Financial Feminist - 139. The Mindset Holding You Back from Starting a Business
Episode Date: February 8, 2024“We're so scared of showing up imperfectly, we're so scared that maybe our wildest dreams are out of reach and too big that we don't ever get started.” For many entrepreneurs or people dreaming of... becoming an entrepreneur, getting started is often the hardest part. That feeling of nervousness and fear — or the thinking that we need to know it all before getting started is not uncommon, but it is holding you back from taking action. In this episode, Tori shares some of the biggest mindset issues and entrepreneurship myths she’s come across as a consultant and business owner and gives you valuable insight into how to use this information to get out of your own way. Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://financialfeministpodcast.com. Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz Business Boot Camp: https://her-first-100k.teachable.com/p/business-bootcamp Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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pru dash disclaimer. Hello, team. Hello. Welcome back to Financial Feminist. Thank you so much for being here.
If you're an oldie but a goodie, welcome back. And if you're new, welcome to the show. My name
is Tori. I am a money expert. I'm a millionaire. I'm obviously a podcast host. And I'm a New York
Times bestselling author. And I fight the patriarchy by making you rich. A few housekeeping
things. One, we have a YouTube now. And if you're watching on YouTube, you know that I am wearing a Try Guys hoodie
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This is actually literally Kelsey Dara's hoodie
that she gave to me.
And it has four Triceratops on it, not three,
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And if you don't, don't worry about it.
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Come on over to YouTube. We'll see you there. We also started creating a YouTube series on
the Her First 100K account that will go out every single week with weekly videos around money,
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saving, investing, paying off debt. And so I would love for you to go over there and get even more good content from us. Second thing, as always, if you like the show, subscribe, tell it to your
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And last but not least, in the spirit of serving you best, if you have a question about money,
if you have a question about building a business, if you have a question about something else
and you want us to answer it, leave us a voicemail. There's a voicemail box right below where you can send in a voicemail and we'll maybe
use it on a show and answer your question. So again, thanks for being here. Today we are discussing
a topic that is near and dear to my heart, which is not only starting a business, but all of the
things that you are telling yourself or that society has told
you that keep you from starting a business. I would say with everything, personal finance and
entrepreneurship, the getting started is the hardest part. We often put barriers in our way
to get started as a way of weirdly feeling productive. And I'll talk about what I mean in a second with this, but I think
that we're so scared of failing. We're so scared of showing up imperfectly. We're so scared that
maybe our wildest dreams are out of reach and too big that we don't ever get started, right?
We tell ourselves, oh, we're going to start next month. Oh, I'm going to start next
year. Oh, when things settle down right now, I'll get started. And so today we're talking about the
mindsets holding you back from starting a business. And before we actually talk about those specific
narratives or beliefs that you're telling yourself, that society is telling you that
are keeping you from entrepreneurship,
if that's something that you crave and that's something that you want.
I first just want to say that getting started is the hardest part. The getting started,
doing something you've never done before is so scary and daunting and feels like literally
you're staring down a mountain and you're like, how the hell do I climb this thing?
And it's a very similar feeling for starting on a personal finance journey, right? Or starting anything, a new workout plan, a new language, a new job,
right? It's like you're excited, but you're also like deeply, deeply nervous. And you're wondering,
at least for me, I do the thing where I am looking not at what I need to do in the next
day or the next week, because I have big dreams and because I have big expectations for myself,
I'm looking at what can I accomplish in three years? Then you realize like, I don't have the
experience or the answers for any of the three years away questions or situations or circumstances.
And I just want to say, of course you don't.
Of course you don't have the answers that you need for questions that are three years away
right now. You will figure out the things that are three years away when it's three years away,
right? You will figure out the things in the future when they actually come around.
away, right? You will figure out the things in the future when they actually come around.
