The End Part 11: Come A Little Bit Closer…

“Come a little bit closer to this” – Glenn Danzig, The Misfits

Like when a “black dress moves is a blue movie” I am getting drawn in to the excitement of potential. Of course, Mr. Danzig was writing about the allure of Vampira but these business opportunities can be quite similar. I get drawn into them with visions of grandeur and I get bitten.

The current status of business with the businesses is this…

We are still in negotiations with the sale of Go-Go Babyz. The talks seem to be moving at a snail’s pace, but is probably just me perception because I am so ready to move one. On the other court, we have a couple opportunities knocking on the food business door. Exciting, exciting.

There are a lot of potentials floating around and as a daydreaming entrepreneur I need to be careful I do not get swept up in the moment and allure of the shiny objects. I need to stay grounded and focused on real data, not daydreams. This creates another potential opportunity; one to practice hard lessons learned from my past experiences. There have been times throughout my entrepreneurial career that I have been taken under the spell of opportunity. It is a spell that I actually cast on myself with my overactive, daydreaming mind. I can tend to drink my own kool-aid.

Don’t get me wrong, I make some good kool-aid but when I lose the ability to make logical, educated decisions, I have drunk too much. In the past, it has been easy for to let my ideas, daydreams, and visions sweep me away and make rash choices that turn out to be bad for business. I have been bitten too many times and I hope that I have learned my lesson. I do believe that each bad decision has made me stronger and better at what I do. Mistakes are how we learn best. So, with these shiny new objects floating around, I hope I can pull that acquired knowledge, and self restraint from the crevices of my mind and make good decisions for the sale of one business and the growth of another.

Let me end with that and urge you to know that it is good to fail. Just do it fast and early! Failure is one of the greatest teachers. The key is to make sure you look at each one and learn from them. That is how you keep getting up and getting better. Take a moment to analyze the failures of your past and see what you can carry forward to make you better today. It is very rare to hit it out the park on your first at bat so don’t beat yourself up.

Talk Soon,

Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live

The End Part 10: 5-4-3-2…GO!

“It’s meant to be, you can’t change fate.” – G.B.H.

I don’t really know what is meant to be but what I do know is that when I get out of the way, things just seem to work out better. Things tend to get messy when I get in there and start trying to control the things I have no business controlling.

One of the hardest lessons in business is realizing that time is the greatest asset and resource AND, that I have no control over it. I can do everything in my power to make things happen in my time but they are all just guesses. In the most basic and general sense I’ll call it timing the market. Can it really be done? It sure appears that it can when you look at the track record of some very successful entrepreneurs. I don’t want to go down that rabbit hole today. I will just boil it down to the fact that some people just have a great sense for timing, reading the market, and a little bit of luck on their side. Not to mention a great team working with them.

The reality is, most of the time we only hear or read about the “perfectly” timed events. We do not hear about the failures, losses, and missed opportunities. Although most entrepreneurs love to talk about the failures and how they made them better. That too is topic for another time.

What I do want to talk about is how I have learned that I want everything now. I want everything to happen in my time. Further, that quite often, my time is not aligned with everyone else’s. Right now discussions have opened up with an interested party to purchase the business. I want it to happen right now so I get on with it. Shut this door and close the chapter so I can start writing a new one. I know that if I keep that mindset I will grow more and more impatient and frustrated which is not good for any negotiation.

I have to remember that this transaction is not a time bomb and will not explode on expiration.  Yes, many transactions or offers have expiration dates on them but we are not there yet. I need to just do the work and provide the information they need to make an educated decision. If the roles were reversed I would be doing the same thing they are doing. Acquiring a business is major decision no matter the size and shouldn’t be taken lightly.

I need to practice patience and be open to the process, and the offer. For today, I will let time continue to tick while I move closer to closing this door.

Talk Soon,

Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live

The End Part 9: Race Against Time

“Lost time is never found again.” – Benjamin Franklin.

I thought that things usually slow down as they come to an end. Why do I feel like everything is speeding back up? Is this a final push? Are we all just racing against time to get everything in before we get to the finish line?

Whatever the case might be, things have really picked up. So much for a soft, easy landing. I can’t complain, though. I want to sell through as much inventory as possible while finding a buyer for the business. To be honest, I have been a bit busy the past two weeks to do much searching. I need to carve out some time and really search for the right buyer.

