Episode 9

To Grow or Not To Grow

Mike Rosenberg joins Joshua Maddux on this weeks episode of In The Bunker to talk about To Grow or Not To Grow. This is a real question so many businesses owners struggle with.

Our episode highlights:

  • What’s your personal “Why” and how does your business support that?
  • Work life balance
  • Work from anywhere

Book recommendations (From our conversation)

  • Find Your Why
  • Start With Why

Bio: Mike Rosenberg leads business operations for Veracity, as well as digital strategy. He brings experience and passion from two distinct, yet similar, career paths in sports business marketing and online marketing. After many years promoting sports events, Mike jumped online to help build EngineWorks; a search marketing agency providing search engine optimization, paid search marketing and social media campaigns. He uses that experience today to bring digital marketing savvy to public relations, digital PR and content marketing campaigns for Veracity’s clients.

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Transcript
Joshua Maddux:

Welcome back to in the.

Joshua Maddux:

Every business owner has faced challenges, and we love to

Joshua Maddux:

tell and share those stories.

Joshua Maddux:

Today.

Joshua Maddux:

We have Mike Rosenberg in the bunker with us.

Joshua Maddux:

Mike was faced with the challenge of, to grow or not grow his business.

Joshua Maddux:

Mike has 20 plus years of experience in marketing and PR.

Joshua Maddux:

And there's so much to unpack on this conversation and I'm super

Joshua Maddux:

excited to jump in and discuss this.

Joshua Maddux:

Let's welcome, Mike to the shell.

Joshua Maddux:

Could I have you on before we jump into this topic, let's

Joshua Maddux:

really understand who you are.

Joshua Maddux:

How'd you get here?

Joshua Maddux:

What do you do?

Mike Rosenberg:

Great.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah, I don't think we have time to, to fully understand it, but so

Mike Rosenberg:

I'll give you, the quick overview.

Mike Rosenberg:

So currently and for the last oh 10 years or so, I've been

Mike Rosenberg:

the CEO of veracity marketing.

Mike Rosenberg:

We are a PR and content marketing and digital PR agency based up in Portland

Mike Rosenberg:

work with a variety of clients, our sort of target tends to be folks in the B2B

Mike Rosenberg:

industrial and in high-tech kind of a.

Mike Rosenberg:

Businessy businesses.

Mike Rosenberg:

We like to say how did I get here?

Mike Rosenberg:

I actually started out in sports marketing always played sports in my life and all

Mike Rosenberg:

my life and had that dream to work in the sports world, whether it was for a

Mike Rosenberg:

team or something did that did actually do that for awhile branched out and

Mike Rosenberg:

did had my own consultancy after that.

Mike Rosenberg:

And then got a little frustrated with.

Mike Rosenberg:

That industry years ago where, whenever we had a question of

Mike Rosenberg:

why are we doing it this way?

Mike Rosenberg:

It was always because we've always done it that way.

Mike Rosenberg:

I, like I said, I got frustrated with that and met with a friend who was starting

Mike Rosenberg:

a digital marketing agency, specifically a search engine marketing agency.

Mike Rosenberg:

This is early two thousands.

Mike Rosenberg:

And when the question came up is, how are we going to do it?

Mike Rosenberg:

Why are we doing it that.

Mike Rosenberg:

The answer was, we don't know, cause it hasn't really been done yet.

Mike Rosenberg:

And that was very exciting.

Mike Rosenberg:

So help build that into a, it came to an acquisition, which was our goal there.

Mike Rosenberg:

And then joined veracity, which was actually started it was a PR

Mike Rosenberg:

specifically a PR firm started by my wife joined her and started building

Mike Rosenberg:

out the digital side of what we do.

Mike Rosenberg:

So that's the quick

Joshua Maddux:

As you started this PR agency, obviously, being

Joshua Maddux:

an entrepreneur, being a business owner, there's always a desire to.

Joshua Maddux:

Grow to, achieve that next goal.

Joshua Maddux:

What was that growth trajectory that you guys had set?

Joshua Maddux:

What does that look like today as well?

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

It's quite different today than when it was the background of the agency

Mike Rosenberg:

starting it actually started, so my wife used to like I said, she's

Mike Rosenberg:

my business partner and she was a.

Mike Rosenberg:

Worked for a few PR agencies, a couple of the big PR agencies in Portland.

Mike Rosenberg:

And then she made a career transition.

Mike Rosenberg:

As we were thinking about kids into real estate.

Mike Rosenberg:

She got recruited over to actually sell a big condo project.

Mike Rosenberg:

That was great.

Mike Rosenberg:

She was doing the sales and the marketing for that.

Mike Rosenberg:

It worked out along with kids coming along.

Mike Rosenberg:

That was 2007, 2008, a little bit of a recession coming a

Mike Rosenberg:

little bit of a housing bubble.

Mike Rosenberg:

Everything was late, of course.

Mike Rosenberg:

And so instead of the timing working perfectly to then take a break to have

Mike Rosenberg:

our son, everything ran over super busy.

Mike Rosenberg:

Then decided to really take a break and really enjoyed the marketing piece.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think even more than the real estate piece, she has a big passion for that,

Mike Rosenberg:

but decided to, just to go back in and, raise the, raise our son for a little

Mike Rosenberg:

bit, but then wanted to work still.