And I think this anxiety and this fear of the unknown is what keeps us playing small and what holds us back often because we think we need all of the answers. We think we need all of the answers
to all of the questions, even though we don't even know what the fucking questions are. So before we even fully
get into the episode, I just want to do a little polite call out. Like maybe you feel red for filth
and if so, great. That was the intent in a kind way. But like the getting started is the hardest
part. So I just want to acknowledge that if you're on the precipice of getting started with anything
new in life, maybe that is launching a business or thinking about a business
for the first time, just know that you have to give yourself the constant reassurance that
it's okay to make mistakes. It's okay to not know everything because it's impossible to know
everything. And that this is something that you can either decide is an incredibly scary,
that you can either decide is an incredibly scary, frightening, overwhelming, intimidating thing, or you can decide is something really exciting and fully committed to you and your success,
right? You can decide this is going to be an exciting part of my life. And truly,
what if everything goes great? So let me talk about some of the mindsets that
hold entrepreneurs back or want to be entrepreneurs back. And also some of the
things that held me back. Because fun fact, I started this business in 2016. I started it right
outside of college. It was about six months after graduation. But I actually wanted to start a
business way sooner than that. But a lot of these narratives kept me playing small.
They held me back from actually growing a business.
And now that I work one-on-one with business owners, that I do consulting, I do coaching,
I literally talk with business owners every single day.
I wanted to share some of the myths and mindsets holding you back from the dream of entrepreneurship.
The first one we have to talk about, there's this myth that, you know what, now's not the
right time. Now's not the right time. It's not a good time for entrepreneurship, right?
We can say, oh my gosh, it's post-pandemic, inflation's really high. There's always a
million reasons not to do something. And I
actually remember it's an episode of The Office where I'm trying to remember what character tells,
oh, it's Jan. Jan tells Pam, there's always a million reasons not to do something. If you're
an Office fan and you've seen episodes or seasons three through five, 25 times like I have, like
literally 25, you know that Pam has this dream of going to art school
and she, you know, immediately hears about it and gets excited. But then, you know, this other part
of herself kicks in, which is, you know, the quote unquote rational part. And I'm using rational as
a derogatory term here, but like this moment where, you know, she's like, oh my gosh, I can,
you know, take this design program at Dunder Mifflin Corporate New York.
And then she goes, well, you know, I have things to do on weekends and I have this and
I have that.
And Jan looks at her and says, there's always a million reasons not to do something.
And I will say that there is this myth that like, oh, you know, I want to start a business,
but now is not a good time because, you know, I don't know.
The thing that happens is that we want to believe that now's not a good time because
it lets us off the hook. Even though the thing we want is to start a business, even though the
thing we want is entrepreneurship, it's so much easier to just tell ourselves, wait, now's not a
good time because then we don't have to take action, right? We don't have to do anything if we convince ourselves that now's not a good time. This is just like investing. This is
just like asking for a raise. There is no perfect time. There's just not. And on the flip side,
if it means that there's no perfect time, well, then every time's a perfect time,
right? If there's no perfect opportune time
where the stars align and everything's great because that's just not how life works, well,
then actually every time is a great time. So I don't want you using this mindset of it's not
the right time as a crutch for you to again actually get started. There's always going to be things standing in your way.
There's always going to be reasons to Jan's point to not do something. But if this is something that
you truly want and something that you really, yeah, you really want to engage with and you
really want to seek out and see if this makes sense for you, then you can't wait. You can't wait. It's never going to be a good time.
So every time is a great time. So that's our first mindset holding us back from entrepreneurship or
holding us back from being a business owner is this fallacy that there's a right time and a
wrong time and now is not the right time. The second one, there is this mindset that is all too common. And I especially
see this in women, which is, well, someone else is already doing it. So I can't do it.
And we had my friend Janice on to talk about side hustles a couple, probably a year ago.
We'll link it. It was a great episode all about growing a business and a side hustle.
And one of the things she said, because we brought this up of like,
okay, this mindset of, well, somebody else is doing it. Somebody else is a photographer.
Somebody else is a graphic designer. Somebody else is a financial expert. And so I can't do it.
Is she gave this idea or this example of the bread aisle in a grocery store,
right? If you walk down, which by the way, there's an entire
aisle just for one thing, bread, right? And if I was a bread maker or a bread owner, right? Or just
bread, if I was bread and I'm walking down the bread aisle and I'm looking at all of this different
bread, kinds of bread, English muffins, bagels, white bread, wheat bread, multi-grain bread, gluten-free bread, right?
