SoTellUs Time

Trevor Howard: Business Marketing Expert

SoTellUs Time is a podcast for business owners and entrepreneurs wanting to learn how to grow their business from the basics all the way to the advanced from the latest technics and technologies. Together the hosts of SoTellUs Time have over 40 years of marketing experience from start ups to $100,000,000 companies. They have started several successful 7 figure companies and advised thousands of companies in 19 countries generating hundreds of millions in revenue.

  1. 3 DAYS AGO

    Stop Losing Great Employees

    Ever hired someone you were excited about… only to wonder 3 weeks later what went wrong? In this episode of SoTellUs Time, we break down one of the most important but overlooked parts of building a successful business: new employee onboarding. Most employee turnover happens early, and the first 30 days can determine whether a new hire becomes a confident, productive team member—or another costly hiring mistake. Great onboarding is not just paperwork, policies, and a quick tour of the office. Great onboarding is performance training. If you want better employees, higher retention, stronger culture, and a business that can scale, you need a better first 30 days. In this episode, we cover: ✅ Why onboarding is more than orientation ✅ The 3 goals every onboarding system must accomplish ✅ How to create clarity, confidence, and connection ✅ What new hires need in week 1, week 2, week 3, and week 4 ✅ The biggest onboarding mistakes business owners make ✅ Why "sink or swim" destroys employee performance ✅ How weekly check-ins improve accountability ✅ How better onboarding leads to faster productivity ✅ Why your onboarding system is your scalability system Confused employees do not perform. Confident employees do. If your new hires are left guessing, your results will always be inconsistent. But when you give employees a clear path, measurable expectations, early feedback, and the right support, you create a team that performs better, stays longer, and helps your business grow. Whether you are hiring your first employee, building a growing team, managing a service business, or trying to reduce turnover, this episode will give you a simple framework for building a powerful 30-day employee onboarding plan. By the end, you will know how to: Create a 30-day plan for every new hire Schedule weekly check-ins that actually matter Define what success looks like by Day 30 Avoid information overload Train employees without overwhelming them Build accountability into your onboarding process Turn new hires into confident contributors faster Your onboarding system is not just an HR process. It is a business growth system. Watch now and learn how to set every new employee up for success from day one. Subscribe to SoTellUs Time for more business growth, leadership, marketing, customer experience, automation, reputation management, and team-building strategies. Visit: https://youtube.com/sotellus #EmployeeOnboarding #BusinessGrowth #Leadership #HiringTips #EmployeeRetention #SmallBusinessTips #TeamBuilding #BusinessSystems #SoTellUsTime #ManagementTips

    21 min
  2. 21 APR

    Scaling Your Business? Why Growth Is Breaking Your Systems

    Is your business growing… but everything feels harder instead of easier? In this episode of SoTellUs Time with Trevor & Troy Howard, we break down one of the biggest hidden problems in business growth: the systems that got you here are now holding you back. At the beginning, everything works. You know every customer. You handle every call. You control every detail. But then growth hits… Suddenly you're dealing with: ❌ Missed calls ❌ Scheduling mistakes ❌ Team confusion ❌ Inconsistent customer experiences ❌ More complaints than ever And the worst part? You feel like YOU are the bottleneck. Here's the truth: Growth doesn't just expose problems… it creates new ones. In this episode, we show you exactly: Why your systems break as you scale The hidden dangers of "just figuring it out as you go" The warning signs your business is outgrowing your structure How to shift from chaos to control with real systems How to build a business that runs WITHOUT you being involved in everything TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Everything worked… until you grew 2:00 Why growth breaks your business systems 6:00 Warning signs your systems are failing 9:00 How to fix broken systems and scale properly 14:00 Turning growth problems into your biggest advantage WHAT YOU'LL LEARN If you're a business owner, entrepreneur, or leader trying to scale, this episode will help you: ✔️ Stop relying on memory and "hustle" to run your business ✔️ Replace inconsistent processes with repeatable systems ✔️ Eliminate confusion across your team ✔️ Build leadership so you're not the only decision-maker ✔️ Implement tools like CRM, automation, and communication systems the RIGHT way ✔️ Create predictable growth instead of constant chaos KEY TAKEAWAY If growth feels harder instead of easier… Your systems are behind your business. And until you fix that, scaling will always feel stressful. REAL BUSINESS APPLICATION Whether you run: A home service business A childcare center A salon or med spa A local service company This episode will help you fix the operational gaps that are costing you customers, revenue, and sanity. POWERFUL FRAMEWORK FROM THIS EPISODE ➡️ Move from People-Dependent → System-Dependent ➡️ Document everything (SOPs, checklists, processes) ➡️ Implement tools AFTER fixing your process ➡️ Build leadership layers in your business ➡️ Create feedback loops to catch problems early CHALLENGE FOR YOU What's ONE system in your business that isn't keeping up? Fix it this week. That's how real growth happens. SUBSCRIBE & CONNECT Subscribe to SoTellUs Time: https://www.youtube.com/sotellus Learn more about SoTellUs: https://www.sotellus.com ABOUT SOTELLUS SoTellUs helps businesses capture, manage, and amplify customer experiences through reviews, automation, and AI-powered communication tools that drive real growth. business growth problems, scaling a business, why businesses fail when scaling, business systems and processes, small business growth strategy, operational systems for business, CRM systems for small business, leadership in business growth, how to scale without chaos, business automation tools, entrepreneur growth tips, systemize your business, customer experience systems, business efficiency strategies