Mike Rosenberg:

So she started veracity basically as a PR consultant, she had a few

Mike Rosenberg:

clients, et cetera, et cetera.

Mike Rosenberg:

That.

Mike Rosenberg:

We did that.

Mike Rosenberg:

I was working for got acquired and the timing just worked out where she

Mike Rosenberg:

was starting to turn business away.

Mike Rosenberg:

And I came over and said, okay let's build this.

Mike Rosenberg:

We see actually at this time now had two little kids.

Mike Rosenberg:

And part of our reason for doing it together was we could sustain,

Mike Rosenberg:

we could make enough money to live.

Mike Rosenberg:

We could, share raising our kids.

Mike Rosenberg:

We could share running this business in this sort of short-term goal.

Mike Rosenberg:

There was just sorta make it through when they were little.

Mike Rosenberg:

And it was in the basement of our house.

Mike Rosenberg:

All that sort of stuff.

Mike Rosenberg:

But we also had plans of what are we going to do when they start to go to school

Mike Rosenberg:

full time and what are our ultimate goals?

Mike Rosenberg:

One of those goals that we identified was actually, this was

Mike Rosenberg:

one, her name is Amy identity.

Mike Rosenberg:

I want to be the biggest, or I think it was the biggest PR for before.

Mike Rosenberg:

It's what does that mean?

Mike Rosenberg:

Does that mean you make the most money?

Mike Rosenberg:

Do you have the most clients?

Mike Rosenberg:

Do you have the most employees, but that was just the Archie goal, right?

Mike Rosenberg:

But that was eventually, but the short-term goals for that was make

Mike Rosenberg:

enough money so that you can live the life that you want to have

Mike Rosenberg:

it as be a lifestyle business.

Mike Rosenberg:

Now, a lot of businesses do that, for some sort of time forever, it's all they

Mike Rosenberg:

retire until they, give it to their kids.

Mike Rosenberg:

Sell it to somebody else, other businesses, like the

Mike Rosenberg:

one that I helped start before this acquisition was the goal.

Mike Rosenberg:

We wanted some sort of action.

Mike Rosenberg:

So we had short term and then the long-term was this nebulous.

Mike Rosenberg:

Now of course we put together, here's where we want to be financially.

Mike Rosenberg:

Here's the number of clients we think it's going to take to get us there,

Mike Rosenberg:

the number of employees or contractors or whatever, to get us there.

Mike Rosenberg:

And that sort of evolved over time.

Mike Rosenberg:

One of the things that's interesting about it, we built the business based on

Mike Rosenberg:

kind of the way that our kids grew up.

Mike Rosenberg:

So it's grown along as they've grown.

Mike Rosenberg:

The more that they're out, doing things.

Mike Rosenberg:

The bigger we got, they were out of the house, we moved out

Mike Rosenberg:

of the house and got an office.

Mike Rosenberg:

All those sorts of things were pieces on it.

Mike Rosenberg:

Got it.

Joshua Maddux:

You know it with any business as you're growing that, and

Joshua Maddux:

you're figuring out, like you said, making the income that you need.

Joshua Maddux:

But having that goal of being the biggest PR firm, in.

Joshua Maddux:

In Portland, obviously, there's other PR firms in the area, is

Joshua Maddux:

that a goal that has changed or is that a goal that you've achieved?

Mike Rosenberg:

I say we certainly haven't achieved it, but as I

Mike Rosenberg:

mentioned before, it's a nebulous goal.

Mike Rosenberg:

It's just one of those, in fact, I think it's an ego goal.

Mike Rosenberg:

I would say one of the other things I said, is it biggest or best?

Mike Rosenberg:

I personally would say that we're probably the best.

Mike Rosenberg:

It also depends on how you define PR the various things that you do.

Mike Rosenberg:

I'm sure there's other firms that are better at certain pieces of PR than we

Mike Rosenberg:

are, like, for example investor relations.

Mike Rosenberg:

Isn't something we do a lot of.

Mike Rosenberg:

So if that's what people think of, when they think of PR.

Mike Rosenberg:

Are we the best at that?

Mike Rosenberg:

Or the biggest?

Mike Rosenberg:

Absolutely not.

Mike Rosenberg:

When it, when they talk about getting their client media

Mike Rosenberg:

relations and media results.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

We could be considered the best at that.

Mike Rosenberg:

And then, like many industries in the agency.

Mike Rosenberg:

Even oftentimes those agencies are acquired by other bigger agencies.

Mike Rosenberg:

So who even knows, which one is which when it comes to that.

Mike Rosenberg:

But, I th I think the bigger thing is, is that, was that the right goal

Mike Rosenberg:

to have it's something to strive for?

Mike Rosenberg:

It's something to say, this is what's going to drive you, but now we start

Mike Rosenberg:

to look at it as where our goals are now is, are we happy with the.

Mike Rosenberg:

Are we happy with the work we're doing or our employees and the folks

Mike Rosenberg:

that we partner with happy are we doing good work by our clients?

Mike Rosenberg:

And are we making an income that that we're happy and satisfied with?

Mike Rosenberg:

So I think that's where our goals have moved and changed.

Mike Rosenberg:

That first.

Mike Rosenberg:

Five-year economic goal was just I'm the numbers guy, right?