You have something to offer. Look at the fucking bread aisle. There are so many different kinds of bread, but they're all inherently the same thing, right? But the key with entrepreneurship is like,
you can do something that maybe somebody else is already doing, but in a different way, right? Not every photographer's photos look the same, right?
If you design a logo for a company, you're going to design a very different logo than
somebody else who's also a graphic designer.
For me, if I would have let this hold me back of, you know what, somebody's already doing
it, like I looked at people who are now my colleagues and thought, well, they're already
doing it,
so I can't do it. I can't be a financial expert. I can't talk about money for women.
Somebody else is already doing it. Yeah, but they weren't me. They weren't me. They didn't have
the experience I did. They didn't have the angle that I take. And so this is the classic version
of a little bit of imposter syndrome, right?
I can't do it as well as somebody else that I see doing it.
And that's what I want to do.
So why would I do it?
And also just this belief that like, there's only one seat at the table.
There's only one person who can talk about women and money.
There's only one person who can photograph weddings in my town. There's only one person who can photograph weddings in my town.
There's only one person who can blog about food. Of course not. Look at the fucking bread aisle.
There are many different kinds of bread, many different shapes of bread, right? And the more
you tell yourself, oh, well, someone's already doing it, the more that, again, holds you back.
There are so many things that you
can offer. And I know that sounds like a platitude, but it's truly not. There are so many things that
you can offer. And there are so many things that you have to say and ways you do things that are
necessary to the world. And every time you tell yourself. You know what somebody's already doing it.
You are denying the world.
That gift.
You are denying the world.
What you can bring.
If you have the audacity to say.
Why not me.
Right.
Again if I would have followed this.
There are already people doing similar things to what I do out there. And there are people who have come after me already people doing similar things to what I do out
there. And there are people who have come after me who do similar things to what I do.
There is enough seats at the table for all of us because we fucking build our own tables as women.
And you have something to give, some angle, some stories, some ways of looking at things that are
different, right? Maybe that's who you are,
right? Maybe that is part of your identity is different, right? I'll just take personal finance
because obviously I know it better than anything else. There are people who are queer, who are
neurodivergent, who are people of color, who are first gen, who are disabled, who are women, right?
Who are from specifically one city or talk to one group of people.
There are people who just do personal finance for non-compensated working parents, right?
Stay-at-home parents. There are people who just do content on YouTube. There are just people who
talk about investing for people who make over a million dollars a year, right? There are so
many different angles or different attributes that you can speak to.
So this myth, this mindset that, you know what, somebody else is already doing it, so I can't
let that go. You have something valuable to say. You have something valuable to produce.
And we need you. We need your voice. We need your perspective. Please don't let that hold you back.
All right, let's talk about number three. I don't have starting capital. I don't have money. I don't let that hold you back. All right, let's talk about number three. I don't have starting
capital. I don't have money. I don't have money to start a business. I don't have a rich uncle.
I can't get a loan from a bank. I don't even know how to go out and raise a bunch of money
because doesn't every business need venture capital or else it's not a legitimate business.
I don't have enough money. Businesses are really expensive and I don't have enough money.
I don't have enough money. Businesses are really expensive and I don't have enough money.
I'm going to caveat this immediately. If you are trying to build an app that's going to require three people, three software engineers to code, that's going to be a more expensive business to
run. If you are trying to invent a product and you need a team of inventors
to go out and build that for you.
I don't know why I just thought of fucking
Elizabeth Holmes and Theranos.
That's a lot of money that you're going to need.
So you kind of have to pick what kind of business
or what your business's focus is
depending on how much money you have.
I have discussed this many times before, but I literally started her first $100K with $40.
That was my upfront starting capital. I have taken no outside investment. I've never raised
money from angel investors or from venture capitalists. I've never received a personal loan either from a family
member or a friend or a bank. I self-funded it with $40. I literally signed up for a website
and bought a domain. That was my investment in my business because it was a blog at the time.
It started with a blog in 2016. And for what I wanted to do, I didn't need upfront capital.
So there is this myth that every single business, in order for it to be successful, to be legitimate,
needs a shit ton of money upfront.
