwaite:that, but he gets all of that, and it's a different world now, but the
David Braithwaite:speed at which you can get information, and you can find information, try
David Braithwaite:something, if it doesn't work, so what?
David Braithwaite:Move on to the next thing, because you've got a whole lifetime ahead.
David Braithwaite:It isn't a one and done, whereas I think it used to be, a lot with
David Braithwaite:my career originally, was what job are you going to go into?
David Braithwaite:I always remember my parents saying, go into banking, because
David Braithwaite:that's a secure job for life.
David Braithwaite:Really?
David Braithwaite:And you think now, you think, God, if I had taken that advice and got in
David Braithwaite:for the safe, steady job, actually, A- it would have been quite boring,
David Braithwaite:and B- probably actually not as secure as what they thought it would be.
David Braithwaite:I'm glad that I've found my own path, really.
David Braithwaite:But, yeah, but at the same time, it has to be a little bit of difficulty.
David Braithwaite:Otherwise, everyone would do it, we still need the employed people to be employed.
David Braithwaite:We still need the entrepreneurs out there trying things and pushing the boundaries.
David Braithwaite:And that's, the joy of life.
Matt Edmundson:No, absolutely.
Matt Edmundson:It's interesting, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:When you, people ask a lot about, they ask, I get asked
Matt Edmundson:a lot about entrepreneurship.
Matt Edmundson:In fact, I've got, I'm on a podcast later talking about entrepreneurship.
Matt Edmundson:And it fascinates me.
Matt Edmundson:This idea that entrepreneurs basically see a problem and they work hard to solve that
Matt Edmundson:problem, and that's what entrepreneurs do.
Matt Edmundson:And I think you've got to have a bit of grit to follow that through because
Matt Edmundson:it's not a straightforward path, right?
Matt Edmundson:And if you can do it and do it well, then there's a chance you can make money at it.
Matt Edmundson:If you don't do it and you, or you do it badly, there's a chance you're
Matt Edmundson:not going to make money at it.
Matt Edmundson:And it, it strikes me as we are seeing like I get asked a lot,
Matt Edmundson:should I start an online store?
Matt Edmundson:I want to do a side hustle.
Matt Edmundson:I want to do this.
Matt Edmundson:I've had enough of my job over here.
Matt Edmundson:I want to start to build my own business.
Matt Edmundson:And so now it's very much a case of why I can do that online.
Matt Edmundson:And it enables me to sort of transition over a period of time.
Matt Edmundson:I'm curious from your point of view, with the coaching and the stuff, the
Matt Edmundson:work you do with entrepreneurs, what are some of the habits that you see?
Matt Edmundson:Entrepreneurs, generally, or you could talk specifically about onlIne.
Matt Edmundson:What are some of the habits maybe that we have, which are formed well and which are
Matt Edmundson:good and we should carry on with them?
Matt Edmundson:What are some of the habits maybe we need to go away and find and work on?
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
David Braithwaite:I I think that what we do as entrepreneurs is very
David Braithwaite:good at solving people's problems.
David Braithwaite:We find a niche, we find something that needs to be solved.
David Braithwaite:And we're often very passionate about what it is that we do.
David Braithwaite:We absolutely believe in the product, the service, whatever it
David Braithwaite:is that we're doing, we get it.
David Braithwaite:It's almost like we're over enthusiastic, we want everybody
David Braithwaite:else to get it sometimes.
David Braithwaite:And I think you're right, a lot of the time with entrepreneurs,
David Braithwaite:we need a crisis to get excited.
David Braithwaite:We need something, we always need something to go, ah, I've solved, because
David Braithwaite:we love the fact that we came across this issue, and we've solved it, and
David Braithwaite:actually that gives us a great deal of feedback, for want of a better word, but
David Braithwaite:I would say one of the biggest problems, and this is where I started, because I
David Braithwaite:actually attended Strategic Coach, as a client before I became a coach in 2009.
David Braithwaite:And I took from my story I found that I was building the business,
David Braithwaite:but it felt a little bit like one of those hamster wheels that you get on.
David Braithwaite:And as I'm on it, it is turning faster and faster.
David Braithwaite:And I knew I wanted to scale the business, but I didn't know how.
David Braithwaite:Because going back to my school days.
David Braithwaite:I was not that bright and they don't teach entrepreneurship at schools, which
David Braithwaite:is a big thing that they should do.
David Braithwaite:They should say, here's all these careers or actually
David Braithwaite:entrepreneur is a career as well.
David Braithwaite:It tends to be what you want to do.
David Braithwaite:So I was going through I was actually due the first my son
David Braithwaite:was going to be born then.
David Braithwaite:And when you talk about scaling a business, it was like I wanted to do
David Braithwaite:more with what I had, and if you're thinking if I wanted to double my
David Braithwaite:turnover, you think I've got to double my hours, and that's crazy.
David Braithwaite:You've got to find a way of working more efficiently and hiring in
David Braithwaite:the right people, for example, to help you build the business.
David Braithwaite:So I think the biggest victim entrepreneurs is
David Braithwaite:that we are never finished.
David Braithwaite:There's always something we can be doing.
David Braithwaite:And I wanna make sure when my son came along that I didn't miss a
David Braithwaite:sports day that I was with him.
David Braithwaite:I needed to be with him.
David Braithwaite:And I wasn't in here working from seven till seven, seven days a week.
David Braithwaite:And you're permanently tired and worn out.
David Braithwaite:And I think what I see a lot from entrepreneurs as well is that we feel.