    18 min
  3. 14 APR

    How to Run Better One-on-One Meetings With Your Team | Leadership, Accountability & Employee Growth

    Do your one-on-one meetings feel awkward, inconsistent, or like a waste of time? In this episode of SoTellUs Time, Trevor and Troy Howard break down how to run better one-on-one meetings with your team so they actually improve communication, accountability, performance, and employee growth. If your meetings usually turn into shallow check-ins, uncomfortable conversations, or basic status updates, this episode will show you a simple structure that makes every one-on-one more productive and valuable. Great leaders know that one-on-one meetings are not just another task on the calendar. They are one of the most powerful tools for improving employee retention, team morale, leadership communication, workplace culture, accountability, and professional development. When employees feel heard, supported, and clear on expectations, they perform better, trust leadership more, and are more likely to stay engaged long term. In this episode, we talk about why one-on-one meetings matter more than most leaders realize, especially in businesses where trust, communication, customer experience, and consistency matter every day. Whether you lead a home service company, childcare center, sales team, office staff, field team, or growing small business, effective one-on-ones can help you reduce surprises, prevent burnout, improve execution, and build a stronger culture. We also break down the biggest mistakes leaders make in one-on-ones. Too many managers only meet when there is a problem, which makes the meeting feel negative from the start. Others turn the conversation into a status report instead of a development conversation. Some leaders dominate the conversation instead of listening, while others constantly cancel or reschedule, sending the message that the meeting is not important. These small habits quietly damage trust and make leadership less effective. That is why we share a simple 5-part structure for better one-on-one meetings that you can start using immediately: Personal Check-In – start human, not transactional Wins and Progress – reinforce what is working Challenges and Obstacles – coach through what is getting in the way Accountability and Priorities – get clear on the most important next steps Growth and Feedback – help team members improve and level up over time This structure helps leaders ask better questions, listen more effectively, create clarity, and make one-on-ones a place where trust and growth actually happen. Instead of just reviewing tasks, you will learn how to create a rhythm that improves performance without micromanaging. You will also learn how to use these meetings to strengthen field accountability, improve customer experience, celebrate wins like positive reviews or completed jobs, and help employees stay aligned with business goals. If you are trying to become a stronger leader, build a healthier team culture, improve employee performance, and create better communication with your staff, this episode is for you. In this episode, we cover: How to run better one-on-one meetings Why one-on-ones matter for leadership and culture Common one-on-one meeting mistakes A simple structure for productive employee meetings How to improve accountability without micromanaging How to help employees grow through better conversations How to build trust and retention with consistent leadership Better management habits for small business owners and team leaders Timestamps: 0:00 – Introduction and hook 1:30 – Why one-on-one meetings matter more than you think 3:30 – The biggest mistakes leaders make 4:30 – A simple 5-part structure for better one-on-ones 12:00 – Pro tips to make one-on-ones actually work 13:30 – Real-world impact of great one-on-one meetings 14:30 – Closing challenge and call to action If you enjoy conversations about leadership, business growth, customer experience, team accountability, marketing, and building better systems, subscribe to SoTellUs Time for more episodes designed to help you grow your business and lead at a higher level. Subscribe to SoTellUs Time: https://www.youtube.com/@sotellus Learn more about SoTellUs: https://www.sotellus.com/ #OneOnOneMeetings #Leadership #TeamManagement #EmployeeRetention #Accountability #BusinessLeadership #ManagementTips #SmallBusiness #WorkplaceCulture #LeadershipDevelopment

