It’s one of the biggest dilemmas people who work for themselves face:
Can entrepreneurs take a vacation?
Especially during the summer months, when images abound of families frolicking at the shore or boating on a lake, that pang to get away for a few days and totally let go can get pretty strong.
For folks who have jobs, vacations are a no-brainer — they are simply told when they can and cannot have time off (as well as how many vacation days they are allotted per year) and thus build their one or two week getaways faithfully each year into their calendars.
It’s not as easy for us entrepreneurs (and in all fairness, we LIKE it that way).
First, there is the urban legend floating about that entrepreneurs just never know WHEN to stop working, and in fact, may be incapable of not working at all.
And indeed, many entrepreneurs honestly LIKE working and don’t see long hours day after day, week after week, as a problem.
But even if you are a super high-charged Type A personality, taking some time off once in awhile is imperative for long-term health and prosperity.
As was made famous by Jack Nicholson in that classic horror movie “The Shining” — “All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.”
The plain and simple truth of it is, vacations are a must for people who log countless hours in front of their computers, on their Smart Phones, in personal development seminars, and making sales.
But working TOO much can actually have a negative effect on a business’s bottom line. Thus, here are 7 reasons entrepreneurs MUST take a vacation, at least every six months:
1. Vacations can stimulate the creative spark that has dulled since your last getaway. Let’s be honest: the stress and pressures of the day-to-day responsibilities an entrepreneur has can wear down even the most creative of people.
2. Getting out of the house and away from everything “plugged in” is downright good for your health, not to mention your attitude. Too much screen time dulls the blade. Need I say more?
3. You are in a rut. A change of scenery is good for the soul and can foster a breakthrough you could not have experienced had you stayed at home and continued to work.
4. You never know who you might meet on vacation. Standing at the Craps table in Vegas, lounging by the pool in Cabo, waiting to go Parasailing in Key West…or riding the elevator back to your room after a night of dancing…you cannot predict who you might meet and how they might impact your business moving forward. One woman in my business met a very influential gentlemen in an elevator at her hotel who simply asked her where she was from. One thing led to another and the next thing she knew, he signed up in her business. And with golf now considered the universal language of business, booking a tee time could turn out to be profitable.
5. You can’t remember the last time you spent quality time with your significant other. If the person you promised to love honor and cherish seems like a stranger lately, best to book a flight and pack your bags for a getaway together…before he or she gets away with someone else!
6. Vacations can remind you of why you work so hard and log such long hours. You can only work for so long before the money comes in. From time to time it’s just nice to celebrate what you have worked for in a place that isn’t the same address as your mortgage or other bills come to.
7. Vacations are fun! Enough said! 🙂
Do you struggle with taking a vacation? Or have you reached the enlightened point of being an entrepreneur and know you need to get away once in awhile? What do you do to recharge while you are gone? Share your vacation tales with us here or add some other great reasons entrepreneurs MUST take a vacation!
I Raise My Umbrella Drink to You!
What an important subject Mary Lou. We can easily have the anxiety about leaving our computers behind and clearing our minds. My story is that once a week I take one day and unplug. Even the cell shuts off and is left behind. We take a day trip, go swimming, anything that gets us out of the house. OR just do NOTHING! It is difficult and tempting, but I trained myself to do that.
As for vacation.. funny how I’m reading this right now, because we are off tomorrow for about four days. My husband and I are going on a trip to nowhere. i.e. We are getting in the car and driving to Vermont only because we have never been there, one night at a hotel, and then off again to wherever the road leads us. I call it an “intuitive” vacation. I just want to get away with no destination in mind and see where the road takes me. (I may sound nuts, but I am an explorer)
Thanks for this post because vacation is so important. You don’t know who you will meet and also when you come back, your mind is clear.
Regards,
Donna
Getting unplugged is so important. Leave the smart phone home and take a throw phone with you for emergencies only. I am so surprised how many so called smart people go batty after a few years of this high pressure age we live in. Just get unplugged it won’t hurt and maybe you just might enjoy it.
Great idea, Mary Lou… Vacation!
I think vacation is great, but I have to say that I’ve always believed in daily vacations more than annual ones. I agree it’s important to ditch everything and get away from it all once in a while.