David Braithwaite:Often, when we need a break, it's almost like we've got to justify it.
David Braithwaite:I've worked so hard, I have to have some time off now.
David Braithwaite:We have to feel that we earn the time off.
David Braithwaite:Whereas actually we should be thinking about it differently and taking that
David Braithwaite:free time as a priority because actually, we've just come back off from an extended
David Braithwaite:break during Christmas if lots of people have had that and I came back really
David Braithwaite:excited about what the year was going to hold and you feel far more creative
David Braithwaite:and freer rather than ground down tired.
David Braithwaite:So Dan Sullivan that actually does a lot of the coaching
David Braithwaite:and it's his coaching course.
David Braithwaite:He says it says that you need a break when everybody around
David Braithwaite:you seems to be more stupid
Matt Edmundson:I love that.
Matt Edmundson:I
David Braithwaite:And it's so true, when people, you get a bit, your views
David Braithwaite:get shorter, we feel we have to earn this time off, but actually, if we book
David Braithwaite:in the free time first, because we're, and the families and the loved ones are
David Braithwaite:more important, and then work fits around that, often it's the other way around
David Braithwaite:for entrepreneurs, is that you're always on, and especially when you're talking
David Braithwaite:about ecommerce, which is, can be for a lot of people, 24 7, 365 days a week,
David Braithwaite:because there's always something going on, and the internet never closes, does it?
David Braithwaite:It's not a nine to five internet, it's always something you can do with
David Braithwaite:different, especially if you're dealing with customers and clients globally,
David Braithwaite:they're all over the place in terms of time, so it's always doing that,
David Braithwaite:and especially I think if you're, particularly as, going back to the word
David Braithwaite:proud of your business, you'll always try and do what you can for that extra
David Braithwaite:mile to please a customer or client.
David Braithwaite:And sometimes that can be at the detriment to you, if you're
David Braithwaite:using that family time up.
David Braithwaite:It's like the same when you go out for a meal and you're going out and
David Braithwaite:you've got your phone and everyone puts their phones on the table.
David Braithwaite:Are they really present?
David Braithwaite:Meh.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
David Braithwaite:It's difficult.
David Braithwaite:I know it's difficult to switch off.
David Braithwaite:And these so called smartphones, they're there for our convenience,
David Braithwaite:not the callers, I always say.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
David Braithwaite:so it's difficult because they can follow you around and
David Braithwaite:you just get a ping, a notification.
David Braithwaite:It's always demanding attention, whereas actually probably our
David Braithwaite:attention should be better spent with the people that we're with.
David Braithwaite:So that's what I see as the biggest negative side from being an entrepreneur.
David Braithwaite:If you can get the hang of that and get the balance right, then I
David Braithwaite:think you're in for a happier life.
Matt Edmundson:It's interesting you talk about this David, because . One of
Matt Edmundson:the myths, that is prevalent in people wanting to start an online business is the
Matt Edmundson:belief that they can be a digital nomad.
Matt Edmundson:So I've seen the rise in people doing this and I've seen the rise, in countries
Matt Edmundson:accepting the, what they call now the digital nomad visa, which is genius.
Matt Edmundson:My kids are, when all my kids have gone, I am doing this, right?
Matt Edmundson:And this is where you can in effect get a visa to work in a country
Matt Edmundson:or to go live in a country for an extended period of time because
Matt Edmundson:you are doing your online business.
Matt Edmundson:My business, I do the podcast, I have my ecommerce businesses,
Matt Edmundson:I've got my coaching business.
Matt Edmundson:I can do that from anywhere in the world as long as I've
Matt Edmundson:got an internet connection.
Matt Edmundson:It's just the way it is, right?
Matt Edmundson:We've got a great team here in Liverpool, got a warehouse.
Matt Edmundson:I don't need to be here.
Matt Edmundson:I can move around.
Matt Edmundson:But I don't.
Matt Edmundson:And this is why I call it the myth.
Matt Edmundson:It's not that you can't, it's just that most people don't.
Matt Edmundson:I can start an online business and then I can go work on the beach in Tahiti.
Matt Edmundson:But I can count on one hand out of the thousands of people that I've spoken
Matt Edmundson:to that end up actually doing that.
Matt Edmundson:There's this sort of, this romantic notion when you start an online business that's
Matt Edmundson:what you could do, but the reality of it is you don't because the rest of life
Matt Edmundson:just happens around you and consumes you.
Matt Edmundson:And so I hear what you're saying and I definitely, the taking of the free
Matt Edmundson:time and just to find out I'm smiling because I still fall into that trap
Matt Edmundson:30 years later and I remember last, just last week, so we're recording
Matt Edmundson:this on a Monday, last Monday.
Matt Edmundson:I didn't have any recordings scheduled for the podcast and so I grabbed my
Matt Edmundson:notebook and I walked to the city center from my house and I walked the long way,
Matt Edmundson:I took a two hour walk down by the river.
Matt Edmundson:I, I sat in a coffee shop with nothing, I didn't take my computer, I just sat
Matt Edmundson:there with my journal and then walked back and the whole thing took 6-7 hours.
Matt Edmundson:I will tell you now, it was one of the most productive
Matt Edmundson:days I've had for a long time.
David Braithwaite:There you go.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
David Braithwaite:And I have a saying that almost everything will
David Braithwaite:work if you unplug it for a while.
David Braithwaite:And it is, I do a lot of my planning not in the office here when
David Braithwaite:you've got things to distract you.