As I search I hope this burst of business is a sign that people are starting to travel again. When families travel sales go up for us. Rising sales always look good to potential buyers so keep traveling with your kids people.

Back to the title, everything is a race against time. Life in general is all about time. Every single thing we do can be broken down into little increments of time. Business is no different. If there is one thing I have learned running multiple businesses it is that time is the most precious and valuable resource. Cash reserves are great. Smart, productive employees are great. Efficient equipment and technology are great. But nothing is as great as well spent time. All your resources, assets, plans, processes, etc, operate in time and you can use it wisely or poorly but once it’s used it’s gone for good.

Time is everything and is non-renewable. When it’s gone, it’s gone. You can always hire more people, buy more equipment, adopt better technology but you can never buy more time, regardless of the silly saying. What buying more time really means is extending your runway further into the future. For example, this burst of sales extends the cash burn rate so I don’t have to pump any more money into the business right away while I wait. Even though we are closing shop, no one wants to buy a dead horse so I have to keep it breathing and cash is the life blood of any business.

Time is the great equalizer. It doesn’t matter how much money we have in the bank, everyone has the same twenty four hours in a day. The best we can do with our time is to use it wisely and do our best to be productive and efficient. The next couple weeks I plan to do a quick assessment of where the business is and dedicate some time to move towards closing this door because I am so ready for the next to open fully.

Talk Soon,

Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live

The End Part 8: What Am I Waiting For?

“And I need something more
To keep on breathing for
So give me something to believe”
 – Samuel Bingham Endicott, The Bravery

What am I waiting for? That is the question. The other is “what do I believe?” Our three neighbors up north say I am waiting for an open door. That I am, but what am I doing to help close this door and open another?

If you have been following this series you know that the selling process has been a bit slow going. That is most likely due to the fact that I have not been doing much. After some deep thinking and soul searching, the reality is that I am holding on a bit. I am keeping one foot in the door to prevent it from closing completely.

Why? Why would I do that? Well, this business has been part of my life for nearly twenty years. It’s hard to let go. As much as I want to let go and move on, it is hard. All the good times and bad times have been an integral part in my development personally and professionally. I learned more running this business than all my years earning a degree in college. It has brought happiness, joy, fulfillment, and pride. It has fostered confidence, skill development, and wealth creation. It has also ignited fear, a sense of failure, and deep financial losses. This business has guided my family through the entire range of success and failure. This business has truly become a part of me.

The time has come, however to move on. One of the greatest lessons I have learned is that nothing happens if I do not take action. I have to be responsible. I can’t just sit and wait for things to happen or wait for others to them for me. As an owner/operator the first thing one should understand is that no one will have the drive or passion that you do. You and only you can be the driver.

That is what I believe. I also believe that when one door closes another will open. It is time for me to get off my butt and start working to close this door. What am I waiting for? Simply to get in the right mindset to do what needs to be done. I believe that thinking this through before I wrote this little ditty has prepared me to trudge forward and drive this to the exchange station to find a new driver.

Talk Soon,

Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live

The End Part 7: The Never Ending Story

“Have patience. All things are difficult before they become easy.” – Saadi

Have you ever read a book that you just wanted to end? You just can’t wait to read the final page, close the book, put it on the “read” book shelf, and place the book mark in a new book. That is where I am right now. I feel like I am in story that just won’t end and all I want to do it get through it.

Of course, there are many versions of this, right? It could be that the book is so gripping you can’t put it down and you are so excited and anxious to see how it is all going to turn out. It could be that the story just drags on and you just want to finish it. You are no longer interested but putting the book away before finishing it would feel like a failure. Sometimes it is a great book but it is just so darn long. The type of book you have been putting off reading because just looking at it is overwhelming. It’s simply too long, how can you even hold a book that big comfortably and enjoy reading it? Once you start reading  a book like that it feels as though you are only reading a page a day and making no progress.