    24 min
  4. 7 APR

    The Hidden Cost of Average Employees in Business

    What is "average" really costing your business? In this episode of SoTellUs Time, Trevor Howard and Troy Howard break down the hidden cost of tolerating average performance in your business—and why mediocrity is never neutral. Whether you run a home service business, childcare center, local service company, or growing organization, allowing average employees, average follow-up, average customer service, and average leadership standards can quietly destroy your culture, customer experience, growth, and peace of mind. Too many business owners keep people around because they are "not terrible." They show up. They do enough. They stay just above the line. But here's the real question: would you clone them? Would you want an entire team of people who operate at that level? If the answer is no, then you may already be paying the price for tolerating average without realizing how deep that cost really goes. In this episode, we talk about how average performance spreads across a company. What you tolerate becomes the standard. When one team member gets away with doing the minimum, avoiding initiative, failing to follow up quickly, delivering inconsistent customer experiences, or refusing to take ownership, the rest of the team notices. High performers start asking themselves why they work so hard when others do less and get treated the same. Over time, your strongest people either disengage or leave—and your culture starts drifting toward the lowest acceptable standard. We also break down how average hurts your customer experience. Customers do not judge your business by your intention. They judge it by what they experience. A slow response. A missed call. A weak follow-up. A team member who solves the technical problem but never builds trust. A teacher who supervises children but never truly engages with them or communicates well with parents. These things may seem small in the moment, but they create uncertainty, lower confidence, and erode trust. For childcare businesses, average can show up in teachers or staff members who cover the basics but fail to create meaningful parent communication, child engagement, warmth, and reassurance. Parents are not just paying for supervision—they are trusting you with the people they love most. Even small gaps in communication, enthusiasm, attentiveness, or consistency can create doubts that affect retention, referrals, and reputation. For home service businesses, average often shows up in technicians or office staff who get the job done but fail to create a memorable experience. They may fix the problem, but they do not educate the customer, build connection, communicate clearly, offer additional value, or create the kind of trust that leads to reviews, referrals, repeat business, and long-term loyalty. In a competitive market, being average is expensive. Customers remember how you made them feel, not just whether the task got done. This conversation also covers one of the biggest problems business owners face: average employees cap growth. You cannot scale excellence on an average team. When your team does not execute at a high level, the owner becomes the bottleneck. You end up fixing mistakes, handling escalations, checking work, answering questions that should not need to be asked, redoing tasks, and carrying a mental load that keeps you trapped in the day-to-day. Instead of leading, building systems, improving marketing, growing revenue, and creating the future of the business, you stay stuck managing preventable problems. We also talk about the emotional toll average takes on owners and leaders. The constant frustration. The repeated reminders. The silent disappointment. The energy drain that comes from knowing things are not being done the right way. Many owners live in a cycle of thinking, "Why can't they just do it right?" That frustration affects not only operations, but also leadership clarity, strategic thinking, and personal peace. The longer average is tolerated, the more exhausted the owner becomes. So why do we tolerate average in the first place? In this episode, Trevor and Troy unpack the real reasons. Sometimes it is fear. "It is hard to find good people right now." "At least they show up." "I do not have time to replace them." "I do not want the drama of another hard conversation." Other times it is a leadership issue. Expectations