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8 Deadly Sins You Must Avoid in Business – Part 2

8 Deadly Sins You Must Avoid in Business – Part 2

by Tony Ajah | May 14, 2021 | Business Growth

Part 2 of  the 8 Deadly Sins You Must Avoid in Business 3. Not caring enough It’s common for an enterprise or an entrepreneurial team to be faced with the kind of challenges where one fundamental question emerges, and that is: ‘Do we care enough to do what we were in...
8 Deadly Sins You Must Avoid in Business – Part 1

8 Deadly Sins You Must Avoid in Business – Part 1

by Tony Ajah | Apr 29, 2021 | Business Growth

8 Deadly Sins You Must Avoid in Business It’s on record that about two out of every three businesses fail. The big question now is where do the two-third who didn’t make it go wrong? What are the behaviors or actions that caused so many businesses (and entrepreneur...
The People Business – How to Play and Win in the New Economy

The People Business – How to Play and Win in the New Economy

by Tony Ajah | Mar 20, 2021 | Business Growth

How to Play and Win in the New Economy How we are perceived as human beings is becoming increasingly important in business. And like you know, business is a means of touching lives in a way that tells your customers that you understand their needs, and are willing and...
How to Grow Your Enterprise Attention Via Visibility

How to Grow Your Enterprise Attention Via Visibility

by Tony Ajah | Jan 8, 2021 | Business Growth

The Attention-driven Business – Growing Your Enterprise Attention Via Visibility Great businesses draw the attention of prospective customers and also keeping the attention of existing customers. They understand that attention is what every business lives and dies...
How to Consciously Generate Attention in the Marketplace (1)

How to Consciously Generate Attention in the Marketplace (1)

by Tony Ajah | Dec 9, 2020 | Business Growth

The Attention-driven Business – How to Consciously Generate Attention in the Marketplace  Every business is the same in some respect; they need a steady supply of customers to flourish. And once they’ve got the customers, they still need to keep them to...
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  • In the early days of building a business in Africa, hustle is often the oxygen that keeps the dream alive. You chase clients, improvise solutions, work late nights, and personally fix every problem. It works for a while. You see revenue come in. The business survives. But at some point, hustle becomes a trap. If your business only grows when you work harder, respond faster, and stay more involved than everyone else, you don’t have a scalable business. I’d say that you have a demanding job wearing business clothes. The real shift every serious founder must make is moving from hustle to systems. Here’s how to do it, practically and intentionally. Accept that hustle is not a strategy Many founders in our ecosystem wear hustle as a badge of honour. But hustle is meant to help you start. It is just a phase and cannot help you scale. A hustle-driven business usually shows these symptoms: the you are involved in every decision, processes live in people’s heads rather than in documents, quality is inconsistent, growth feels chaotic, and taking a vacation feels impossible. If this sounds familiar, don’t panic. It simply means your business has outgrown its informal beginnings. The mindset shift is what you need. It simply means that your job is no longer to do the work yourself but to build the machine that does the work. Document what already works You don’t need complex systems to begin. Start by observing your current operations. Ask yourself: how do we acquire customers today? How do we onboard them? How do we deliver our product or service? How do we collect payment? Now write it down, step by step. This is where many founders and business owners hesitate. They think their business is too small to document processes. That’s exactly why you should start now. Simplicity is your advantage. For example, a small Lagos-based catering business I once advised reduced customer complaints by nearly 40% simply by documenting its event preparation checklist. This is nothing fancy, but just clarity. Clarity gives speed! Standardize before you automate One common mistake is jumping straight into fancy software. Technology cannot fix a broken process. First, make your workflows consistent. You do that by creating standard operating procedures (SOPs), checklists for recurring tasks, templates for emails, proposals, and invoices, and clear handoff points between team members. When everyone follows the same playbook, your business becomes predictable, and predictability is the foundation of scale. Only after this should you introduce tools to automate parts of the workflow. Build around roles, not personalities Hustle-driven businesses depend heavily on specific people. Conversely, process-driven businesses depend on clearly defined roles. Instead of saying: “Ngozi handles customers because she’s good with people…” Define the role: “Customer Success Officer, who is responsible for onboarding, support response within 24 hours, and client retention.” This shift makes your business more fortified. People may leave, but well-defined roles and systems keep the engine running. For African founders, this is especially important because talent mobility is high. Your systems must be stronger than individual dependencies. Measure what matters If you don’t track performance, you cannot improve it. Start simple by identifying 5–7 key metrics that truly reflect business health. For many SMEs, these might include monthly revenue, customer acquisition cost, conversion rate, delivery turnaround time, and customer retention rate. Review these numbers consistently, say weekly or monthly. A small Accra-based logistics startup that my team and I worked with improved delivery efficiency by 25% simply by tracking average delivery time and reviewing it every Friday. The principle is clear: what gets measured truly gets managed. Delegate gradually but intentionally Many founders struggle to let go. The fear is understandable. It could be that the quality might drop, and customers might complain. But delegation is not abandonment. It is a structured transfer. So, start small by delegating repeatable, low-risk tasks first. Then, provide clear instructions, set expected outcomes, and review and coach regularly. Over time, your confidence and your team’s capability will grow. Remember, if you cannot step away from daily operations for two weeks or more, your business is still in hustle mode. Build a culture of continuous improvement Systems are not static documents you create once and forget. The best process-driven businesses treat improvement as an ongoing habit. It's your duty as a leader to encourage your team to ask: What slowed us down this week? Where did errors occur? What can we simplify? Small, consistent refinements compound into massive operational strength over time. Build the business that can grow without you. The goal is not to eliminate hustle entirely. Every founder will still need moments of extra push, especially in Africa’s dynamic markets. But sustainable businesses are not built on perpetual exhaustion. They are built on clarity, repeatability, and systems that work even when you are not in the room. businessHow to move from a hustle-driven model to a repeatable, process-driven business
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