Or maybe it’s a mix of all the above. That is where I am sitting right now; never ending story limbo. There are ups and downs. Sometimes I want to be a part of it and other times I just want to leave the story and never return. The problem in my case is that I am one of the lead characters so I can’t leave the story. This story is just dragging on. I am very excited to see how it will end but I am stuck in the same scene where it just feels like there is no progress being made. It’s just the same scene over and over again

I am so ready to wrap up this chapter and sell the business. I am ready for a new chapter in a new book. It has served us well for nearly twenty years. It’s a great turnkey business to acquire for anyone in the industry. Why are people not knocking down our doors?

The anticipation of what is on the next page leaves me to create a variety of scenarios. Like the old choose your own adventure books. The problem in my case is the story has not been written yet. I can choose to envision any outcome but whatever page I choose to turn to is still blank at this point. The story has not been written, the book is incomplete.

The pandemic has taught me that life can be short; life, business, friendship, etc, can end in an unforeseen instant. Life happens in the moment. Transactions happen in the moment. Preparation happens in the moment. Everything happens in the moment. Therefore, the present is where I must live. I am anxious for this book to end so I can focus on my other businesses and what else is to come, but I can only write so many stories at one time, let alone be the lead character.

For now, I will live today and continue to do what I need to do to prepare for the ending of this story. The story will end when the story is over.  I guess there is more to come with is one.

Talk Soon,

Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live

The End Part 6: The Waiting Game

“The waiting is the hardest part.” – Tom Petty

Waiting is torturous. It’s brutal. I don’t do well sitting idle. I have to move and get things done or I feel like I’m being irresponsible and lazy. It is one of my downfalls; impatience. I always want things to happen in my time, yet there is no Kevin time in the greater expanse of the universe. It only exists in my head and the vortex I pull people into when things are not happening in my time.

That is exactly what is happening right now; nothing. We are sitting in limbo with the sale and closure of the business. Steps that are seemingly being taken while walking thorough molasses. Can we just get on with it?

This will just be short because, as I pointed out, I am just waiting. And waiting and waiting and waiting. So, while I wait…

Let me impart a little bit of hindsight knowledge; be patient. They say good things come to those who wait. Well, it isn’t always good, but if I let go of control and attachment to outcomes it is more tolerable and it is easier for me to practice acceptance. When we wait with expectations we set ourselves up for disappointment. I have slowly learned, and am still learning, that practicing patience allows me to be open to the outcome whether it turns out to be what I thought I wanted or not. Many times the outcome has been opposite of what I thought I wanted but exactly what I needed.

Patience allows room for change; a change of perspective, a change of desire, a change of direction, etc. When I am impatient I am projecting what I think I want and desire on to an imminent outcome that may or may not align with what I have conjured and created in my head. And if it doesn’t align, all hell breaks loose. That hell is cast upon all those in my vicinity. That is not a good way to operate.

Therefore, as I sit and wait this time, I try to remember the lessons of my past disappointments. I try to learn from my past mistakes and be in the present and focus only on what I can control. I can control my attitude and I can control the work I choose to do in the meantime. I can only do my part. Beyond that I must continue to wait…

And wait, and wait.

Talk Soon,

Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live

The End Part 5: A Wrinkle In Time

“Our greatest glory is not in never failing, but in rising every time we fail.” ― Confucius

As I write this, it is just about a year since the world shut down. Not to mention the business this series is about. We are a travel related business and when no one can travel there is no need for our product. Covid was the final nail in the coffin for us.

The reality is, we already begun digging the hole with one foot in. We were already on a downward slope to begin with. We have spent the last five years trying to heal and recover from one blow after another. Many of the blows were beyond our control but the impact of many could have been minimized or prevented had we done some things differently; hindsight is twenty-twenty.

Looking back through the glass there are many lessons to be had for the choices we made over the years. The hard truth is we can really go back to day one and see that the manner in which the corporation was formed and structured placed the business in a vulnerable position financially. After that, we backed ourselves into a corner as a one trick pony; easy prey for bigger companies to pounce on. We didn’t realize it until it was too late.

I have shared on many occasions the events that led to our first major fall so I will not go into detail here. The fact is that we have been working to recover from that for nearly a decade. It has truly been a roller coaster ever since. We climbed pretty high several times but would fall back again. We were just never able to get back to that high point again and maintain our position. It was always one thing after another; a recession, copy cat products, trade wars, factory headaches, the list goes on.