And there are some companies that need a shit ton of money upfront.
But if you're not able to raise money, if you're not wanting to do that. If you don't have a lot of money right now, there are plenty of businesses that you can
start.
I kind of had this theory that starting a business either requires your investment in
time or your investment in money.
I was a 22-year-old just out of college marketer. I didn't have a lot of money, right? I
didn't have a lot of money to invest, but I did have time. I had this passion and this ability
for me to manage my time accordingly so that I could take some time after my nine-to-five job
and the occasional Saturday. And I had that passion
and that want to grow a business. And so I invested time instead. Now it took a couple
years for it to really get off the ground and get traction, right? I started it in December of 2016.
So let's call it 2017. And I didn't see real traction on the business until 2019, right? So two to three years later.
But that was something I was willing to do because I was building my skill set.
I was building my experience.
And also, I was slowly making more money, both in the business and also my nine to five,
that I could put back into the business in order to grow it.
So not all businesses need a bunch of money to get started.
And I would argue some of the most powerful ones don't need money at all, right? Or don't need
substantial investment. There's great things about getting outside investment, whether that is from
a bank or from friends and family, if you've got it, which is a massive privilege, right?
Or venture capitalists. But you also have people to answer to that, right? You have a bank to answer to. You have a family member to answer to. You have
venture capitalists, a board to answer to. And for me, it just was a lot more flexible to just say,
okay, I'm going to grow this business on my own terms.
Oh, number four. We got to talk about number four. This mindset holds so many people back.
It's kind of a two-parter. It's either I don't have an MBA and you need an MBA to run a business.
I've actually heard this so many times. Or kind of adjacent to that, I don't have an MBA and you need an MBA to run a business. I've actually heard this so many times or kind of adjacent to that. I don't have a business plan. I don't have a 35 page document
outlining my business. And I need to put that together before I launch a business.
First of all, I don't have an MBA. You don't need an MBA. I have plenty of friends who have MBAs
who are super smart and successful. I have plenty of friends who have MBAs who are super smart and successful.
I have plenty of friends who never got an MBA, maybe even didn't go to four-year college and are successful business owners. You do not need an MBA to run a business.
You don't. The closest thing I got to an MBA was an entrepreneurship program in college in my senior
year. And I learned very little that I apply to my general life now as
a business owner. It was a great experience. I highly recommend it. But in terms of actual
real world application, very little. And I hear a lot of that with MBAs as well,
that there's some programs that are really helpful and there's some programs that are
not so helpful. So you don't need an MBA to be a successful business owner and definitely not
to even get started. The business plan thing, I got my little dirty secret that I'm going to
confess to you right now. I never wrote a business plan. I still technically have never written at
least a 35-page document of a business plan. One of the most helpful things I learned in my
entrepreneurship program was figuring out what your value proposition is. If you know your value proposition,
that at the bare minimum is what you need to get started. Your value proposition is what is the
thing that you are bringing that is unique? That's it. Is it, again, your different way of viewing
things? Is it a different product? Is it some sort of innovation?
Knowing your value proposition plus who is your ideal customer, that's enough to get
started.
You don't need a business plan.
In addition, something that I teach with my incredible friend Mallory, who is also a seven
figure business owner, is a business boot camp program where literally in three hours,
is a business bootcamp program where literally in three hours, we walk you through a marketing plan,
a business plan, a how to actually create revenue streams kind of plan. We call it a mini MBA in three hours. Again, it's called the business bootcamp. We will link it down below. And that
is what we built as a way of showing you exactly what we did. We have successful seven figure
businesses and we never wrote a business plan and neither of us have an MBA. And so I think, again, this is one
of those mindsets is that you need a stack of paper for a business plan that goes like thump
when you hit it against a desk. You don't need anything that crazy and you definitely don't
need anything that big. You just need to define what it is you're trying to do and to whom and how are you going to make
money doing it? Which again, the business bootcamp goes into detail and helps you outline.
So that's one big thing. You don't need an MBA and you don't need a business plan.
Number five, this is the most pervasive one I see. So if you've been tuning me out,
I need you to come back.