are unclear. Standards are not written down. Performance is not measured. Owners hint instead of being direct. They hope things improve without ever clearly addressing the gap. That is where this episode becomes practical. We do not just talk about the problem—we talk about how to fix it. We walk through how to define what great actually looks like in your business. That means getting specific about response times, communication expectations, ownership, follow-up, customer interaction standards, attitude, consistency, initiative, and performance. Great cannot be vague. If your team cannot see it, they cannot hit it. If you cannot measure it, you cannot enforce it. We also talk about the importance of direct conversations. Not emotional conversations. Not vague frustration. Clear, respectful leadership. Here is the gap. Here is the expectation. Here is what needs to change. Too many leaders delay the conversation and then wonder why performance stays the same. Clarity is kindness, and avoiding the issue only increases the cost. Another key part of raising standards is reinforcing excellence. If you want a high-performance culture, you have to reward and recognize it. Celebrate top performers. Create opportunities for people who raise the standard. Tie excellence to growth, leadership roles, bonuses, raises, and trust. Great people want to know it matters when they go above and beyond. And yes, we talk about the hard truth: sometimes people will not rise to the standard. When that happens, you have to be willing to make changes. Keeping the wrong person is often far more expensive than replacing them. The hidden cost shows up in morale, customer trust, lost sales, lost referrals, poor reviews, operational drag, and your own energy as the owner. This episode is for business owners, entrepreneurs, operators, managers, and leaders who know their company cannot grow beyond the standard they tolerate. If you want to build a stronger team, improve customer experience, increase reviews and referrals, protect your culture, and grow a business that does not depend on constant owner intervention, this conversation is for you. If you are serious about improving customer experience, getting more reviews, converting more leads, and building a business that scales with stronger systems and higher standards, make sure you check out SoTellUs. SoTellUs helps businesses generate more video reviews, build trust, improve conversions, and create better customer communication that drives growth. Subscribe to SoTellUs Time for more episodes on business growth, leadership, customer experience, marketing, reviews, culture, systems, and how to build a business that actually works. In this episode, we cover: The hidden cost of average employees How mediocrity spreads through company culture Why high performers disengage when average is tolerated How average customer service hurts reviews, referrals, and trust Why average performance makes the owner the bottleneck The emotional and operational toll on business owners Why leaders tolerate average too long How to define clear performance standards How to have direct conversations that create change Why rewarding excellence matters When it is time to replace the wrong person Chapters: 00:00 – The hidden cost of tolerating average 02:00 – What "average" looks like in real businesses 04:00 – How average lowers your team's standard 06:00 – How average hurts customer experience 07:30 – How average caps business growth 08:45 – How average drains the owner 10:00 – Why leaders tolerate average 12:00 – How to raise the standard 14:30 – Final challenge for business owners Connect with SoTellUs: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@sotellus Website: https://www.sotellus.com Watch more episodes from SoTellUs Time for advice on: business leadership, customer service, team culture, employee performance, entrepreneurship, scaling a business, home services marketing, childcare business growth, review marketing, customer experience strategy, leadership development, small business systems, service business growth, accountability, management, and business success. If this episode hit home, share it with another business owner, manager, or leader who needs to hear it. #BusinessLeadership #EmployeePerformance #SmallBusinessGrowth #CustomerExperience #Entrepreneurship #TeamCulture #BusinessOwner #LeadershipDevelopment #ServiceBusiness #SoTellUsTime