Each issue alone was not the biggest deal but when you are already in a compromised position, the impact hits harder. So, we did our best to mitigate the external issues beyond our control but the timing was always off. Looking back that begs the question “did we really do our best?” I can only answer for my choices and actions and the answer is a resounding “NO!” I absolutely did not do my best.

That it a blessing and a lesson in and of itself. The ability to see our mistakes and admit we were wrong is huge. That places us in a position to learn and grow from the mistakes. There a many to be had through the years of this business which prevents the mistakes from becoming failures. Not that a business that operated for twenty year is considered a failure, but I can easily throw my thoughts to the darkness and say that I failed because we are shutting down.

I will close with that and leave the lessons to be shared in another part. For now, we are still in limbo with the closing. This door sure is taking its time to shut!

Talk Soon,

Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live

“Time is like a fuse, Short and burning fast” – Metallica

I feel the end is near yet so far away. I am sure someone wrote that in a song as well. It does ring a bell. That is where I am right now, just stuck in ending limbo. There is no abrupt ending to a twenty year old business. I can’t just shut the door and open another, no matter how hard I slam it.

I should not be surprised. This business has been a roller coaster from day one, why should the final chapter be any different? This section I will reflect on that roller coaster while I sit in limbo with anticipation mixed with a little fear.

To set the stage a bit, this business was founded like most others; an idea that solved an immediate problem. The idea sprung when two families were experiencing the problem at the same time. The reality is it probably wasn’t an original idea. Ideas are cheap, they are a dime a dozen. The difference is what people decide to do with them. We decided to do something. That is the major difference between entrepreneurs and the average folk.

Is there any right timing for anything? The reality is, if you are waiting for the stars to align, the lights to turn green, and all the ducks to be in a row, you will spend your life waiting while opportunities continue to pass you by. No more waiting here. As a matter of fact, we made the no more waiting decision when launched our first business in the garage of the house we just purchased, just before our wedding, just after Kerry was pregnant with our first child. Perfect timing, right? Did I mention that we both had full time jobs?

Here we are a year into our first start up and Kerry is ready to start a second. By this time our first child was born and was six months old. I just can’t think of a better time to launch start up number two, can you?

Fast forward a bit and Kerry had to leave number one to focus on number two. Good choice because five years in to number one it was done and we were buried in debt. Number two however was looking good. Remember I said it was a roller coaster and where do they go? Up.

We rode it up and it got to a point where I could hop on board. I always helped a bit but we were afraid to put everything in one basket so I never went all in. Now that I was all in we were looking good moving up having a good old time and enjoying a little success. At some point, however, we realized that we were making the same mistake with the business they we were trying to avoid with our family; we put all the eggs in one basket.

We relied on one product to provide 90% of our business. We rode that for a while but we decided it was time to diversify if we wanted to survive for the long term. We began planning for growth and as we were still climbing higher not one but two competing products hit the market; both by bigger companies with deeper packets. You know the saying, “what goes up, must come down.” Come down we did. That wasn’t the first drop on the ride but it was definitely the first big and fast one.

That was a while ago so obviously we survived. There were a lot of ups and downs during our recovery phase but we never quite got back to where we were. There are so many things beyond our control that caused obstacles for us, many which would knock down a few rungs. The good news is that each one provided some great lessons that made us better and stronger. I will dig into to some of those in another part when I actually close the door. 

So, stay tuned, the ending truly is near, the door is swinging shut, it’s just a slow burn as we finalize everything and wait. And wait. For me, the waiting is often the hardest part.

Talk Soon,
Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live

The End Part 3: The Doors of Perception

“That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the lessons that history has to teach. – Aldous Huxley

I still do not know the ending. I am somewhere in the middle of this section of the story. I do know it is the end of this business as I know it; that is for certain. It is the how and what that are the two biggest mysteries at this point in time. As much as I would like to just have it be over, there is always a process, the timing of which I have no control over. That is one of the many lessons I have learned while operating this business.

While I wait and jump through all the necessary hoops with three interested parties I feel it is time to start looking at the lessons and identifying the skills, traits, principles, etc that I can carry forward in my other current ventures and those of the future. Because one other thing I do know, is there will definitely be other doors, even if I have to knock them down. I am a serial entrepreneur and I am pretty sure that cannot be taken away. It would be like taking an arm or a leg.