David Braithwaite:It is about getting out and doing something and doing the working in the
David Braithwaite:coffee shop or taking away, like if people do goal setting for example,
David Braithwaite:it's better to do it somewhere that's a nice inspiring place rather than
David Braithwaite:the same four walls you're already in because that's all familiar.
David Braithwaite:And it's distracting, so I completely get why you do that.
David Braithwaite:I'm quite efficient working when I've had to write stuff for brochures and
David Braithwaite:things that we've done for the office.
David Braithwaite:I've done it out of the office because I just feel a bit more free.
David Braithwaite:I'm sitting there, I'm looking around in the cafe, you get the people,
David Braithwaite:the hubbub, the noise, and it feels like it's proper focus time, I would
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
David Braithwaite:the fact you're in somewhere where people
David Braithwaite:might find that a bit alien.
David Braithwaite:But I'm there.
David Braithwaite:You can't just sit there and look at a wall, whereas you can in your own office.
David Braithwaite:If you really wanted to.
David Braithwaite:But in a coffee shop or something, it's really good.
David Braithwaite:It just feels more inspiring to be somewhere a bit different.
David Braithwaite:And if you had a walk down by the river, and it's, you've freed your
David Braithwaite:mind, and you've got nothing else there, and put your phone in airplane
David Braithwaite:mode, that's gonna be a good day.
David Braithwaite:And you've remembered that for that fact that it's so simple to
David Braithwaite:do, but not a lot of people do it.
David Braithwaite:That's the difference.
David Braithwaite:You don't have to do this stuff.
David Braithwaite:It's not for everybody, but it really works if you try it and it's worth the go.
Matt Edmundson:yeah absolutely.
Matt Edmundson:So how do you how would you advise someone who is working a full time
Matt Edmundson:job, they're probably not liking it really and they've decided they're
Matt Edmundson:going to start a side hustle and they're listening to this show, it's
Matt Edmundson:probably an ecommerce business, right?
Matt Edmundson:So they've set up an online business.
Matt Edmundson:They're either selling a digital product or a real product, they're maybe having
Matt Edmundson:it made, shipped over and they're trying to do, they're trying to do all
Matt Edmundson:the things they need to do to grow an ecommerce business, which is in reality
Matt Edmundson:used to be very simple and now it's becoming more and more complicated,
Matt Edmundson:such as a way of things, right?
Matt Edmundson:We take something simple and we mess it up.
Matt Edmundson:So on one hand, it's I've got to take time, quite a lot
Matt Edmundson:of the ancient religions have this Sabbath idea, don't they?
Matt Edmundson:Which, let's just be real, works very well.
Matt Edmundson:The idea of taking a day of rest.
Matt Edmundson:But at the same time, I'm working eight hours at work.
Matt Edmundson:I'm coming home working five, six hours of an evening.
Matt Edmundson:And I need to, on one hand, I need to put the time in to, to
Matt Edmundson:actually get the thing started.
Matt Edmundson:But at the other time, I'm at the other side, I'm like how do I do that?
Matt Edmundson:The whole resting, but how would you talk to someone like that,
Matt Edmundson:maybe, who's listening to the show?
David Braithwaite:so I think you've got the right idea is that people would
David Braithwaite:do that you keep your full time job you need to still keep your rent and
David Braithwaite:everything over your head and the house that you've got or flat wherever you are.
David Braithwaite:And then if you're working eight hours a day, there's 24 in a day.
David Braithwaite:So how much sleep do we really need?
David Braithwaite:So it's then coming back in the evening and working on your what they call the
David Braithwaite:side hustle whatever it is e commerce and they work on that but also how much do
David Braithwaite:they really need from a financial point of view, what else could they cut back on?
David Braithwaite:How much are they actually needing that car they've got on the drive?
David Braithwaite:Could they actually downsize and go and rent somewhere smaller?
David Braithwaite:So they're not having to a lot of people buy it's something one knows
David Braithwaite:from a financial planning point of view,
Matt Edmundson:yeah,
David Braithwaite:a lot of people spend a lot of time and money buying
David Braithwaite:stuff that they don't necessarily need but it's sometimes there to
David Braithwaite:impress other people, it's sometimes there to make themselves feel good.
David Braithwaite:All put off the evil moment.
David Braithwaite:So for some people if they actually condensed down their life and simplified
David Braithwaite:it a little bit and said actually what can I get away with selling, what can I
David Braithwaite:get away with downgrading in, do I really need that type of car, so that your income
David Braithwaite:that you've got to bring in isn't quite as heavy as what it needs to be, you've
David Braithwaite:got your full time job and your side
Matt Edmundson:yeah,
David Braithwaite:But actually, what is it you need to bring in?
David Braithwaite:Is the fact that it's not working that six hours extra in the evening because
David Braithwaite:of the fact your outgoings are so big.
David Braithwaite:So it's looking at not just the income you're bringing in and the time, it's
David Braithwaite:looking at minimising your outgoings as well, if you're serious about doing this.
David Braithwaite:But unfortunately, I think a lot of, again, coming back to my son, there is an
David Braithwaite:awful lot of stuff on TikTok and the like, where it almost makes it sound too simple.
David Braithwaite:Oh, you just do this, you just do that, and look at all the money coming in.
David Braithwaite:If it was that easy, everybody would do it, there has to be
David Braithwaite:work involved in some of this.
David Braithwaite:So don't be afraid to put the work in.
David Braithwaite:If you're serious about making this work, it will.
David Braithwaite:And at some point, hopefully, then the balance will tip and you
David Braithwaite:can give up your full time job and then the world's your oyster.