    20 min
  5. 31 MAR

    Why You're Losing Customers Without Knowing It

    You think you're delivering a great experience… but your customers might be quietly walking away. In this powerful episode of SoTellUs Time, Trevor Howard breaks down one of the most overlooked (and expensive) problems in business today: the Customer Experience Gap. Whether you run a home service business, childcare center, salon, med spa, or any service-based company, this episode will open your eyes to what your customers are actually experiencing—and why small moments are costing you bookings, enrollments, reviews, and long-term loyalty. If you've ever wondered why: Leads don't convert Tours don't turn into enrollments Estimates don't close Customers don't come back Reviews are inconsistent 👉 This episode gives you the real answer. 🔥 WHAT YOU'LL LEARN IN THIS EPISODE ⚠️ The Truth About Customer Experience Most business owners believe: "We have great service" "We return calls quickly" "Our tours go well" But here's the reality: 👉 Customers don't judge you by your intentions—they judge you by moments. And those moments are where most businesses fail. 📉 THE CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE GAP EXPLAINED There's a massive disconnect between: What you think is happening vs. What your customers actually experience This gap is especially dangerous in industries like: Childcare (trusting you with their kids) Home services (letting you into their home) These are high-trust, high-emotion decisions—and even small breakdowns destroy confidence fast. 👀 THE 5 BIGGEST BLIND SPOTS COSTING YOU CUSTOMERS 📞 1. The First Phone Call (MOST IMPORTANT) Missed calls = lost revenue Cold or rushed tone = no trust No clear next steps = confusion 👉 If the first interaction feels off… they're gone. 🚪 2. First Impressions (Tours & Service Visits) No greeting = awkward experience Messy appearance = low professionalism Disorganized tour = lost enrollment 👉 Customers decide emotionally within minutes. ⏱️ 3. Waiting & Poor Communication "We'll be there between 12–4" No follow-up after inquiries Delayed responses 👉 Silence creates doubt—and doubt kills decisions. 💬 4. Inconsistent Experiences One great employee, one terrible one Different messaging every time No standard process 👉 Your brand = your weakest moment. 💵 5. Closing & Follow-Up Failures No clear explanation No urgency No follow-up 👉 Most businesses don't lose the customer during the sale… they lose them after. 🔍 HOW TO FIND THE PROBLEMS YOU CAN'T SEE Trevor shares practical strategies to uncover the truth: ✔️ Secret shop your own business ✔️ Call your own phone lines at different times ✔️ Submit website inquiries ✔️ Listen to real conversations ✔️ Observe your team in real moments ✔️ Ask better, deeper customer questions 👉 The biggest insights come from the people who didn't choose you. 🛠️ HOW TO FIX THE EXPERIENCE GAP FAST If you want to increase: Conversions Enrollments Bookings Reviews Customer loyalty You need to: ✅ Script key interactions (calls, tours, visits) ✅ Train your team for consistency ✅ Track real metrics (not assumptions) ✅ Build a culture of customer awareness 💡 KEY TAKEAWAY Your customers are making emotional decisions about trust, safety, and reliability. And the experience you THINK you're delivering… is not the one that matters. 👉 The one they FEEL is. 🎯 YOUR CHALLENGE THIS WEEK Go through your own business like a customer: Call your phone Fill out your form Walk through your process Then fix just ONE thing that feels off. That one change could dramatically increase your revenue. 🚀 WANT MORE BUSINESS GROWTH STRATEGIES? Subscribe to SoTellUs Time for weekly insights on: Customer experience Reviews & reputation management Marketing strategies Business growth systems AI tools for scaling 👉 Subscribe here: https://www.youtube.com/@sotellus 👉 Learn more: https://www.sotellus.com 🔥 ABOUT SOTELLUS SoTellUs helps businesses: Generate more 5-star reviews Capture video testimonials Automate follow-ups Increase conversions Build trust instantly If you're serious about growing your business, your online reputation and customer experience must work together. 📈 KEYWORDS (SEO BOOST) customer experience gap, why customers leave, improve customer experience, business growth strategies, customer service mistakes, home service marketing, childcare enrollment strategies, increase conversions, improve phone calls business, missed calls lost revenue, customer journey optimization, service business tips, reputation management, get more reviews, sotellus, sotellus time podcast, business podcast 2026, marketing strategies for small business, lead conversion strategies, customer retention strategies, improve business systems, client experience optimization   #CustomerExperience #BusinessGrowth #MarketingStrategy #HomeServices #ChildcareBusiness #Entrepreneurship #LeadConversion #CustomerService #ReputationManagement #SoTellUs #SoTellUsTime