Mike Rosenberg:

It was just based on, okay, we grow this percent, we get this

Mike Rosenberg:

many people we're gonna, be where we quote unquote want to be.

Mike Rosenberg:

One of the things that I've found and I know it's true for most

Mike Rosenberg:

businesses, bigger doesn't necessarily mean you're making more money or

Mike Rosenberg:

doing better work or any of that.

Mike Rosenberg:

So you start to, to go through it and say, okay we need X number of employees to get

Mike Rosenberg:

this amount of monthly revenue coming in.

Mike Rosenberg:

But at the end of the day, are you doing better work?

Mike Rosenberg:

Are you happier?

Mike Rosenberg:

Are you making more money?

Mike Rosenberg:

Not necessarily.

Mike Rosenberg:

But I, th there's scales and tipping points and that I've seen along the way.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

And I definitely can relate to that, with our team owning a digital agency, we're

Joshua Maddux:

a team of five and there was a point where we had nine and I either needed to.

Joshua Maddux:

Bring on someone else who could project manage and literally split the team in

Joshua Maddux:

half and have sort of two teams internal, which Mount now means more overhead

Joshua Maddux:

because there's more project management, there's more, more layers with that.

Joshua Maddux:

And then, me taking a higher, business, directional goal aspect,

Joshua Maddux:

and then continuing to grow that.

Joshua Maddux:

And it's all a hundred percent possible.

Joshua Maddux:

It just is what has.

Joshua Maddux:

Do you want that business to become, do you want it to be something,

Joshua Maddux:

do you want to have a PR firm that has a big giant office with 150

Joshua Maddux:

employees that come in every day?

Joshua Maddux:

Or do you want a PR firm that allows you to take a two-week vacation and not worry

Joshua Maddux:

about the 150 employee who is, and because you don't have 150 employees and that I

Joshua Maddux:

think is where so many business owners.

Joshua Maddux:

Really start to struggle with, I want to have this massively quote unquote

Joshua Maddux:

like successful business and successful, sadly, oftentimes as associated with,

Joshua Maddux:

number of employees or size of the office or, whatever that metric is,

Joshua Maddux:

and it doesn't need to be successful, for me my wife and I had a kid in

Joshua Maddux:

February and I was able to take a few weeks off work and I work from home.

Joshua Maddux:

I'm sitting in my garage and, in a small office that we've built out and not

Joshua Maddux:

having to commute two hours each way to, an office in downtown LA or whatever.

Joshua Maddux:

And for me, that.

Joshua Maddux:

The successful aspect.

Joshua Maddux:

It's being able to have that family time being able to have that

Joshua Maddux:

flexibility more rather than an office with a hundred plus employees.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah, for sure.

Mike Rosenberg:

And I think also as a business owner, it, a lot of it boils down to also what

Mike Rosenberg:

do you want to do, and what I mean, like your day to day, do you want to

Mike Rosenberg:

continue to do whether it's the project management or, the, in the weeds work or

Mike Rosenberg:

the client interaction or, et cetera, and.

Mike Rosenberg:

If that's some, if you want to continue to do that of course you can hire people

Mike Rosenberg:

to do, the tasks and things that you don't want to do, but if that's the role you

Mike Rosenberg:

want to keep having, and you're happy with it, maybe it doesn't make sense to grow.

Mike Rosenberg:

If one of the early on things I remember talking with a coach was, the

Mike Rosenberg:

different stages of a business from being self-employed to, being a small

Mike Rosenberg:

business owner, to being an investor.

Mike Rosenberg:

Those are, I'm butchering it somehow exactly how they say a

Mike Rosenberg:

much more eloquent, not my job.

Mike Rosenberg:

That, that was how I originally built it.

Mike Rosenberg:

It was like, okay.

Mike Rosenberg:

So I want to go from being self-employed okay.

Mike Rosenberg:

Then to being a small business owner, and then, at some point, do I want

Mike Rosenberg:

to be an investor in this business and then go do different things.

Mike Rosenberg:

That's a question.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think a lot of business owners, I'm sure they have asked

Mike Rosenberg:

themselves, but need to continue to ask themselves as they're going.

Mike Rosenberg:

And then.

Mike Rosenberg:

Are these steps going to help take me closer to that.

Mike Rosenberg:

So if my goal is to become an investor in this business, maybe you

Mike Rosenberg:

do respond to those emails, talking about people, wanting to buy it.

Mike Rosenberg:

Continuing that way.

Mike Rosenberg:

I don't know if you get those, but those are my current annoyance in the inbox.

Mike Rosenberg:

But that's just because I'm not in that position right now.

Mike Rosenberg:

Like I want to keep building it myself.

Mike Rosenberg:

So again, I think that the thing there is it's like you said, it's not.

Mike Rosenberg:

It doesn't have to be perfectly where, what's perceived to be, a

Mike Rosenberg:

good business or a big business.

Mike Rosenberg:

I've talked with plenty and worked with plenty people who have, hundreds of

Mike Rosenberg:

employees and it seems like everything from the outside is going amazing.

Mike Rosenberg:

And it's yeah, but we're actually, we're a lot more profitable.

Mike Rosenberg:

Before we hit that 50 employee mark or that 10 employee mark or whatever it is.

