Marketing Advice
Protect your time to help protect your profit
In this column, Colin Sinclair McDermott, aka The Online Print Coach, explains how setting firm boundaries transforms you from a full-time troubleshooter into a strategic leader.
I
t is mid-morning, and you have fi nally sat down to tackle a complex quote or a long-term growth strategy. Then it happens.
A head pops around the door to ask about a thread colour, or an operator wants your take on a tricky logo placement on a technical fabric.
It feels small, and it only takes a minute to answer, but the damage is already done. Every time you become the ‘human search engine’ for your team, you aren’t just answering a question: you are resetting your focus, slowing your momentum, and training your staff to rely on your brain instead of their own.
The hidden cost of the ‘quick question’ In the world of printwear and promotional products, the technical variables are endless. The opportunities for things to go slightly off-track are everywhere. Many owners pride themselves on being the technical expert who can solve any production glitch in seconds. However, this level of accessibility is a growth killer.
When you allow yourself to be interrupted at any moment, you are essentially telling your team that your time is less valuable than their minor inconvenience. This creates a culture of dependency. If the owner is always there to catch the ball, the team stops trying to catch it themselves. Over time, this erodes your staff’s problem-solving skills and ensures the business can never scale beyond your personal capacity. If you want more structure and more headspace, you have to realise that your primary job is no longer troubleshooting: it is leadership.
Training for independence
Building a strong business requires a shift in how you interact with your shop fl oor. It starts with setting clear boundaries around your availability. This might mean having deep work hours when your offi ce door is closed, or specifi c times of day when you are available for production queries. Then, and this is the hard part, you have to stick to them.
When an employee comes to you with a question during your focus time, the temptation is to give them the answer to get them out of the offi ce. Resist it. By enforcing your boundaries, you force your team to look for the information elsewhere. Whether that is in a job sheet, a digital workfl ow system, or by drawing on their own experience, they begin to develop the autonomy a growing business needs. You are moving from a model where you are the invaluable centre of the web to one where the processes carry the weight instead.
www.printwearandpromotion.co.uk
Protecting the strategy
A business grows when its owners protect their time for high-value tasks. While you are deciding which backing to use for an embroidery job, nobody is reviewing the sales pipeline or the fi ve-year plan. Focus is a fi nite resource. If you spend it all on the shop fl oor, you will have nothing left for the decisions that actually drive profi t.
If your facility feels chaotic, it is likely because your boundaries are too porous. You have become the universal safety net, and while that might save a single job from going wrong, it prevents the business from ever running without you. True control is about having the visibility to know the job is right without having to touch it yourself.
Leading with clarity
If you want your business to be in a different place 12 months from now, you have to stop being the answer to every question. This isn’t about being distant or unhelpful; it is about respecting your company’s growth enough to step back. When you protect your time, you can fi nally design the plan that leads to more sales and less fi refi ghting.
The strongest businesses are built on systems and respect. By setting clear boundaries, you aren’t just protecting your own mental health, you are empowering your team to become the professionals the business needs to thrive. It is time to stop being a full-time troubleshooter and start being the strategist your company deserves.
If you are ready to stop being the bottleneck and start fi nding your quickest wins, let’s have a straight-talking conversation about your structure.
April 2026 |19 |
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22 |
Page 23 |
Page 24 |
Page 25 |
Page 26 |
Page 27 |
Page 28 |
Page 29 |
Page 30 |
Page 31 |
Page 32 |
Page 33 |
Page 34 |
Page 35 |
Page 36 |
Page 37 |
Page 38 |
Page 39 |
Page 40 |
Page 41 |
Page 42 |
Page 43 |
Page 44 |
Page 45 |
Page 46 |
Page 47 |
Page 48 |
Page 49 |
Page 50 |
Page 51 |
Page 52 |
Page 53 |
Page 54 |
Page 55 |
Page 56 |
Page 57 |
Page 58 |
Page 59 |
Page 60 |
Page 61 |
Page 62 |
Page 63 |
Page 64 |
Page 65 |
Page 66 |
Page 67 |
Page 68 |
Page 69 |
Page 70 |
Page 71 |
Page 72 |
Page 73 |
Page 74 |
Page 75 |
Page 76 |
Page 77 |
Page 78 |
Page 79 |
Page 80