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I Am A Family First Entrepreneur

posted on April 22, 2009

It isn’t very often that I pick up a book and can’t put it down. But, that is what happened when I got my advance copy of ONO, Options Not Obligations: Enrich Your Personal Life by Rethinking Your Financial Life by Marc Warnke.

ONO BookThe other thing that happened was as I read more and more of the book I kept thinking in the back of my head, “dang, I could have written this book.” That isn’t a slight at Marc at all. What I mean is that so many of the thoughts, feelings and points I agreed with completely and have for quite sometime. While our experiences in life have been quite different, I can tell that we walk down the same path a lot as well at this point in our lives.

I first heard of this book when a mutual friend told me he knew this guy Marc who thought of himself as a “family first entrepreneur.” Now, I had never heard of that term before, but I instantly knew it described me.

Everything I do in life is so that I can have a happy family life. Doesn’t matter if it is a business decision, going to the gym, what I say online or what I make for dinner. Each and every piece of my life is for the good of my family and the life I have with them.

Ever since opening up shop with The Advance Guard it has been something that is harder then ever. Running your own company takes a lot of time. Mentally your brain is always thinking about work no matter where you are. As a business owner this is something you can’t get around. But, the balancing act is being able to also focus and spend time on the other parts of your life as well. This is something I’m working on all the time, but it is important because one fuels the other and it works in both directions.

I think the values outlined in this book apply to people who don’t have a family as well. The key is the fact that work shouldn’t be the only thing in your life. You need to leave room for passions and loves. That could be anything that doesn’t involve the time at your work desk.

I love my job. I get up every morning excited about working with our clients, growing our business and satisfying my entrepreneurial cravings. But, I also love it because I know that it is allowing me to be the family man I want and need to be as well. I’ve worked with people in the past who didn’t understand that this balance is possible and required and it has never worked out. You need happy employees working for you and if YOU are not happy then we all know what trickles down. *grin*

It is far from the standard business book, but I really hope people pick up a copy of ONO and take the time to read it. You’ll get through it in no time and I think you’ll feel better for it.

Marc is going to be a guest on an upcoming Managing the Gray so if you have questions let me know them and I’ll be sure to ask them.

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Categories: Books
  • http://www.16thletter.com Melissa Chang

    CC – Thanks for the heart-felt post. As an entrepreneur who is committed to making my business succeed – and my family (including my husband, friends and any yet-to-be-born children), this really resonated with me. Keep on fighting the good fight. :) @mchang16

  • http://www.realmendriveminivans.com PJ Mullen

    CC – looks like an interesting book and good for you to have found that balance. I was way to the other side. I burnt myself out working in a career/job I hated just for the money, but was never happy. Being a stay at home dad is a tough job – no training, long hours, difficult boss :) – but it is definitely the most rewarding. The one thing I’ve always admired about you is how you follow your passions. I hope one day that I can turn my passions into a career that allows me to be family first, because right now I’m family only and quite happy with that decision.

  • Glenn Alves

    CC- appreciate the ONO book reference. Work-life balance in this economy is very challenging. Great to know you aspire and live with this focus.
    Further been reading some “Advanced Guard” info and the white paper pdf applicable to social media tactics. Good stuff! I continue to consult on social media in the enterprise space and reference The AG insights regularly.

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  • http://www.mommybytes.com Angela at mommy bytes

    Hey CC – I heard Erin’s interview of Marc on the latest Manic Mommies and it was quite inspiring. I’m way too chicken to leave my corporate lifestyle, even though it is far from secure nowadays. The job is far from family first, although I do it to support my family (my husband stays home with the kids). Maybe that’s my version of family first…

  • http://www.odeo.com Eric

    CC, I’ll have to check this book out. I’ve had a very clear separation of work/family for a long time. Sometimes it takes some breaking in time with new partners, but my first rule is – If it’s not due at 8AM on Monday morning, don’t call me on the weekend. If you do, I’ll be wondering why you just figured it out on Saturday and I don’t work on Sunday. I think that having regular time where your mind is taken away from work makes you that much more productive come Monday AM. The smartphone has definately made this both an obstacle to mental separation and a tool to allow quick, simple responses to requests so it’s kind of a double-edge sword.

  • http://www.pricebonus.com/ PB

    CC – Thanks for the heart-felt post. As an entrepreneur who is committed to making my business succeed – and my family (including my husband, friends and any yet-to-be-born children), this really resonated with me. Keep on fighting the good fight. :) @mchang16