David Braithwaite:But it's about minimising your outgoings and looking at your lifestyle that you've
David Braithwaite:got and cutting a cloth I hate to say it, and putting in as many hours as you can.
David Braithwaite:But you've just, you've got to do it.
David Braithwaite:That's what you've got to do if you can't afford to give up your full time job.
David Braithwaite:Yet.
Matt Edmundson:yeah I love this.
Matt Edmundson:You're talking about how, I'm going to use this phrase,
Matt Edmundson:downgrading your lifestyle, right?
Matt Edmundson:And it's.
Matt Edmundson:I think this is where a lot of people that I speak to are wanting to start a
Matt Edmundson:side hustle either to escape the drudgery of the 9 to 5 that they're working at,
Matt Edmundson:or they're doing it because their job is not creating the lifestyle that they
Matt Edmundson:want and so they set up another, they set up a business to try and create
Matt Edmundson:their lifestyle that they feel like they want and so whenever you talk to
Matt Edmundson:people in that situation and I don't know if you found this, David, I'd
Matt Edmundson:love to know if you have, but I would have said similar things to people.
Matt Edmundson:It's let's look at how we can cut back so you can go forward, right?
Matt Edmundson:So you can prune for want of a better expression, to produce
Matt Edmundson:the growth, to produce the fruit.
Matt Edmundson:How can you do that?
Matt Edmundson:And it's not a very popular question because people don't like the idea
Matt Edmundson:of going backwards to go forwards.
David Braithwaite:Progress sometimes, no, but it's true,
David Braithwaite:there's a saying, all progress starts with telling the truth, right?
David Braithwaite:And I think also there is, there's a danger as well where, again, going on
David Braithwaite:things like the social media, where people that have set up their own businesses and
David Braithwaite:things are on there, it's like a showreel.
David Braithwaite:And there's lots of criticism for some of these people posing by Lamborghinis.
David Braithwaite:You can even hire the shell as a set of a private jet.
David Braithwaite:Do you know this?
David Braithwaite:You can hire this set that's a private jet to go in there for an hour.
David Braithwaite:You have photographs taken and then you use the pictures of this
David Braithwaite:lifestyle in your social media.
David Braithwaite:So one thing you've got a private jet you've been on.
David Braithwaite:It's all rubbish.
David Braithwaite:A lot of it is all rubbish.
David Braithwaite:It's not supported by anything concrete and what I find is certainly again
David Braithwaite:from the financial planning side of things, the people that have got the
David Braithwaite:real money, don't talk about it, the people that haven't are the ones that
David Braithwaite:are more extrovert in showing you what they're the ones that wear the labels,
David Braithwaite:that have the flash things, because they're almost trying to put a show on.
David Braithwaite:Yeah, actually, the ones that, the most humble ones that we've come across
David Braithwaite:are the ones that got the real money.
David Braithwaite:Because they've got nothing to prove.
David Braithwaite:They're just doing what they need to do for themselves, and it's not
David Braithwaite:about anyone else, it's about them.
David Braithwaite:Talking about it, recently we were driving through France last year, and I just
David Braithwaite:noticed that most of this is probably a sweeping statement, but you drive
David Braithwaite:through France, nobody there seems to be bothered about what car they're driving.
David Braithwaite:They're all much of a muchness.
David Braithwaite:You don't notice suddenly a Bentley Mulsanne going
David Braithwaite:down the road, or a Ferrari.
David Braithwaite:You just don't see it, because they don't seem to be hung up on that lifestyle.
David Braithwaite:They're just happy doing what they do.
David Braithwaite:A car that's a six litre whatever versus a one litre mini or whatever
David Braithwaite:is probably broadly going to get you to the same place at the same time.
David Braithwaite:Whereas here it seems to be a bit, that we sell in UK that the sales
David Braithwaite:of big flat screen TVs go up just before a lot of international football
David Braithwaite:matches because people are coming round to other people's houses.
David Braithwaite:They're going to buy these things to show their friends.
David Braithwaite:Oh, look at my TV, and it's just a bit of a plastic lifestyle I hate to say
David Braithwaite:it, but yeah, if you're serious about doing it, cut your cloth and that's where
David Braithwaite:you've got to start, and swallow it.
David Braithwaite:Or you're not serious, really, you can't spend money you haven't got yet.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it's, or get ready for burnout, trying to do it, right?
Matt Edmundson:It's or amass a lot of debt on a credit card, trying to
Matt Edmundson:live a lifestyle, it's one way
David Braithwaite:Yeah, that's a road to ruin as well.
Matt Edmundson:Have you ever read the book The Millionaire Next Door?
David Braithwaite:I think I have got it on my bookshelf here, but
David Braithwaite:full transparency, no, I've got it here though, I haven't read it yet.
Matt Edmundson:It's a really fascinating book.
Matt Edmundson:It's an old book, I say an old book, it's probably 15-20 years old and I judge
Matt Edmundson:old now on the basis of my kids ages.
Matt Edmundson:That's good, that phase of
David Braithwaite:So we're very similar, it's okay.
Matt Edmundson:And The Millionaire Next Door is a fascinating book because
Matt Edmundson:it's these guys basically interviewing people who were millionaires.
Matt Edmundson:And what they discovered was that people who created their wealth, as in a lot
Matt Edmundson:of immigrants, for example, would come into the States, they'd work crazy
Matt Edmundson:hours, they'd save everything, they wouldn't spend it, they'd invest wisely.
Matt Edmundson:They'd created a lot of wealth.
