Work Smarter, Not Harder

How smart women entrepreneurs overachieve without overworking


If you started your career in corporate America, you know getting promoted isn't all it's cracked up to be. A move up is often nothing more than your old job on steroids. Rather than starting something fresh and exciting, the promotion consists of new responsibilities piled on top of your old ones.

The result: You feel overloaded, overstressed and over it. So you shunned the corporate grind for the perceived bliss of entrepreneurship. As one client told me, "I simply couldn't survive another promotion."

Ironically, in search of a break, you may discover your new boss--the tyrant in the mirror--is the toughest yet. And the workload? By comparison, the corporate world was a lunch-time walk on the treadmill.

Overworking yourself to a frazzle doesn't end just because you're at the helm. More often, it intensifies. The to-do list gets miles longer. The responsibilities cascade. You wear so many hats, your hat rack needs a maintenance crew.

Even after hiring qualified, well-paid support, you may think the only way you can secure results is through the sheer volume of your work load. The more heavy lifting you do, the more you feel you can control a successful outcome.

Male business owners generally don't subject themselves to the same level of doubt and rigor. They freely delegate or offload responsibilities whenever possible--very often to an alpha woman.


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The point is, you can learn a little something from your freely delegating counterparts: The art of advancing in business doesn't mean doing more; it means being more effective at what you choose to do and what you do best. Here are five simple steps to help you cut back on the blood, sweat and tears--and renew the passion and purpose that drove you to start your business.

1. Value your brains over your brawn. Before carrying out your next task, ask yourself: Am I really the only one capable of doing this? Is this the best use of my time? Am I doing this out of necessity or habit? Does this activity require real judgment and leadership? If you answer no to at least two of those questions, brawn, not brains, may be running your enterprise. Reallocate how and where you invest your time.

2. Stop authoring and start editing. Whether writing a proposal, authoring a manual or designing a product, creating anything from scratch is time consuming. Assign yourself the role of editor, or whatever's comparable in your field, and let someone else give your vision form and substance.

3. Ask more questions, provide fewer answers. Next time you're asked to solve a problem, don't. Ask your employee, "If I weren't here, how would you handle this in a way that would better serve our company?" You're sure to switch on their critical-thinking skills, and perhaps uncover some untapped talent within your staff. Delegate tasks, but also teach others to think. It's an investment in your people with unlimited upside potential.

4. Replace perfection with effectiveness. Many women believe achieving perfection is what it takes to succeed. But being effective is the only measure that really counts. Knowing when just enough is good enough can mean the difference between a healthy bottom line and barely breaking even. Remember, as the visionary for your company, you'll be most effective at acting on your vision and pursuing growth opportunities, rather than getting mired in detailed perfection.

5. End your "voluntyranny." Volunteering may be rewarding, but beware the trap of overcommitting your time. It can doom your success. Be selective about the community organizations you're most passionate about. And volunteer your talent over time. Licking envelopes might be needed, but when your real ability lies in marketing, fundraising or finance, you should also make the best use of your talents. Ultimately, your experience will be much more gratifying and the organization much better served.

So stop accepting sweat as the measurement of your success. When you lead with your wisdom, instincts and passion, it won't feel like work. Instead, you'll find yourself exhilarated by the fresh, exciting challenges you're taking on every day.


Suzy Girard-Ruttenberg is founder of Girard & Associates, an international executive business coaching firm and headquarters for SWAN, the Strategic Women’s Alliance Network, a nationally syndicated coaching support program for women business owners intent on aggressively growing their businesses while maintaining quality of life.





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