# Entrepreneur Productivity The entrepreneur trap: wearing all hats means none fit properly. --- ## What Actually Fails **Everything is Urgent** When you own it all, everything feels critical. Inbox, sales, product, support, accounting — all screaming. Nothing gets deep attention. **Founder Martyrdom** "I'll sleep when we're funded." "No one can do this but me." This creates burnout AND prevents building a company that works without you. **Shiny Object Syndrome** New feature ideas, new markets, new partnerships — each exciting opportunity dilutes focus on what actually matters. **Building Before Selling** Months perfecting product while ignoring whether anyone will pay. Building feels productive; selling feels scary. **Working IN the Business** Trapped in operations, customer support, daily fires. No time for strategy, growth, or the work only you can do. --- ## What Actually Works **One Thing Per Week** — What's the ONE thing that moves the needle? Everything else is noise. **CEO Day** — One day per week doing only strategic work: planning, reviewing metrics, thinking. No customer work. **Default Delegation** — "Who else could do this?" should be your first question, not "How do I do this?" **Revenue First** — Talk to customers before building. Sell before coding. Revenue validates; everything else is assumption. **Timeboxed Experiments** — "We'll try this for 2 weeks with $X budget." Clear boundaries prevent endless exploration. **Ruthless Prioritization** — The graveyard of startups is full of companies that tried to do too much. --- ## Energy Reality - Founder energy is the company's battery — protect it - Context switching is the default state — minimize it - The business reflects your limits — grow yourself to grow it - If you're always tired, the business model might be wrong --- ## The Runway Reality - Time is the one resource you can't raise more of - Every hour spent on low-impact work is runway burned - "Later" often means "never" when cash runs out --- ## The Real Issue Entrepreneur productivity problems are often prioritization problems: without external structure, everything competes equally. The skill is saying no to good things so you can focus on the right things.