

Self-imposed barriers to business growth
I used to think the biggest barriers to scaling my consulting business were the obvious ones - lack of expertise, weak marketing, or insufficient skills. But after years of working with hundreds of consultants, I've discovered something shocking: the real killers of growth aren't external at all. They're the subtle, unconscious beliefs we carry that sabotage us from the inside. These mental roadblocks are so sneaky that most consultants don't even realize they have them, yet they're the difference between staying stuck at your current income and breaking through to multi-six or seven figures. In this episode, my co-host and I dissect the five most dangerous limiting beliefs that keep consultants trapped in mediocrity - and reveal the mindset shifts that unlock explosive growth.
Show Notes:
- The "irreplaceable expert" trap - Why believing "only I can do this work" is actually protecting you from the growth you claim to want (and the ego-bruising truth about what happens when you finally let others help)
- The income replacement ceiling - How your old salary becomes an invisible prison that keeps you thinking small, even when your consulting could be worth 3-5x more than your previous job
- The "perfect preparation" paradox - Why consultants waste months building systems for clients they don't have instead of focusing on the one thing that actually matters for growth
- The capacity versus demand equation - The counterintuitive reason why having MORE demand than you can handle is actually better for your business than perfect supply-demand balance
- The client dependency delusion - How the belief that "clients only want me" creates a business that's impossible to scale and why this might be more about your need for validation than reality
- The competitor creation fear - Why worrying that employees will steal your secrets and become competitors reveals a dangerous scarcity mindset that's killing your growth potential
- The vulnerability factor - The uncomfortable truth about why letting others see "behind the curtain" of your business feels so threatening (and why it's essential for scaling)