Mike Rosenberg:

And then I think a lot of people in the last couple of years with the pandemic

Mike Rosenberg:

and living at, working from home and reevaluating priorities, I think there's

Mike Rosenberg:

a lot more people who are coming on to that, that it doesn't have to be what

Mike Rosenberg:

that, old school view of success was.

Joshua Maddux:

And I think the other aspect with that, I know that I've seen.

Joshua Maddux:

You also have employees who are okay with not working a 40 hour week now

Joshua Maddux:

they've realized that there's a lot of stuff in their life that they cut

Joshua Maddux:

out expense wise, that, if you're not driving, in LA you could, you can go

Joshua Maddux:

20 miles and have a two hour commute.

Joshua Maddux:

It's ridiculous.

Joshua Maddux:

And if you're not spending four hours in the car every day,

Joshua Maddux:

that's a heck of a lot of gas.

Joshua Maddux:

You can take a pay cut, you can take less hour a week job.

Joshua Maddux:

You can, you can spend that money elsewhere.

Joshua Maddux:

And so I think that's where so many businesses have seen flexibility in that.

Joshua Maddux:

I know some local businesses in the LA area who would only hire

Joshua Maddux:

local talent, who could be in the office and then they realize.

Joshua Maddux:

The pandemic and realized the ability to hire anyone in the us.

Joshua Maddux:

They're like that changes our talent pool.

Joshua Maddux:

We now can hire anyone anywhere.

Joshua Maddux:

And it's a very different, different element.

Joshua Maddux:

You can have someone who's, in New York or Florida or whatever that

Joshua Maddux:

has a three hour time difference.

Joshua Maddux:

That is going to be able to be online three hours before.

Joshua Maddux:

Your staff in LA is an instantly, that gives you an additional

Joshua Maddux:

few hours of client support.

Joshua Maddux:

And you don't have to pay someone to, get up and be in the office

Joshua Maddux:

at five o'clock in the morning

Mike Rosenberg:

because they're doing it.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah, absolutely.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think, it's interesting, we've been through I feel like almost

Mike Rosenberg:

every sort of employee contractor, whatever situation and I'm sure it'll

Mike Rosenberg:

continue to change too, from having only full-time folks to, to work.

Mike Rosenberg:

, part-time working, mothers was one of the things we thought, we could get

Mike Rosenberg:

there's, especially in the PR world, we felt like there was this great talent

Mike Rosenberg:

pool, that worked for a while and maybe took a break for kids or whatever.

Mike Rosenberg:

And then maybe didn't want to come back and go into an office and,

Mike Rosenberg:

didn't want to have that full-time job, but had this great knowledge.

Mike Rosenberg:

And before.

Mike Rosenberg:

So we worked with some folks who were like that, speaking of, now it's for

Mike Rosenberg:

us, at least it's a hybrid, right?

Mike Rosenberg:

We've got some folks who are quote unquote full-time employees, we gave up our

Mike Rosenberg:

office and haven't gone back to it yet in Portland, but we just hired a person.

Mike Rosenberg:

In the St.

Mike Rosenberg:

Louis area.

Mike Rosenberg:

And that's worked out great, like you said, we've got, so now

Mike Rosenberg:

we've got, east coast, Midwest.

Mike Rosenberg:

We don't have anybody in that mountain time yet.

Mike Rosenberg:

So that, that hour we don't quite have covered, but maybe that's the next one

Mike Rosenberg:

will be, somebody in Montana or something.

Mike Rosenberg:

But in an, of course, our Western.

Mike Rosenberg:

But w like you were saying, we found it's been great to have those diverse

Mike Rosenberg:

work hours to, I love having stuff in my inbox when I get there in the

Mike Rosenberg:

morning, because I know that somebody has been working a couple of hours, but

Mike Rosenberg:

also it does, they don't necessarily have had to have been working from

Mike Rosenberg:

eight o'clock their local time either.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think a lot of.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think for a lot of employees and where the, the really, especially they get into

Mike Rosenberg:

man wants that flexibility of time, not only location and time zone time, but like

Mike Rosenberg:

you work with what works for you, right?

Mike Rosenberg:

There's all kinds of studies talk about when people do their best

Mike Rosenberg:

work and when they're the most productive and, it's the ability for

Mike Rosenberg:

the most part to, to be flexible in.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think is going to be a big win for everybody that can do it, oh, you

Mike Rosenberg:

want to do yoga every day at nine o'clock that's a part of your schedule.

Mike Rosenberg:

And, don't build meetings that you need to be at around that time of your

Mike Rosenberg:

nine o'clock central time or whatever.

Mike Rosenberg:

Great.

Mike Rosenberg:

We'll block that in the calendar for you and you're getting your work done.

Mike Rosenberg:

Awesome.

Mike Rosenberg:

But that's the perfect scenario.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah, absolutely.

Joshua Maddux:

And our team is almost the same thing with, being able to.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

You want to take a two hour lunch and, do a workout or get your

Joshua Maddux:

grocery shopping in during that time, rather than trying to grocery shop

Joshua Maddux:

at five 30 when everybody else's.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah, no, it's a great, it's a great element.

Joshua Maddux:

We had a designer that worked for the company for a while that

Joshua Maddux:

would go surfing in the morning and the days that he went surfing.