Matt Edmundson:They weren't driving around in flat flash cars.
Matt Edmundson:They were wearing jeans and a t shirt, you know, they weren't wearing Hugo
Matt Edmundson:Boss and all that sort of stuff.
Matt Edmundson:You wouldn't really know.
Matt Edmundson:That's why the millionaire next door, what they discovered was the
Matt Edmundson:people that inherited the wealth.
Matt Edmundson:So somebody dies and therefore I have been given a large chunk
Matt Edmundson:of wealth or I've grown up in wealth and I've become used to it.
Matt Edmundson:They're the ones that drive the flash cars.
Matt Edmundson:Where the fancy clothes because this, having part, reading this book was
Matt Edmundson:part of the reason why I decided with my kids not to ever pay them pocket
Matt Edmundson:money when they were growing up.
Matt Edmundson:Now I give them an allowance now they're at uni, but I didn't ever
Matt Edmundson:want to create this entitlement thing.
Matt Edmundson:And so the premise of the book was if you create it.
Matt Edmundson:You know how to keep it.
Matt Edmundson:If you're given it, you know how to spend it and it's going to go quick.
Matt Edmundson:Within one or two generations, it tends to go.
Matt Edmundson:And I hope I'm doing the book some justice in paraphrasing it like that,
Matt Edmundson:but it's a fascinating book, very insightful book on the whole concept.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
David Braithwaite:another, there were lots of the people, certainly
David Braithwaite:here in the UK, and presumably other countries as well, that have
David Braithwaite:come into unexpected wealth through things like winning the lottery.
David Braithwaite:Actually, you go back to see them a few years later, and they're
David Braithwaite:back to where they were before.
David Braithwaite:It's because they've spent without the right mindset, they're not
David Braithwaite:used to it, so therefore they've reached their own level again.
David Braithwaite:Which just seems to me like an absolute crying shame and a waste of money but,
David Braithwaite:they're back to where they started and it's a shame really, but yeah, I've got a
David Braithwaite:friend of mine, he's a financial advisor, if there's there's a thing over here,
David Braithwaite:Premium Bonds, where people can, it's like a lottery, isn't it, where you can put
David Braithwaite:money in, and he's the advisor that goes in to see the people who've won a million
David Braithwaite:pounds, and some of the stories that he hears from them is just fascinating, some
David Braithwaite:people don't know what to do with it.
David Braithwaite:And some people have spent it before he's even got there, and it's different.
David Braithwaite:Whereas what he's trying to do is to make it last and last and give for
David Braithwaite:generations, where some people are going it's my money, I'm going to spend
David Braithwaite:it, it's totally different mindset.
Matt Edmundson:let's talk about that a little while, because obviously the reason
Matt Edmundson:people want to set up side hustles, people want their own ecommerce businesses.
Matt Edmundson:And I appreciate we're not necessarily talking about ecommerce tactics today.
Matt Edmundson:We're talking more about the mindset, I think, of being the entrepreneur, the guy
Matt Edmundson:driving or the gal driving the business.
Matt Edmundson:You start to be successful, right?
Matt Edmundson:You start to make a few quid, excuse me, or a few dollars, a few bucks for
Matt Edmundson:our American cousins, And the temptation then is, I think you, it's very easy to
Matt Edmundson:live to the edge of your means, right?
Matt Edmundson:So if you can, if I can live on say, I don't know, $2000 a month now, and then
Matt Edmundson:next month I start paying myself $3000 a month because of business as well.
Matt Edmundson:I can quite easily live according to 3000 books and then not really
Matt Edmundson:have anything extra to show for it.
Matt Edmundson:And then it goes from 3000 to 6000.
Matt Edmundson:And again, so as people start to get successful, as we start to see the,
Matt Edmundson:the shekels rolling in, what sort of things should we be thinking about?
David Braithwaite:So when you're getting more successful
David Braithwaite:entrepreneur, there's four freedoms that we coach at Strategic Coaches.
David Braithwaite:Time, money, relationship and purpose.
David Braithwaite:So the first thing is your time.
David Braithwaite:The reason why a lot of people want to set up their own business is because they want
David Braithwaite:to have their own say over their own time.
David Braithwaite:Take as much time as you want off without filling in a whole new
David Braithwaite:form and all that sort of thing.
David Braithwaite:Relationship is to be able to deal with people that you want to deal with
David Braithwaite:and spend time with those be with.
David Braithwaite:And your purpose is what's your why?
David Braithwaite:What you're doing?
David Braithwaite:But the money aspect of it there, money buys your freedoms.
David Braithwaite:So from my point of view, what I've always done, certainly, and
David Braithwaite:I coach this with people, is you don't spend what you've earned.
David Braithwaite:You just take what you need and leave the rest of it in there because there's a
David Braithwaite:It's a subtle difference of how you handle things, especially if you're growing a
David Braithwaite:business when opportunities might present themselves to you, where you need money.
David Braithwaite:You need to hire that person that's come across your desk that you think,
David Braithwaite:crikey, that is a really good hire, I can't afford to miss him or her.
David Braithwaite:If you've got the money, you're controlling it.
David Braithwaite:The money shouldn't control you, it's a difference.
David Braithwaite:From the freedom of money, it can massively help you grow a business.
David Braithwaite:And I've always taken from the businesses I've got, exactly what I need.
David Braithwaite:And in fact, three of them I've never taken a penny from.
David Braithwaite:Because I don't.
David Braithwaite:But why would I take money from a business and then effectively throttle it?