What can I learn from the history of myself and other business owners like myself? Too much to list here, but let me focus on the process and timing of things. There have been many occasions in my life , personal and professional, that I have failed to learn from my mistakes in a timely manner. Further, there have been times where I have refused or denied the fact that I could even learn from any such mistake at all.

Why? Because the hardest lesson for me was to take my ego out of the equation. I didn’t want to look ignorant, stupid, inexperienced, etc. I thought admitting to my mistakes, bad decisions, and poor management was a sign of weakness and weakness that doesn’t fly in business, right? Not until years into my entrepreneurial career did I realize that all those “mistakes” and “failures” were really the key to becoming better and better. They were the treasure trove of knowledge that would build a better business. All I had to do was accept responsibility, opening me up to learn from them.

That did happen once I learned that the most “successful” people all failed just like I did. Most of them on a much grander scale too. This opened me up to do a deep dive to rediscover the mistakes and learn from them so I could move forward better and stronger.

Jumping back, one very important lesson is that everything and everyone has a process. And further, I do not control it. The processes involve timing. One of the hardest and most frustrating lessons to learn is that I do not control anyone’s timing. Life and business does not happen on Kevin’s time as much as I want it to. That leads to utter disappointment or acceptance; Accepting that I have no control over anything but my own attitude and perception. And, I cannot create or control time. It is the most valuable resource and all I can do is work to manage my own time to be of maximum effectiveness.

That is one of the most important lessons because in my experience it has been the root of so many other less than ideal situations and experiences that could have been prevented had I just practiced a little patience and acceptance. The more expectations I placed on employees, vendors, competitors, etc the more frustration, anger, resentment, and fear I experienced, In turn, the more poor decisions I made that led to most of the “mistakes”.

Now, I try to stay present and focus on what I can do to push my life and business forward regardless of the decisions, processes, and timing of others. When I satyr mindful and aware of my thoughts, my actions usually follow in a way that is better for all those around.

The hardest part is the application but that is ok, there are more doors to open and more lessons to learn.

Talk Soon,
Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live

The End, Part 2: The Doors

“When one door closes, another opens.”- Alexander Graham Bell

When one door closes, another opens. That is what I hear in times I need comforting, or answers to questions that can’t really be answered at a particular moment in time. At this particular moment I don’t feel the need for comfort. Sure I have questions but they are not possessing my mind right now. Will there be another door? I don’t know, this door has not fully closed yet. It is still slowly swinging towards the frame.

I could look back now and begin answering the questions I closed the first part with…

Was it really wasted? Is it really the end?

The answers would not be complete because that door has not fully closed yet. I can provide some partial answers. Just simple ones because I have a feeling this series just might end up with a lot of digging and soul searching.

So to quickly answer, no, I do not think the time was wasted. Was there wasted time within the years? Absolutely. There were many time that I stubbornly chose to go down certain paths that provided nothing. Far beyond the point that I realized a particular path would lead nowhere. Was each of those detours a waste? Of course not, but some of it was.

As I write those words, the wisdom of the ancient philosophers burn inside my brain. Was anything truly wasted if I learned something? If I became better as a result of that “wasted time”? Let it burn, let it burn as I grab my shovel to dig and uncover the treasure trove from the years of running this business for the door is apparently closing.

Wait, but first, the second question. Yes, I do believe this is really the end of this business…as we know it, that is. Don’t you love ambiguity (except spelling it) and incomplete, open ended answers? Too bad. That is what you get today.

When I write serial pieces, I often have an idea with a clear outline of what I want to write about and a path of where I want to go with the series. Sometimes that works and I follow the path I have set down in the outline like a roadmap, other times my mind simply will not follow. Hmmm, does that mean my mind has a mind of its own?

Yet other times I just start writing about something and let the story go wherever it may. I think this will be one of those series. I do have the idea, however, that at some point I will share the failures and successes of this business and all the lessons the experience has provided. At least some of the parts.

I can’t say for sure because as I mentioned, the door is slowly closing. It is not closed yet. You will just have to grab a seat and hang on for the ride.

Talk Soon,
Kevin W @LEAP272
Owner-Operator

You have to leap if you want to live