Remember I was talking before at the beginning about this belief that we need to have all of our shit together before we embark on this entrepreneurship journey, right? We need to
know all of the answers to all of the questions that we don't even know either. We don't know
the questions, so of course we don't know the answers. And we think we're being productive by doing this, right?
We think we are being productive by worrying about all of the things that we think we need
answers to.
And number five is very specific, but I see it.
This is the most common thing I see.
thing I see. This mindset is the most pervasive and damaging mindset, which is, well, I need a website and I need a brand color and I need a logo and I need all of these things before I can launch
and they need to be perfect, right? And this looks like different things for different businesses,
but this is the most common thing I see, which is I don't have a website or I don't have a perfect website
or I don't have a logo or I don't have the perfect logo or I don't have brand colors and
I need to have brand colors before I launch. If you have been here since 2016, I doubt it,
but props to you. Bless you. Hello. Thank you for being here. You know that the brand that I ran, which wasn't
even called Her First 100K for another three years, was messy as fuck. If you have time and
you want to do this, you can literally go to the Her First 100K Instagram and you can scroll back
to content I was creating in 2018. It is bad. It's not good. It's really messy and I can look at it
and feel a little cringy and a little embarrassed. I was doing the best I could with what I had at
the time. And something so powerful that I decided to do was take on the mindset that done was better than perfect. If there's one mindset I can get you to
actually take on as opposed to get rid of, it is that done is better than perfect, especially when
it comes to being an entrepreneur. I launched my first website with three blog posts literally
in a night. I woke up that morning and I decided, hey, I think it's time to stop talking and actually launch the blog.
The website was ugly.
It wasn't good.
It wasn't pretty.
But I did it.
I did it.
I got it launched.
Okay, cool.
And then a week later, I fixed this part of it.
Great.
A week after that, I designed myself a logo in Canva.
It wasn't pretty.
It was enough.
We put these hoops in front of ourselves that we
think we need to jump through. Like, oh, well, I can't get started because I need a website.
You know what? I can't get started because I need the perfect branding. You know what? I can't get
started because I need the perfect logo or the perfect name or whatever that looks like.
Done is better than perfect. You will figure out what it should look like along the way. You can constantly
improve. You can constantly iterate on your original idea. And you should, right? But you
cannot wait for it to be perfect before you even launch it because then you will never get started.
And weirdly, your brain is doing this like, well, I have to have all of these things.
And you feel like you're being productive, right?
Because you're worrying about all of these things.
No, it's just your excuse for not getting started.
You don't need the perfect brand color.
You don't need the perfect logo or the perfect website or the perfect name.
Her first 100K didn't come about.
The name didn't come about until three years after I
originally launched the blog. Because I found that name, I found the mission, I found the brand
color, I found what the vibe of the brand was through the three years working on it,
through conversations with you all, through understanding where my own passions and my
own gifts were. Done is better than perfect.
Let go of the mindset that you need to have all of your ducks in a row before you can get started.
Just start. You're going to figure it out along the way. And finally, number six, we talked about
this with Amy Porterfield on a previous episode. We will also link it down below. It's a great
companion for this episode that you're listening to now. We also believe, especially as women,
that I cannot teach somebody because I'm not an expert. We always feel like there's more we could
be doing, more we could be learning, more that we could know before we brand ourselves as an expert. I still remember the first time that I got any sort of major press.
And they were asking, you know, what my title was.
You know, they're going to write Tori Dunlap, comma, you know, title, comma, and then my quote.
And I remember thinking, am I allowed to put money expert?
am I allowed to put money expert? Am I allowed to say that I'm a money expert if the money expert unicorns or fairies didn't come down from on high and bequeath me with that title,
right? Like I was trying to find, I don't know, the council of Nicaea for money experts. That's
Catholic school deep cut. But like I was trying to think of who
or what gives me the permission to say that. And I realized I give myself permission.
Now, I'm not out here saying I'm a money expert and then I can't teach you anything about money,
right? That's a scam. That's a fraud. But as Amy said in the episode,
you're just trying to teach the people who are slightly behind where you're at now.