But even more important is to be certain that every single day you reserve time for yourself, your spouse, your family and anything else that really defines your life. I know my business does not define my life, and every day I get to the gym, linger over morning coffee with my wife (although I confess we DO discuss business a lot), and I cherish my black and white movies that I fall asleep on every night after setting the automatic sleep control on my remote.
In addition, I often break for 5 or 10 minutes to meditate, deep breath, walk the dog… and I never work on Sundays. So, daily break aways, and get out of town vacations every now and then… you’re doing yourself and your business more harm than good if you don’t indulge yourself here.
Thanks for a refreshing post, Mary Lou.
Hi Mary Lou,
Great post, and a good time of year to write it!
Many people don’t know that most developed countries (European, Australia, and others) have between four to six weeks of vacation per year. Why?
Because!
Think about it. We do, as has been mentioned, get into ruts. And time away from work. . .enough time, really allows us to pursue other areas in our lives that are important to us (things like travel that enrich us and help us grow in ways we wouldn’t be able to otherwise), it enables us to stay a lot more connected to those whom we love, and — if we are blessed to be doing something we REALLY love — has us longing to get back in the saddle when the vacation is over.
Sez me!
How do entrepreneurs take that time away? Hire a virtual assistant. There are so many people out of work right now; people with the skills (or desire to acquire them) needed to take up aspects of our business that keep us from growing our revenues.
Keep it on an independent contractor basis. Align yourself with someone who is capable of managing and training others — you’ll need this capability because the more time you spend creating your next product, your next affiliate relationship, your next MLM star, the more help you’ll need with the other stuff that doesn’t pay anywhere near as well as what we entrepreneurs are most rewarded for.
It’s a brave new world and there are tremendous opportunities for us to tap into, if we choose to. And in the process we can help one heck of a lot of other people who aren’t interested in our product or our company.
Joe
PS We take about five weeks off each year right now. . .shooting for six. Figure I can go like a dervish for 3.5 months (with lots of David’s and his lovely wife’s ideas sprinkled in) if I have two weeks to really blow off steam, take a nice scuba diving or skiing trip or. . .?
Hey MaryLou,
Oh, I am so glad I read this post today as I am a true work-o-holic. You are correct vacations are such a necessary part of building a successful business. Without rest and rejuvenation time, it is very easy to actually lower our effectiveness. Thanks for this gentle reminder… my family thanks you as well. We have a vacation scheduled for Cabo in th October and I am really looking forward to the break.
Mary Lou,
Taking time for ourselves is so important. We need time to re-energize & connect with ourselves and those we care about. Yes, we can take vacations. I really like David’s idea of mini vacations, time for yourself every day.
Val 🙂
Hi Val, I hope you have had some time this summer to take a mini vacation somewhere rejuvenating. I remember you talking with Don Enck once on a call about fishing? You are so right, though…to be our best, we MUST take time for ourselves!
Hi Scott, You are indeed one of the most driven people I know who would plow right through the year with no vacations ever! I am glad to know you are taking your family away for a break this fall. It is so important — and perhaps most important for Type A’s — to have down time (as hard as it can be to totally let down). Rest and rejuvenation will make you even better at what you do.
Hi Joe, Your comments are definitely the most in-depth and thoughtful around, like mini-blog posts all on their own. I like your idea here about hiring a VA. This is a subject I have read about but have yet to explore for myself. I agree with you — delegating tasks becomes more and more necessary for entrepreneurs as our businesses grow and our time becomes more precious. That way when we do get away, we aren’t so worried about what’s happening while we are gone. Thanks for a terrific comment! 🙂
Hi David, I agree with you about taking mini-breaks throughout the day. I think I would implode if I didn’t stop to stretch, walk, meditate…finding a daily rhythm that works when you are an entrepreneur takes time and revision. When I first got going in my business, I never took breaks and it nearly killed me. I was so exhausted and my relationships suffered from neglect. I am much better now at doing what you suggest here in your comment. Life is far more than just one’s business, indeed!
Sometimes great things happen when we unplug ourselves from all the 21st century gadgets that have us tied up in knots most of the time. Life isn’t going to suddenly stop because you can’t update your Facebook page!
Hi Donna, I am writing this response knowing that you and David had a wonderful little getaway and that some significant things happened while you were on the trip! As you wrote, “you don’t know who you will meet…” and obviously, you also don’t know what you will discover while away (the perfect house, perhaps?). 🙂