    25 min
  6. 24 MAR

    How to Build Momentum When You Feel Stuck

    Ever feel like you're working hard, but nothing is moving forward? In this episode of SoTellUs Time, Trevor Howard breaks down exactly how to build momentum when you feel stuck in business, leadership, marketing, or life. If you've been feeling overwhelmed, frustrated, plateaued, burned out, or stuck second-guessing your next move, this conversation will help you stop overthinking and start creating real progress. The truth is, momentum is not something you wait for. Momentum is something you create. Most people think being stuck means they need a better strategy, but in many cases, being stuck is really an action problem. When you stop waiting for perfect timing, perfect clarity, and perfect conditions, you can finally start moving again. In this episode, we talk about why people get stuck in the first place. Sometimes it's because there are too many problems and no clear starting point. Sometimes it's perfectionism and fear of making the wrong decision. Sometimes it's discouragement from not seeing immediate results. And sometimes it's plain fatigue and burnout. No matter what the cause is, the solution almost always starts with action. We shares practical ways to create momentum fast, including how to shrink the target so progress feels manageable again. Instead of trying to fix everything at once, focus on one small, meaningful action. One client follow-up. One system improvement. One piece of content. One revenue-producing move. Small wins create big momentum, and the fastest way to get unstuck is to lower the barrier to action. You'll also hear why imperfect action beats overthinking every single time. Clarity does not come from sitting still and analyzing every option forever. Clarity comes from movement. It comes from sending the email, making the uncomfortable call, testing the idea, launching before you feel fully ready, and learning as you go. If you've been waiting until everything feels certain, this episode will help you break that cycle. Another major principle in this episode is learning how to stack small wins daily. Momentum compounds like interest. Trevor shares a simple framework you can use every day: 1 revenue activity 1 operational improvement 1 relationship touchpoint This daily discipline helps build confidence, create visible progress, reduce overwhelm, and keep your business moving forward even when motivation is low. We also talk about something many entrepreneurs and leaders overlook: your environment. Sometimes you are not stuck because your strategy is bad. Sometimes you are stuck because your energy is stale. A change in environment can create a powerful reset. That could mean working from a different location, changing your routine, reviewing your wins from the past 90 days, or talking to someone outside your business who can give you fresh perspective. Sometimes you do not need a new plan. You need new energy. One of the most powerful parts of this episode is the reminder that you do not have to build momentum alone. You can borrow momentum from other people. Accountability partners, team check-ins, coaching, mastermind groups, and public commitments can all help you move faster and stay consistent. Momentum is contagious, and getting around people who are moving can help you start moving too. If you are an entrepreneur, business owner, salesperson, marketer, leader, or anyone trying to grow in business and life, this episode is packed with practical advice to help you take action now. This is not just motivation. This is a simple, tactical framework for getting unstuck and building forward progress. In this episode, we cover: How to build momentum when you feel stuck Why overwhelm and perfectionism keep people frozen How to stop overthinking and take action Why small wins matter more than giant plans How to create clarity through movement A simple daily framework for consistent progress How changing your environment can reset your energy Why accountability and borrowed momentum matter How to overcome burnout, discouragement, and plateaus How business owners and leaders can regain traction quickly If you've been asking yourself how to get unstuck, how to stay motivated, how to regain momentum in business, or how to stop feeling paralyzed by big goals, this episode is for you. Your challenge after watching: What is ONE action you can take in the next hour? You do not need to solve everything today. You just need to start moving. Subscribe for more episodes on business growth, leadership, entrepreneurship, marketing, customer experience, mindset, reviews, systems, sales, and building a better business. Follow SoTellUs Time for more content designed to help entrepreneurs and business leaders grow smarter and faster. SoTellUs Time YouTube Channel: youtube.com/sotellus #BuildMomentum #FeelingStuck #BusinessGrowth #EntrepreneurMindset #LeadershipDevelopment #MotivationForEntrepreneurs #SmallWins #TakeAction #StopOverthinking #BusinessPodcast #SoTellUsTime #TrevorHoward #MomentumInBusiness #ProductivityTips #Entrepreneurship #LeadershipPodcast #HowToGetUnstuck #BusinessMotivation #MarketingMindset #SuccessHabits how to build momentum when you feel stuck, feeling stuck in business, how to get unstuck, stop overthinking and take action, how to create momentum, small wins create momentum, business motivation, entrepreneur mindset, leadership motivation, how to stay motivated, overcome overwhelm in business, perfectionism in entrepreneurship, how to take imperfect action, build momentum fast, business growth podcast, entrepreneurial success habits, how to regain momentum, productivity for entrepreneurs, so tell us time, trevor howard

