Sometimes entrepreneurs can be the victims of their own success. Here’s a situation that may sound familiar: your own a service-oriented business with one full-time employee—you. You have had hundreds of clients over the years. You use subcontractors to do certain jobs that you don’t have time for. You are really busy and business is very good. But you feel overwhelmed. There are a couple of problems you’ve identified.

  1. The Tail Wagging the Dog: Your have a subcontractor to whom you give a great deal of work. But he’s mercurial. Sometimes he’s prompt and communicative, other times he vanishes. Sometimes he makes you feel like you work for him. Every time you take on a job he’s your go-to guy and it makes you queasy.
  2. This Business Would Be Great if It Weren’t for the Customers: You have clients who love you and come back to you again and again. But they are constantly late meeting deadlines for feedback that will enable you to get to the next stage of the project. This costs you money and adds to your stress level.
  3. Small Potatoes: To paraphrase one of my least favorite figures from American history, you go to war with the customers you have, not the customers you wish you had. You have lots of smallish customers who are price sensitive. You wish you had big customers who were less penny-pinching.

Despite the problems, business is good. You feel successful. Just not as successful as you’d like to be. And the level of success you have creates inertia: You don’t want to rock the boat for fear of capsizing. Well, to paraphrase that dreadful American once more, small business is messy. But it can be cleaned up! Corresponding to each problem above, do these things and your effectiveness in, and enjoyment of, your business will soar:

  1. Show ‘Em Who’s Boss: If you use subs, you must have a locked-down, no-nonsense, no-exception, written and iron-clad contract they sign and live up to. Sounds complex but isn’t. Write down in plain English exactly what you want and expect from your subs, and give that document to a lawyer. She will turn it into a contract. Best $750 you ever spent. (If it costs more than that, get another lawyer.)
  2. Be a Client-Whisperer. Clients will stop bucking you in the head if you train them! Give them a process for working with you and lay it out at the start of a project. Make sure they understand their responsibility and accountability to the project and its outcomes. Create deadlines that are real. Think about building in incentives for meeting deadlines, or disincentives for failing to meet them (a rebate or a penalty). They will respect your taking a disciplined approach.
  3. Go Big-Game Hunting: It’s as difficult to service a small account as a big one, so you may as well have the big ones. If you don’t have them right now, is it because you feel unqualified to handle them, or just fearful? Do you honestly believe you can handle bigger clients and service them better than anyone else? If so, the only thing stopping you is, perhaps, not having a locked-down, bolted-in process for managing your business. Get that done and the rest will follow.