Joshua Maddux:

Where the days that he did his best design work on bet.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

And so it was like, I don't care that you're going to be two hours late,

Joshua Maddux:

like getting in the office because I know the work you're going to

Joshua Maddux:

produce today is going to be awesome.

Joshua Maddux:

It's going to be great.

Joshua Maddux:

And so it also, not only does it provide that flexibility,

Joshua Maddux:

but it provides the aspect of.

Joshua Maddux:

No, if you're not having to sit there all day while you're working going,

Joshua Maddux:

I'm going to have to fight people at the grocery store at five o'clock

Joshua Maddux:

like this, even a pain, like

Joshua Maddux:

knowing that you can go during lunch or go early in the morning

Joshua Maddux:

and just take care of that.

Joshua Maddux:

And then you're not sitting there thinking through that and focusing on that all day

Joshua Maddux:

in the back of your head, it's one less distraction to not have to worry about.

Joshua Maddux:

And it just, not only does it make your Workday better, it makes.

Joshua Maddux:

You're just overall quality of life better.

Joshua Maddux:

It just it's.

Joshua Maddux:

It's nice.

Joshua Maddux:

It's nice to be able to have that flexibility.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

I, makes you think about whether it's worth like work, like the work-life

Mike Rosenberg:

balance or, what, we talked about it as work-life flow where it's it

Mike Rosenberg:

just goes in and out and especially for, owners and entrepreneurs.

Mike Rosenberg:

It isn't necessarily your on and off, right?

Mike Rosenberg:

I know that's for sure.

Mike Rosenberg:

True for me, I don't, you're talking about, taking time off for the

Mike Rosenberg:

kids or taking vacations and one.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think that one of the things that, that's another growth question.

Mike Rosenberg:

Eventually you go back to that, investor piece, that's where you're, you have that

Mike Rosenberg:

ability it's, part of that is, what's going to happen when I leave the office.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

I can't leave, first one is I can't leave cause nothing's going to get done.

Mike Rosenberg:

The second one is, yeah, I can leave, but I need to be, it's gotta be for a short

Mike Rosenberg:

amount of time and I need to be avoiding.

Mike Rosenberg:

And then of course, the next step is, yeah, I can leave and trust that,

Mike Rosenberg:

things are going to get done without me.

Mike Rosenberg:

It's going to be totally fine.

Mike Rosenberg:

Maybe if there's an emergency.

Mike Rosenberg:

And I think that.

Mike Rosenberg:

For me is getting to that point is where I want our company to go.

Mike Rosenberg:

Pseudo there, but back to that, work-life sort of flow balance thing,

Mike Rosenberg:

for me, it's now it actually had this even before the pandemic being with

Mike Rosenberg:

the ability to work from anywhere.

Mike Rosenberg:

And even have different times that you're working, it's not going to be turn it off.

Mike Rosenberg:

I don't think it's going to be turned off for many business owners.

Mike Rosenberg:

But it's knowing that, okay.

Mike Rosenberg:

I can get.

Mike Rosenberg:

On vacation, maybe I get up early and get that couple of hours of work done

Mike Rosenberg:

and be able to enjoy my time, as opposed to, I'm going to take these two weeks

Mike Rosenberg:

and be away and completely unplugged.

Mike Rosenberg:

Now that's needed for some people at some points where, you've got your

Mike Rosenberg:

head down grinding for a long time.

Mike Rosenberg:

You need that, completely unplugged time.

Mike Rosenberg:

As long as I've owned this business, I haven't had that nor have I wanted it.

Mike Rosenberg:

And so I think that's a part of deciding how you want to grow as well.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah, for sure.

Joshua Maddux:

I know there's a saying that goes, you're either a business owner or

Joshua Maddux:

owned by your business and it's super resonates because yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

There's days where I'm like, I can't leave the office because who's going

Joshua Maddux:

to make sure the stuff gets done and.

Joshua Maddux:

If that's the mindset, then you have the wrong people in place, or you haven't

Joshua Maddux:

provided the right training to the team.

Joshua Maddux:

And so when my wife and I first found out we were pregnant, it was sweet.

Joshua Maddux:

I got about eight months to make sure the team's ready.

Joshua Maddux:

Because I'm going to be taken about two to three weeks off.

Joshua Maddux:

Now it wasn't two to three weeks.

Joshua Maddux:

Me, no cell phone, no, communication, but it was.

Joshua Maddux:

About a week and a half of pretty much other than a 9 1, 1

Joshua Maddux:

slack message I wasn't around.

Joshua Maddux:

And then another maybe week or so of I checked email, I was maybe, touch

Joshua Maddux:

base on a weekly call with the team.

Joshua Maddux:

And other than that, it wasn't a ton and then slowly eased

Joshua Maddux:

back into it a little bit.

Joshua Maddux:

And it's interesting when you step out.

Joshua Maddux:

And legitimately step away and the team knows that they have to

Joshua Maddux:

step up to make things happen.

Joshua Maddux:

It's interesting to see how they fill the gap and it works.

Mike Rosenberg:

I, did you get in pleasantly surprised by it?

Mike Rosenberg:

Absolutely.

Mike Rosenberg:

We have a couple of times for sure.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah, absolutely.

Joshua Maddux:

And I did something a few years ago that dramatically changed my life.