David Braithwaite:Because there's no point having zero in the bank, and then worrying,
David Braithwaite:because Things happen, right?
David Braithwaite:We had a thing called a pandemic two years ago, so we as a business never
David Braithwaite:furloughed anybody, because we had that emergency pot to make sure that
David Braithwaite:we could still pay the people, and that's paid off, whilst a lot of people
David Braithwaite:didn't do that, and are being, staff are disappearing because they're being poked
David Braithwaite:from other companies all this stuff.
David Braithwaite:We've never had that.
David Braithwaite:Because we try and look after the people, but if we didn't have the
David Braithwaite:money to do that, those choices and decisions where I've got the option
David Braithwaite:is no longer an option for me.
David Braithwaite:So I want to make sure I'm in control of the money, and I'm putting it to good use.
David Braithwaite:So the money thing is a really important thing.
David Braithwaite:Only take what you need.
David Braithwaite:Yeah, okay.
David Braithwaite:It's nice sometimes to treat yourself every now and again.
David Braithwaite:So if I'm going to do a speaking something for a conference overseas,
David Braithwaite:often when I'm there I'll buy myself something as a little reward.
David Braithwaite:Pat On The Back type of thing, and it could be anything from a set of cufflinks
David Braithwaite:or whatever you want, or sometimes nothing if you can't see anything that's
David Braithwaite:fine, but actually just leaving the money in the business to leave yourself
David Braithwaite:in control puts you in a much stronger position, both from a financial point
David Braithwaite:of view, but mentally as well, because when things do happen, those curveballs,
David Braithwaite:whenever people are struggling, you're in control still, not a lot of other people.
David Braithwaite:It's like when you go and drive your car, if it's always got a full tank of gas.
David Braithwaite:It's much easier.
David Braithwaite:I'm going to worry about where I'm going to go.
David Braithwaite:It just causes you less stress, I believe, to have the money
David Braithwaite:there when you can, rather than just going out and spending it.
David Braithwaite:Often, sometimes, to keep up with the Joneses.
David Braithwaite:So it comes back to that again.
David Braithwaite:So keep control of that money.
David Braithwaite:Time, money, relationship purposes.
David Braithwaite:Those are four freedoms.
David Braithwaite:You want to make sure you concentrate on making sure that they are
David Braithwaite:freedoms and not restrictions.
Matt Edmundson:It's super powerful this idea that you spend half your life
Matt Edmundson:buying things you don't really need to impress people you don't really like.
Matt Edmundson:And it's that kind of, when you look at it, you go, yeah, okay.
Matt Edmundson:And I think,
David Braithwaite:Always use the best crockery for yourself,
David Braithwaite:that's what I always say.
David Braithwaite:Don't save it up for somebody who comes around once in a
David Braithwaite:blue moon, use it, that's what
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, absolutely.
Matt Edmundson:And I think for me, listening to you talk, I think, take what you need, which I do.
Matt Edmundson:I don't, I was talking to the staff the other day about this.
Matt Edmundson:I personally haven't had a pay rise, I don't think in 12 years of running the
Matt Edmundson:business, not because I couldn't take a pay rise, but I live a life where
Matt Edmundson:actually I don't need it and I'd much rather the money stay in the business.
Matt Edmundson:When we grew Jersey, which was our beauty company our ecommerce beauty company.
Matt Edmundson:We bootstrapped it and we scaled it with the money that we had.
Matt Edmundson:So whenever we purchased stock Andy, my business partner in Jersey, who's
Matt Edmundson:an absolute legend his whole premise was we never buy stock on credit.
Matt Edmundson:We always buy stock with the money that we've got.
Matt Edmundson:We sell it, we keep that cash.
Matt Edmundson:We don't take any out and then we buy more stock with it until you're
Matt Edmundson:buying, hundreds of thousands, if not millions of pounds worth of stock.
Matt Edmundson:And it meant that when business.
Matt Edmundson:inevitably had its setbacks, its trials, its tribulations.
Matt Edmundson:We owned the stock.
Matt Edmundson:I wasn't then scrambling around to try and find money to pay the supplies for
Matt Edmundson:the stuff that I had on the shelves.
Matt Edmundson:My invoices were always paid.
Matt Edmundson:I always, it's one of those things, isn't it, with supplies.
Matt Edmundson:If you say no, I'll pay you when I order.
Matt Edmundson:I don't want credit.
Matt Edmundson:Amazing how much of a nicer service you get out of them,
David Braithwaite:100%.
David Braithwaite:Just had something, so I'm having the side thing here, I'm having some
David Braithwaite:bookshelves put in here to take all the books that I've got round this room.
David Braithwaite:And the guy I should deposit, I'll pay it on the day.
David Braithwaite:You saw that was quick, because guess what, if there's a queue of people that
David Braithwaite:are wanting these things put in, he's probably going to give me a bit more
Matt Edmundson:one.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah,
David Braithwaite:I've given him attention, and again,
David Braithwaite:it comes down to cash flow.
David Braithwaite:If you've got the money, I'm in control of it.
David Braithwaite:I can pay it.
David Braithwaite:So I'll always pay my tax bill on time.
David Braithwaite:Everything's always done on time.
David Braithwaite:It just makes your life easier.
David Braithwaite:But as you said earlier on, by having that cash flow there, to decide, you
David Braithwaite:could decide actually, I'm gonna buy this stock and put it there, and then
David Braithwaite:that security it buys you is huge.
David Braithwaite:And your mental state of mind and how you feel about the
David Braithwaite:business, you're not desperate.