    27 min
  7. 17 MAR

    The Hidden Danger of Nice Leadership in Business

    Are you being a nice leader when your business actually needs a clear leader? In this episode of SoTellUs Time, we break down the real danger of "nice" leadership in business and why being too accommodating can quietly damage team performance, accountability, culture, and business growth. Many business owners avoid hard conversations because they do not want to hurt feelings, create conflict, or seem too harsh. But when leaders tolerate missed deadlines, poor performance, bad attitudes, and low standards for too long, the cost is high. Your best employees get frustrated, expectations become unclear, productivity drops, and the business suffers. This episode is for entrepreneurs, small business owners, managers, team leaders, and executives who want to lead with more confidence, improve communication, strengthen company culture, and create a high-performing team without becoming cold or uncaring. We cover the critical difference between nice leadership vs kind leadership, why so many business owners fall into the trap of over-accommodating employees, and what strong but respectful leadership actually looks like in the real world. You'll learn why: Avoiding difficult conversations makes leadership problems worse Over-accommodating poor performance hurts your best employees Lack of accountability creates confusion and weakens culture Clear expectations reduce tension and improve team performance Respectful honesty builds stronger teams than passive leadership Strong leadership is not about being mean, it is about being clear We also share a simple framework for handling difficult employee conversations with confidence, including how to: Address repeated lateness Correct missed deadlines Explain the impact of poor performance Reset expectations clearly Offer support without lowering standards If you have ever thought: "I don't want to hurt their feelings." "Maybe it will get better on its own." "They're going through a lot." …this episode will help you understand why delayed leadership creates bigger problems later, and how to replace "nice" leadership with clear, kind, accountable leadership that helps both your team and your business grow. In this episode, we discuss: The danger of nice leadership in business Why leaders avoid confrontation The difference between nice and kind leadership Leadership communication skills for business owners How accountability improves company culture Why high performers leave when standards are inconsistent How to set clear expectations with employees How to handle difficult conversations at work Leadership mistakes that hurt small businesses How to lead with clarity, respect, and confidence Timestamps: 00:00 – The danger of "nice" leadership 01:00 – When avoiding the issue makes it worse 02:00 – Nice leadership vs kind leadership 05:00 – Why business owners fall into the nice leader trap 08:00 – The hidden costs of avoiding accountability 12:00 – What strong and respectful leadership looks like 15:00 – A practical script for difficult conversations 16:30 – Final takeaway: clarity is kindness in leadership If you are building a business and want better systems, better communication, better leadership, and better customer experiences, this episode is for you. On SoTellUs Time, we talk about business growth, leadership, marketing, customer experience, team development, accountability, reviews, automation, and strategies to help business owners scale smarter. Subscribe for more episodes on: leadership development, small business growth, entrepreneurship, team accountability, employee management, customer service, business systems, marketing strategy, reviews, and operational excellence. Subscribe to SoTellUs Time: https://www.youtube.com/@sotellus Learn more about SoTellUs: https://www.sotellus.com If this episode helped you, leave a comment with this word: CLARITY Tell us: Have you ever waited too long to address a team issue? #Leadership #BusinessLeadership #SmallBusiness #Entrepreneurship #Management #TeamLeadership #EmployeeAccountability #CompanyCulture #BusinessGrowth #SoTellUsTime danger of nice leadership, nice leadership in business, leadership accountability, clear leadership, kind leadership, leadership communication, difficult conversations with employees, how to hold employees accountable, leadership tips for business owners, employee performance management, business leadership skills, small business leadership, team accountability, company culture problems, entrepreneur leadership advice, managing poor performance, leadership training for entrepreneurs, workplace accountability, leadership clarity, business growth leadership

    21 min
  8. 10 MAR

    Stop Being Busy: The Hidden Cost of Constant Work for Business Owners | Productivity, Focus & Business Growth