Joshua Maddux:

Sort of work-life balance or flow was disabled email notifications on my phone.

Joshua Maddux:

And I could get a hundred notifications on a Saturday afternoon, but unless I

Joshua Maddux:

launched the app, I will have no idea.

Joshua Maddux:

Now, granted, if there is a server that goes down or a fire that pops

Joshua Maddux:

up, I get a slack notification because we have systems in place that

Joshua Maddux:

monitor all those 9 1, 1 type issues.

Joshua Maddux:

But for the most part,

Joshua Maddux:

At the park or, whatever I'm out.

Joshua Maddux:

I don't want to see it deal with it, know about it.

Joshua Maddux:

And when I get back and I think that's something that sort of having those

Joshua Maddux:

boundaries a little bit, is really good.

Joshua Maddux:

And also making sure that those are in place for, for the team as well.

Joshua Maddux:

Is.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah, absolutely.

Mike Rosenberg:

Setting those expectations with the rest of your team, for sure.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think is key.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

Not having those constant notifications when they don't,

Mike Rosenberg:

you don't really need them.

Mike Rosenberg:

That's definitely important.

Joshua Maddux:

I actually know, I know of a company that their system won't receive

Joshua Maddux:

email after 5:00 PM or before 8:00 AM.

Joshua Maddux:

Like it just holds it in queue and then everybody would get the

Joshua Maddux:

email the next morning because they don't want their team touching it.

Mike Rosenberg:

And the, that's, one of my favorite features of

Mike Rosenberg:

email is this the send later, right?

Mike Rosenberg:

Just because I'm maybe doing something at night or, I, I want, I don't want

Mike Rosenberg:

my people to see that, especially internally, you can get it in the

Mike Rosenberg:

morning and that's completely fine.

Mike Rosenberg:

Cause even though you say it a hundred times, like you don't need to respond

Mike Rosenberg:

to this, you don't need to do this now.

Mike Rosenberg:

Just not even having it be an option, I think is oftentimes

Joshua Maddux:

Oh, and you're out at dinner, you get that

Joshua Maddux:

notification now you're, you're out at dinner with some friends.

Joshua Maddux:

Now, your mind, isn't thinking about the conversation you're having,

Joshua Maddux:

it's thinking about that problem or that thing you need to do tomorrow.

Joshua Maddux:

And yeah, Slack's added that now the send later function, there'll

Joshua Maddux:

be times where Dan o'clock at night, I'm like, oh, dang it.

Joshua Maddux:

I need to ask so-and-so to get this done.

Joshua Maddux:

And I'm like, send it 9:30 AM.

Joshua Maddux:

Because I don't want that done tonight.

Joshua Maddux:

It doesn't need to be done tonight and tomorrow is fine.

Joshua Maddux:

Sure.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

It's good.

Joshua Maddux:

Obviously, you guys have been faced with this aspect of, to grow or not

Joshua Maddux:

grow in hiring people like you talked about, whether it's full-time or

Joshua Maddux:

remote or part-time or contractor, and, there's all different aspects there.

Joshua Maddux:

In California state laws in California are a mess for subcontracting it's

Joshua Maddux:

anyway, not even gonna go into that.

Joshua Maddux:

And what is that look like for you guys that decision of stay the size

Joshua Maddux:

you're at or what Drupal the company or, know, what is that decision like?

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

It's interesting cause we're, we're in the middle of it.

Mike Rosenberg:

One of the things that, that we did during COVID internally was actually

Mike Rosenberg:

treat ourselves like a client.

Mike Rosenberg:

We started doing a lot more marketing for ourselves.

Mike Rosenberg:

And we're seeing that pay off.

Mike Rosenberg:

We're seeing that pay off with, new client leads and new clients coming in.

Mike Rosenberg:

And what we found is, we can be a bit more selective which is nice.

Mike Rosenberg:

That means growth assuming that we want to do it.

Mike Rosenberg:

And we're certainly not at the point where, we're ready to

Mike Rosenberg:

be like, okay, this is good.

Mike Rosenberg:

This is the ultimate thing.

Mike Rosenberg:

The exact place that we want to be.

Mike Rosenberg:

I'm honestly not even totally sure where that's going to be.

Mike Rosenberg:

But what we're trying to do.

Mike Rosenberg:

And a lot of it is, I think stress-relief too is getting in front of it.

Mike Rosenberg:

So we're trying to get the people in place on our team ahead of the growth which

Mike Rosenberg:

I think can be, is really advantageous because those are the times as a

Mike Rosenberg:

business owner, you're stressed out.

Mike Rosenberg:

It's oh, who's going to do.

Mike Rosenberg:

Wait, who ends up being you, right?

Mike Rosenberg:

It's oh, now again, maybe I'm back to doing the things that, that

Mike Rosenberg:

I don't really want to be doing.

Mike Rosenberg:

But we know that they have to get done in the meantime.

Mike Rosenberg:

And it's a tough hiring market right now, too.

Mike Rosenberg:

That's kinda, getting ahead of it makes a lot more sense in that capacity.

Mike Rosenberg:

So it's hard and there's a lot of planning there.

Mike Rosenberg:

We have, I think th you know, that we're not sure we have, I

Mike Rosenberg:

haven't got there completely to know exactly what that looks like.

