A business that depends on one person is a job, not an asset.

Executive take:
If the business stops when you stop, it’s a job. An asset runs, scales, and creates value without a single point of failure.

Here’s a clean way to think about it:


The Litmus Test

Ask three questions:

  1. Can the business operate for 90 days without you?
  2. Is revenue driven by systems or by your personal effort and reputation?
  3. Could someone else step into your role with documented processes?

If the answer is “no” to most → you own a job.
If the answer is “yes” → you’re building an asset.


Job vs Asset (Simplified)

A Job

  • Revenue tied to one individual
  • Tribal knowledge in someone’s head
  • Clients say: “We work with you
  • Vacations = revenue anxiety

An Asset

  • Documented processes and controls
  • Delegated delivery and decision‑making
  • Clients say: “We work with the firm
  • Time away doesn’t hurt cash flow

Why This Matters
  • Valuation: Buyers don’t pay for dependency risk
  • Scalability: One person caps growth
  • Burnout: Personal effort is not leverage
  • Exit options: An owner‑dependent business is hard to sell, easy to quit

The Real Shift

Moving from operatorowner means:

  • Designing systems, not heroic effort
  • Hiring for replacement, not relief
  • Letting go of being indispensable

Ironically, the moment the business doesn’t need you anymore is when it becomes most valuable—to others and to you.