    Are you constantly busy in your business but still feel like you're not making real progress? Many entrepreneurs, founders, and small business owners spend their days responding to emails, handling minor issues, and jumping from task to task. By the end of the week, they are exhausted — yet the business hasn't truly moved forward. In this episode of SoTellUs Time, Trevor breaks down one of the biggest hidden problems in entrepreneurship: being busy without being productive. Most business owners do not struggle with motivation or work ethic. In fact, the opposite is true. They work incredibly hard. The real challenge is misdirected effort — spending time on tasks that feel important but don't actually grow the business. If you want to grow faster, increase revenue, and build a company that scales, you must learn how to separate activity from progress. This episode introduces a simple but powerful framework that helps business owners identify what truly moves the needle — and what is quietly wasting their time. Whether you're running a startup, managing a growing company, or trying to scale your current operation, this conversation will help you rethink how you approach your daily workload and leadership priorities. If you've ever ended the week thinking, "I worked nonstop, but did anything actually move forward?" — this episode is for you. What You'll Learn in This Episode ✔ Why being busy is often the biggest productivity trap in business ✔ The difference between working hard and creating real growth ✔ Why most entrepreneurs spend too much time reacting instead of leading ✔ The three questions that can instantly refocus your week ✔ How to identify the activities that actually grow your company ✔ Why protecting your time is one of the most important leadership skills ✔ How successful founders prioritize differently than overwhelmed owners ✔ The simple mindset shift that can dramatically improve business progress The Busy Business Owner Trap Many entrepreneurs fall into the same pattern. Their days are filled with: • Emails and messages • Operational problems • Small fires that constantly appear • Meetings that may not be necessary • Minor details that feel urgent • Notifications pulling them in every direction These tasks feel productive because they require action. But they rarely drive real business growth. The truth is: If everything feels urgent, nothing is truly important. Without a clear system for prioritization, business owners often spend the majority of their time maintaining the business instead of growing it. The 3 Questions That Can Refocus Your Entire Week One of the most powerful leadership habits is asking the right questions. Instead of reacting to every issue, Trevor and Troy share a simple framework that helps owners regain control of their priorities. Every week, ask yourself: 1. What actually grows the business? These are activities like: • Sales conversations • Strategic partnerships • Marketing campaigns • Hiring great people • Building scalable systems • Improving customer experience These actions directly impact revenue, growth, and long-term success. 2. What only maintains the business? Some work is necessary but does not drive growth. Examples include: • Administrative tasks • Scheduling • Internal communication • Operations management • Routine updates and reporting These things keep the business functioning, but they are not the primary growth drivers. 3. What should I stop doing entirely? This is where the biggest breakthroughs happen. Many business owners are spending valuable time on tasks that: • Someone else could handle • Don't significantly impact results • Exist because of perfectionism • Are distractions disguised as productivity The reality is that many founders are stuck doing $10-an-hour work while $1,000 decisions wait. The 80/20 Rule of Business Success A core principle discussed in this episode is the Pareto Principle, also known as the 80/20 Rule. In most businesses: 20% of your efforts produce 80% of your results. The challenge is identifying that 20% and protecting it. Successful entrepreneurs do not simply work harder. They work more intentionally. They protect time for: • Strategic thinking • Sales and revenue generation • Building partnerships • Leadership and culture • Long-term planning • Creating systems that scale These are the activities that separate busy owners from successful leaders. Why Focus Is a Competitive Advantage In today's business world, distractions are everywhere. Notifications, emails, social media, constant communication, and operational noise can easily consume an entire day. But the companies that grow the fastest are not run by the busiest founders. They are run by the most focused leaders. Focus allows you to: • Move faster than competitors • Make better decisions • Allocate resources more effectively • Scale systems that actually work • Build a company with long-term stability When your priorities are clear, your business begins to move forward with far more momentum. A Challenge for Business Owners If you're feeling overwhelmed or stuck in constant activity, try this simple challenge. At the beginning of the week, ask yourself: "What is the one thing that will move my business forward more than anything else?" Not five things. Not a giant list. Just one priority. Then structure your week around making meaningful progress on that one goal. Over time, this discipline compounds and leads to massive results. Subscribe to SoTellUs Time If you enjoy conversations about entrepreneurship, leadership, marketing strategy, and business growth, make sure to subscribe to the SoTellUs Time channel. Trevor and Troy Howard share real-world insights from building companies, helping businesses grow, and developing systems that create lasting success. You'll learn practical strategies you can apply immediately to improve your business, leadership, and productivity. Subscribe here: https://www.youtube.com/@sotellus Visit SoTellUs: https://www.sotellus.com About SoTellUs SoTellUs helps businesses capture, manage, and leverage customer reviews through powerful automation tools that increase trust, visibility, and conversions. Businesses use SoTellUs to: • Collect more authentic customer reviews • Improve online reputation • Increase leads and sales • Showcase customer experiences through video reviews • Strengthen credibility across digital platforms Learn more at: https://www.sotellus.com Connect With SoTellUs YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@sotellus Website: https://www.sotellus.com #businessgrowth #entrepreneurship #productivitytips #smallbusinessowner #leadershipdevelopment #businessstrategy #entrepreneurmindset #timemanagement #scalingabusiness #founderlife

    17 min

About

SoTellUs Time is a podcast for business owners and entrepreneurs wanting to learn how to grow their business from the basics all the way to the advanced from the latest technics and technologies. Together the hosts of SoTellUs Time have over 40 years of marketing experience from start ups to $100,000,000 companies. They have started several successful 7 figure companies and advised thousands of companies in 19 countries generating hundreds of millions in revenue.