David Braithwaite:You're controlling it and you're driving it forward through making choices.
David Braithwaite:Yes, you could do it, but sometimes the harder route is actually the
David Braithwaite:far easier route in the long run.
David Braithwaite:Rather than just getting a line of credit and having a load of
David Braithwaite:stuff there that If it went wrong, that's not a good place to be.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, I'm with you.
Matt Edmundson:And I appreciate people listening to the podcast might
Matt Edmundson:go there's no way I can do that.
Matt Edmundson:And that's, I'm not saying you should do what I did.
Matt Edmundson:I'm just saying this is what we did.
Matt Edmundson:And it worked very well for us.
Matt Edmundson:It's another way.
Matt Edmundson:And I'm glad that we did it.
Matt Edmundson:It was very hard at first.
Matt Edmundson:But you know what?
Matt Edmundson:It's stayed with me the whole time.
Matt Edmundson:So whenever we've done ecommerce businesses since, we're just
Matt Edmundson:about to launch a new one.
Matt Edmundson:Buy the stock up front with the cash.
Matt Edmundson:Have we got the cash to do this?
Matt Edmundson:Yes.
Matt Edmundson:Good.
Matt Edmundson:If we haven't, no.
Matt Edmundson:And it's not that, I think I learned this in my early twenties.
Matt Edmundson:I had a lot of credit card debt and once I'd managed to pay it off, I'm like, I'm
Matt Edmundson:never getting into credit card debt again.
Matt Edmundson:The only debt that I have it's the Mortgage on my house.
Matt Edmundson:Whenever I've bought cars, whenever I've bought anything, it's always
Matt Edmundson:been out of the money that I had.
Matt Edmundson:And it's just been a principle that's followed me around really, and I don't
Matt Edmundson:necessarily think it's easier, I think it can be trickier at first, but I think
Matt Edmundson:it's easier in the long run, because, I've got friends that went on ski trips,
Matt Edmundson:but they've got 12 grand on the credit card they've now got to pay off, and
Matt Edmundson:it's okay, I don't have to do that.
David Braithwaite:No.
David Braithwaite:And also you think we're so used to doing things like shopping around for
David Braithwaite:things, so they have spent 12 grand in your example on a ski trip, and they've
David Braithwaite:put the flights there, they've got the place they're staying there, they shop
David Braithwaite:around for all these bits, but what they haven't banked on is how much
David Braithwaite:interest that's going to cost them.
David Braithwaite:So the actual holidays cost is actually far higher than what they thought it
David Braithwaite:was going to be and it restricts you in what you're actually looking to do and
David Braithwaite:certainly thinking about my situation one of the businesses that I started was
David Braithwaite:because we had the cash to invest in it and get it going from the get go and leave
David Braithwaite:it funded for a year before it was able to earn its own but if I if that opportunity
David Braithwaite:had come up and I hadn't got the money It would have been wasted, and I'd probably
David Braithwaite:always be kicking myself thinking, Oh, if only, what if, as it is, I'm not.
David Braithwaite:I'm like, I'm glad we've done that.
David Braithwaite:It was having the cash that created that decision that I could make
David Braithwaite:rather than having it made for me.
Matt Edmundson:No, totally agree.
Matt Edmundson:I'm very aware of time, David, that has just gone by at a million miles an hour.
Matt Edmundson:It's just unbelievable how quickly it goes.
Matt Edmundson:No I've thoroughly enjoyed talking about this topic of entrepreneurship and it's
Matt Edmundson:okay it's nice I think on EP, every now and again, just to take a step back
Matt Edmundson:and think about ourselves and our own.
Matt Edmundson:State of being and where we're at is just talk to me briefly and in the last
Matt Edmundson:few moments if you can about Maybe why as an entrepreneur who is either doing
Matt Edmundson:the side hustle full time like me, ecommerce entrepreneur, why I should
Matt Edmundson:think about something like a coach to help me with the whole process?
David Braithwaite:You dunno what you don't know.
David Braithwaite:So I would say that for a lot of people you think about it in other contexts.
David Braithwaite:If you were going to go down to using me as example, first of all
David Braithwaite:I was never taught how you hire people at school or anything.
David Braithwaite:So having a coach for me, and I still get coached.
David Braithwaite:is giving me all the bits that I should have been taught at school but don't.
David Braithwaite:But also, probably more importantly, it's very easy, as we said at the beginning
David Braithwaite:of this conversation, to get caught up in the day to day and you just keep going.
David Braithwaite:There was a, there is a Netflix series on called Drive To Survive, if you've ever
Matt Edmundson:Oh, yeah the formula one thing.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah
David Braithwaite:That's it.
David Braithwaite:Brilliant, exciting series to watch, but what I learned from that is that
David Braithwaite:the race isn't won on the track, it's actually won in the pits.
David Braithwaite:It's the crew that you've got there, it's all the fine tuning that you do, it's
David Braithwaite:the testing, it's everything that you do, then you send the car out on the tracks.
David Braithwaite:And us as entrepreneurs, we're similar to that, that while we're doing the hustle,
David Braithwaite:the business side of it, we also need that moment to pause, like you did when you
David Braithwaite:went for that walk and you took a journal.
David Braithwaite:It's how do you actually unplug?
David Braithwaite:So Strategic Coach for me It's a chance for me to, and I was there last week doing
David Braithwaite:it, is a day for me where you've got a group of entrepreneurs in the room that
David Braithwaite:all think like you, where you can be you.
David Braithwaite:So if you have got staff, for example, all my staff can come
David Braithwaite:to me with all their problems.