You don't need a PhD in economics to teach somebody how the economy works at the basic level, right?
You don't need to be the world's foremost expert in what you're doing.
You just need to be able to offer value
to people. And if you are going to teach something, teach it to the people who are just behind you,
right? Or who are a couple steps behind you. That's so important to keep in mind,
especially when imposter syndrome creeps in, where we're like, oh my God, I'm not an expert.
What kind of questions are your friends asking you?
That's a perfect place to start.
What kind of questions do your friends ask you about something?
That's how I discovered my passion for teaching women about money.
And then I went out and taught myself more to make sure that I felt confident enough
to teach it, right?
But I say this all the time as part of my story. I was the friend that all my friends were
coming to for advice and guidance. Did I have multiple degrees in finance? Was I a financial
professor? Did I have certifications out the wazoo? No. But I could teach money in a way that was accessible, in a way that broke it down in
millennial English and felt like you were just having brunch with me, not sitting in a stuffy
office learning about the stock market. So this idea that you need to be a complete and total
expert, you need to have, again, everything figured out and you need to be the foremost thought
leader on whatever you're trying to do or teach is just bullshit.
I always hate when people do this, but like white men do this shit all the time.
And you know way more than a fucking white man.
Like you do.
You are way better at your job.
You're way more qualified to teach,
but you think you have to be an expert and it's holding you back, right?
So when it comes to building a business that's teaching somebody something,
when it comes to building a business that's offering a service and you're trying to gain
credibility and brand yourself as the person that somebody should trust. You don't have to be the person
who's read every single book about the topic. And frankly, you shouldn't be, right? You don't
have to be the world's foremost expert. Think about what people ask you about all of the time,
what your friends come to you for advice for, what you can offer
somebody who's just a few steps behind you.
Team, I'm so excited for you to throw away these mindsets that are holding you back from
entrepreneurship.
If this is something that you want to pursue, if you've always wanted to be a business owner,
I encourage you to maybe journal after you listen to this episode.
What takeaways do you have? What takeaways do you have?
What thoughts do you have?
Are any of these mindsets things that are actively keeping you playing small, keeping
you from getting started or from progressing in your business?
And I would love to hear, especially if you're on Spotify down below, feel free to share
your thoughts with us in the little question box.
I love doing these kind of entrepreneurship focused episodes. These are questions we get all of the time, which is how
do I increase my income? How do I become an entrepreneur? How do I do this full time?
And if for some reason you listen to all of this and you have never wanted to be an entrepreneur,
that's also okay. Entrepreneurship isn't for everybody. I am the first to tell you that there
are many great things about entrepreneurship and there are also many, many painful things about entrepreneurship.
So you may have gotten to the end of this episode thinking like, yeah, I want to do
this and maybe you're not, maybe this isn't for you.
That's okay.
But I will say that if you are telling yourself any of these, that it's not the right time
or that somebody else is already doing it or that I don't have money and I need a bunch
of money or, you know, I don't have this stack of paper for a business plan, or I don't have the perfect
website, or I don't feel like the world's foremost expert. Let all that go. Leave all that behind.
The world needs your voice. The world needs what you have to offer. And frankly, I need you to get
fucking rich doing it. I need you to go out and pursue entrepreneurship if that's a passion of yours because the world needs you and also you need you
You need the investment in yourself in order to boost your confidence, but also
To make a bunch of money for yourself and for your community
So thank you for being here as always financial feminists. I'm cheering you on every step of the way
I can't wait to see you back here soon, and I'll talk to you later.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast.
Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields,
associate producer, Tamisha Grant, research by Arielle Johnson,
audio and video engineering by Alyssa Medcalf, marketing and operations by Karina Patel,
Amanda LeFue,
Elizabeth McCumber, Masha Bakhmakieva, Taylor Cho, Kaylin Sprinkle, Sasha Bonar, Claire Coronin,
Daryl Ann Engman, and Janelle Reisner. Promotional graphics by Mary Stratton,
photography by Sarah Wolf, and theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound. A huge thanks to the entire
Her First 100K team and community for supporting this show.
For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100K,
our guests, and episode show notes, visit financialfeministpodcast.com.