Mike Rosenberg:

That sort of original goal that we talked about being the biggest

Mike Rosenberg:

PR firm, in Portland that's gone to the wayside cause one.

Mike Rosenberg:

Half of our, work's not even in Portland, have our clients

Mike Rosenberg:

aren't even necessarily here.

Mike Rosenberg:

So what is that kind of, I think I said it at the time.

Mike Rosenberg:

What does that even mean?

Mike Rosenberg:

And I think not worrying about those Eagle or external sort of

Mike Rosenberg:

like goals in mind, it's just.

Mike Rosenberg:

Growing it and having, I think the biggest thing is, when your employees

Mike Rosenberg:

or contractors are, encouraging folks that they know that they work with to,

Mike Rosenberg:

to become partners that to me is what it feels, when people are coming in that way,

Mike Rosenberg:

so I don't have a perfect answer for it.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think everybody asks you evaluate it on their own.

Mike Rosenberg:

I'm in my mid forties and I feel like this is peak working time, so it feels.

Mike Rosenberg:

Now's the time to go.

Mike Rosenberg:

I originally was talking about, having kids, I've got one in high school,

Mike Rosenberg:

pretty soon moving along to college, it's okay, now I'll have even more

Mike Rosenberg:

time to, to enjoy growing the business.

Mike Rosenberg:

And I think to me that's key of it is it's not doing it cause you have

Mike Rosenberg:

to, ideally it's doing it because you want to, and you're making sure

Mike Rosenberg:

that you have the pieces in place for yourself and your employees.

Mike Rosenberg:

And of course, doing good work for the clients as well.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

I think that's a super key element with any business.

Joshua Maddux:

If you're growing a business, you thoroughly enjoy, getting in the office,

Joshua Maddux:

you enjoy the people you work with, the clients you work with and the work you

Joshua Maddux:

do, there's so much less stress there.

Joshua Maddux:

There's so much less anxiety and just all of that.

Joshua Maddux:

You want to do more?

Joshua Maddux:

You want to grow it.

Joshua Maddux:

You want to have more clients of those amazing clients who work with you want to

Joshua Maddux:

have more team members like the awesome team members you already work with.

Joshua Maddux:

And so it's you just, you want more of what you already have and it's just

Joshua Maddux:

continuing to grow that a little bit.

Joshua Maddux:

Definitely can see.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

And yeah, you can also, I don't know, you get to the part where

Mike Rosenberg:

you do, you know everybody, that's, you don't necessarily have to but

Mike Rosenberg:

I think that's another piece of it.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

That's good.

Joshua Maddux:

We've chatted through this topic of growth and employment and work life balance.

Joshua Maddux:

And what would be your advice for someone who's challenging, challenged with that

Joshua Maddux:

aspect of, do we grow the business?

Joshua Maddux:

Do we not?

Joshua Maddux:

And what that looks like will be that sort of no advice to someone who's facing that?

Mike Rosenberg:

I think the biggest thing is.

Mike Rosenberg:

I would say, take a step back from what your business goals are and

Mike Rosenberg:

where do you want to be in life.

Mike Rosenberg:

And I don't think that you have to do it, there's always, 3, 5, 10 years, I think,

Mike Rosenberg:

look at it that way and start thinking about it and know that things can change.

Mike Rosenberg:

But I think understanding like what you want to do.

Mike Rosenberg:

Where you want to be and knowing that it doesn't always have to be bigger, to be

Mike Rosenberg:

better, I think is a good place to be.

Mike Rosenberg:

I think that's the main thing I would do is, what are your sort of, like I said,

Mike Rosenberg:

life, family type goals, and how's the business going to help you get there.

Mike Rosenberg:

And good enough might be good enough in that aspect.

Mike Rosenberg:

It doesn't always have to be bigger.

Joshua Maddux:

That's really good.

Joshua Maddux:

Simon Sinek has.

Joshua Maddux:

I was just looking up on my shelf, Simon Sinek.

Joshua Maddux:

There's a book called find your why.

Joshua Maddux:

And another one start with why.

Joshua Maddux:

And I think you hit it basically with what you just said.

Joshua Maddux:

Like it's literally, if your business supports your personal mission statement

Joshua Maddux:

and is right alongside that, then.

Joshua Maddux:

How can the business further support that?

Joshua Maddux:

But if the business is 100% against your sort of why your personal life or

Joshua Maddux:

personal sort of mission statement, then you got to change it or do something

Joshua Maddux:

or sell and get rid of the business.

Joshua Maddux:

Or you got to think personal first.

Joshua Maddux:

And how does the business support that?

Joshua Maddux:

I think that's really good.

Joshua Maddux:

He's

Mike Rosenberg:

gotta be yours too.

Mike Rosenberg:

Oh, so many people, oh, I want to do this.

Mike Rosenberg:

And I'm going to work really hard so I can retire.

Mike Rosenberg:

Here the whole time, what are you going to do when you retire?

Mike Rosenberg:

I don't hear all the time.

Mike Rosenberg:

I'm not that old, but it's like, why?

Mike Rosenberg:

I don't know if I am right.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

I'll probably be doing something different, but.

Mike Rosenberg:

That's a, that's not I don't think that, work hard for 40 years

Mike Rosenberg:

and then retire and do nothing.