David Braithwaite:Who does the owner go to?
David Braithwaite:Because you can actually end up bottling it up.
David Braithwaite:So in that group, it's a place where you could be yourself and discuss
David Braithwaite:everything you want to talk about, but it gives you that moment to stop, pause
David Braithwaite:and think, but also give you tools and strategies to work through during
David Braithwaite:the day so that you get that downtime.
David Braithwaite:You come back to your business and you're raring to go.
David Braithwaite:So every quarter I'm planning my next quarter, my next year, my
David Braithwaite:three years, five years, lifetime.
David Braithwaite:And just having that moment of just pausing, sometimes you've
David Braithwaite:got to slow down to go faster, and that's what it does for me.
David Braithwaite:And likening it to if you're going to go to the gym and get fit.
David Braithwaite:You're probably going to get fitter or get better results with a
David Braithwaite:personal trainer than you are just going down there and pulling a few
David Braithwaite:weights and hoping you get it right.
David Braithwaite:Okay?
David Braithwaite:So that is why I think everybody should have a coach.
David Braithwaite:Just so you get the down time, the thinking time around the tools and
David Braithwaite:things that they give you to do, but you've got that time for you as
David Braithwaite:well and to be around a room full of other people that are like you.
David Braithwaite:Because we're a bit of a rare breed, us entrepreneurs.
David Braithwaite:It's good to find a few more of us out there in the
Matt Edmundson:yeah, Lunatics, I think is the is the official diagnosis.
Matt Edmundson:David, listen, it's been a wonderful chatting to you.
Matt Edmundson:If people want to reach out to you, if they want to connect
Matt Edmundson:find out more about what you do, what's the best way to do that?
David Braithwaite:If they want to do that, they can just Google my name,
David Braithwaite:they'll find me in various places.
David Braithwaite:But I've got a landing page, so Strategic Coach, I've built for
David Braithwaite:anybody listening to this, which is davidbpodcast.com, that's davidbpodcast.
David Braithwaite:com.
David Braithwaite:What they've got on there is, there's an eBook, and there's a couple of
David Braithwaite:tools that you can just sit down.
David Braithwaite:So if you are thinking, perhaps I need a bit of that downtime.
David Braithwaite:Go down there, you can download some tools and do some thinking about your business
David Braithwaite:using some free things that's already there for people to help them out a
David Braithwaite:little bit and give them a little insight as to what coaching might look like.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Brilliant.
Matt Edmundson:We'll put the link into the show notes, of course.
Matt Edmundson:And I, just from a personal point of view, I've been in business for a while
Matt Edmundson:now and you don't have to wait until you become successful to get a coach.
Matt Edmundson:I think if I'm honest with you, getting a coach was what helped me be successful.
Matt Edmundson:I think it's the other way around.
Matt Edmundson:And I've
David Braithwaite:too late and I had a lot more stuff to unravel.
David Braithwaite:The knot gets more complicated.
David Braithwaite:That's what I would say.
David Braithwaite:So don't let your knot get too tight.
David Braithwaite:Get it sorted out.
Matt Edmundson:don't get you, not get too tight.
Matt Edmundson:And on that bombshell, ladies and gentlemen, David, thank
Matt Edmundson:you so much for joining us.
Matt Edmundson:Super stoked, man.
David Braithwaite:Matt.
David Braithwaite:It's been a pleasure.
Matt Edmundson:Ah, it's been great.
Matt Edmundson:Love the conversation.
Matt Edmundson:Like I say, always nice to talk about these kind of things.
Matt Edmundson:So yeah, great conversation.
Matt Edmundson:Thanks again.
Matt Edmundson:Now, of course, a big shout out to today's show's sponsor, the eCcommerce Cohort.
Matt Edmundson:Remember to check them out at ecommercecohort.
Matt Edmundson:com.
Matt Edmundson:Come join us in there.
Matt Edmundson:Why not?
Matt Edmundson:Let's have a laugh, see what it goes.
Matt Edmundson:We like to have fun.
Matt Edmundson:Now be sure to follow the eCommerce Podcast wherever you get your podcasts
Matt Edmundson:from, because we have yet more great conversations lined up and I
Matt Edmundson:don't want you to miss any of them.
Matt Edmundson:And in case no one has told you yet today, let me be the first
Matt Edmundson:to tell you, you are awesome.
Matt Edmundson:Yes, you are.
Matt Edmundson:Created awesome.
Matt Edmundson:It's just a burden.
Matt Edmundson:You've got to bear.
Matt Edmundson:David has to bear it.
Matt Edmundson:I've got to bear it.
Matt Edmundson:You've got to bear it as well.
Matt Edmundson:Now, the eCommerce Podcast is produced by Aurion Media.
Matt Edmundson:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app,
Matt Edmundson:the team that makes this show possible.
Matt Edmundson:The wonderful, amazing team that makes this show possible.
Matt Edmundson:Sadaf Beynon, Tanya Hutsuliak.
Matt Edmundson:Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:And as I mentioned, if you would like to know more, head
Matt Edmundson:over to the website, ecommerce.
Matt Edmundson:podcast.
Matt Edmundson:net, where incidentally, you can also sign up to the newsletter.
Matt Edmundson:It'd be great to see you over there.
Matt Edmundson:So that's it from me.
Matt Edmundson:That's it from David.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you so much for joining us.
Matt Edmundson:Have a fantastic week, wherever you are in the world.
Matt Edmundson:I'll see you next time.
Matt Edmundson:Bye for now.