Your business isn’t your family

Okay, some of us run a family business, but it should still be run along professional lines.

Employees may underperform and you will need to follow your disciplinary procedures to bring them back in line. You may even need to sack them if they are more of a liability than an asset so make sure that you do everything legally. Employees may leave you for better pay, conditions, or opportunities. Or you may need to make their positions redundant if you need to reorganise the business or make cutbacks if the business is underperforming.

While many clients will become friends yours is primarily a business relationship. Why would you offer ‘mates rates’ when your mates should be supporting you to set up your new business? Would they give up part of their salary as willingly as you drop your prices? You may need to be disciplined about only answering business queries during working hours and not in the middle of your sister’s wedding. Real friends wouldn’t want to spoil your free time.

Clients may leave if they feel the grass is greener on the other side in terms of price or services. Similarly we need to charge commercial prices to everybody and to increase those in line with inflation each year.

If you treat your business as a business and your friends as good employees or good clients then you will be able to offer a much better service overall. If you have to sell yourself cheap or accept poor standards to keep their friendship then are they really friends?