Mike Rosenberg:

That's not where I want to be.

Mike Rosenberg:

There are plenty of people in this world who do and, having that big,

Mike Rosenberg:

huge agency that you know, sells for, for exit evaluation, et cetera.

Mike Rosenberg:

That could be a goal, put your head down and doing that that I'm sure

Mike Rosenberg:

that is a goal for a lot of folks, which is totally fine, but I just, I

Mike Rosenberg:

think just by UCF cynics, find your, why get in there try to understand.

Mike Rosenberg:

And I would say, you're going to talk to whether it's partners, whether

Mike Rosenberg:

it's business partners, family, partners, whatever, and make sure

Mike Rosenberg:

that it all aligns too, because I think there's definitely times where.

Mike Rosenberg:

You have preconceived notions of what your partners in life and business want

Mike Rosenberg:

to do which may or may not be accurate.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah.

Joshua Maddux:

Yeah, definitely true.

Joshua Maddux:

And in the aspect of retiring you don't have to retire, you don't have to retire.

Joshua Maddux:

If you can work anywhere.

Joshua Maddux:

Like for me, literally, all I need is a laptop and my cell phone.

Joshua Maddux:

It's funny.

Joshua Maddux:

One of our designers was traveling and seeing some family.

Joshua Maddux:

We're on a mock-up review call with a client.

Joshua Maddux:

I was like, yeah, we needed to shift the call an hour or something

Joshua Maddux:

because he's Midwest or something.

Joshua Maddux:

And it's really funny because client didn't realize it.

Mike Rosenberg:

And

Joshua Maddux:

no one cares, like if you are doing a mock-up review or, you're

Joshua Maddux:

getting your work done, it doesn't matter if you're sitting in your office, you're

Joshua Maddux:

sitting on your couch, you're sitting at a coffee shop or sitting on the beach.

Joshua Maddux:

Like the same work gets done either way.

Joshua Maddux:

And so if you're able to be on, a beach and getting stuff done and having a

Joshua Maddux:

better, scenic view or whatever, and, your lunch break is going for a swim

Joshua Maddux:

or whatever that looks like it's a much more enjoyable work-life balance.

Joshua Maddux:

And it's, it's.

Mike Rosenberg:

Yeah.

Mike Rosenberg:

And you'll do better work.

Joshua Maddux:

Absolutely.

Joshua Maddux:

Absolutely.

Joshua Maddux:

Awesome.

Joshua Maddux:

I think there's been a ton of good information and just really breaking down

Joshua Maddux:

the aspect of that element of like success and how we see that just in our society

Joshua Maddux:

a little bit, and it doesn't have to be.

Joshua Maddux:

You're the biggest, you're the number one, whatever metric you want to

Joshua Maddux:

measure that by, it's more, how does your business fulfill your personal

Joshua Maddux:

mission and your personal, why?

Joshua Maddux:

And if it fulfills it and supports it, then that's a huge achievement.

Joshua Maddux:

That's a huge achievement.

Joshua Maddux:

You've started a business, you fulfill the personal mission and and a Y.

Joshua Maddux:

Pat yourself on the back.

Joshua Maddux:

That's so much more than so many business owners have done.

Joshua Maddux:

And it's a story that we would love to hear and we love to share appreciate Mike.

Joshua Maddux:

You've been on the show today and We'll have your full bio and website, Facebook,

Joshua Maddux:

Instagram, LinkedIn, all those links will be in the show notes, but if someone

Joshua Maddux:

wants to connect with you, what is the best spot online for them to do that?

Mike Rosenberg:

For listeners, this I'd say probably LinkedIn

Mike Rosenberg:

Mike Rosenberg on LinkedIn, my websites, veracity agency.com.

Mike Rosenberg:

I actually have a ton of resources on the learning side.

Mike Rosenberg:

Somebody who wants to learn stuff about PR digital PR that as I mentioned, or

Mike Rosenberg:

doing marketing for ourselves, it's all thought leadership stuff where

Mike Rosenberg:

we're sharing our insights and what we know with the world, trying to get

Mike Rosenberg:

people better educated on our industry.

Joshua Maddux:

Awesome.

Joshua Maddux:

appreciate you coming on and sharing a little bit about your business

Joshua Maddux:

and your knowledge and background and some of the stuff that you

Joshua Maddux:

guys have ventured through and

Mike Rosenberg:

appreciate it.

Mike Rosenberg:

Absolutely.

Mike Rosenberg:

Thanks for having me.

Mike Rosenberg:

Awesome.

Joshua Maddux:

Awesome.

Joshua Maddux:

Thanks.

Joshua Maddux:

Thanks for being on.

Joshua Maddux:

Thanks for listening to this episode of, in the bunker.

Joshua Maddux:

As always we can be found on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter

Joshua Maddux:

at, in the bunker podcast.

Joshua Maddux:

Be sure to share this episode and what you're going to apply from it.

Joshua Maddux:

And how that can affect your business, make sure to tag us in that post so

Joshua Maddux:

we can highlight your journey as well.

Joshua Maddux:

But before you go.

About the Podcast

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In The Bunker
Exploring the biggest challenges in starting and running a business.

About your host

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Joshua Maddux

Joshua Maddux is an entrepreneur who has helped numerous businesses grow and thrive.