How to set boundaries as a founder
When I first launched my business, I believed growth meant saying yes to everything. Every client who reached out, every opportunity that landed in my inbox, every late-night email that felt urgent. It all felt like momentum. I had spent years in the finance industry learning how to be reliable, responsive, and endlessly available. So when I went out on my own, I brought those habits with me. I believed boundaries were something you earned later, once you’d proven yourself. To make matters worse, there’s an unspoken belief in founder culture that “serious” entrepreneurs are always available, always hustling, always willing to sacrifice their lives for their businesses. I had absorbed that belief without questioning it. It looked like success, until burnout made it clear I wasn’t scaling impact I was scaling exhaustion. I was recreating the same constant availability I had promised myself I’d leave behind when I stepped away from my job in finance, just from a different location. So I started making changes. At first, it felt risky. My biggest fear was that clients would leave—that setting limits would signal I wasn’t serious, that I didn’t want it badly enough. Instead, the opposite happened. Clients felt more supported. Projects ran more smoothly because I had the margin to think. The business grew faster once I stopped trying to do everything. Here’s what I changed, and how any founder can start adding more boundaries to their business today. Protecting my time I knew the first thing that needed to change was my availability. I’d left corporate life so I could be more present for my kids, not less. Instead, I was trying to be everywhere at once: fully available to clients while also being fully present with my kids while also showing up for my community. I just ended up half present everywhere. So I set office hours and communicated them clearly: I respond to non-urgent messages within 24 hours during business days and I very rarely communicate with clients throug