
This newsletter is for experienced corporate women who know they have skills, ideas, and expertise they could turn into a side business, but keep staying stuck in thinking mode instead of taking action. It is a heart-to-heart reminder that building income options does not start with the perfect idea – it starts with deciding whether you really want a different future and taking one honest step toward it.
I have a friend who spent 18 years working in corporate in financial services.
About three years ago, she told me she wanted to start an online business. She said she wanted to do something similar to what I was doing. Use her experience and build something on the side. Create another income stream so she would not have to rely completely on her corporate salary.
So we talked through her ideas. I helped her narrow them down and came up with a niche, a clear problem she could help people solve, and a simple way she could test the idea in the market.
She was excited. At the time, it felt like something had clicked.
Three months later, I asked her what feedback she had received from potential clients. She said, “Oh, work got really busy. I haven’t had a chance to do anything yet.” Fair enough. Life does get busy.
Then another six months passed. Still nothing. Three years later, the offer was gathering internet dust and never had the opportunity to face the market and get feedback.
Also, over the last three years, I have listened to her talk about how frustrated she is with her job. How difficult her boss can be. How much she wishes she did not have to rely on one income. How upsetting it was when she had to miss her son’s soccer game because of work.
As a friend, I am always there for her. I listen and support her, and understand why she feels the way she feels.
But as a business coach, I can also see the painful truth – if she had started taking small actions three years ago, she could have been in a very different position by now. Maybe not necessarily with the glamorous laptop-on-the-beach version of entrepreneurship, which honestly looks very sweaty and impractical anyway.
But she could have had proof, the real client conversations. She could have tested her offer and worked with her first clients. She could have built confidence with an online business and created income options.
And I say this with a lot of compassion, because she is not alone. I have seen this over and over again with experienced women in corporate.
At a certain stage of your career, something starts to shift.
You may still be good at your job and value your career. You may still have a lot to contribute. But deep down, you start to wonder whether relying on one income, one employer, and one career path is really the smartest strategy for the next chapter of your life. You start thinking about other income avenues.
You see all these young entrepreneurs in their 20s talking about building multiple six or seven-figure businesses on the internet and living a life of freedom.
And you wonder…Why can’t I? I have experience and skills. I have worked hard and solved real problems. I have life experience that they probably do not even have yet. So why does it feel so hard for me to start?
And this is where I want to have a very honest conversation.
Because from what I have seen, most experienced corporate women are not lacking ideas.
They have ideas. Sometimes they have too many ideas. They could coach, consult, and mentor. They could create a workshop and teach something they know. They could package their expertise into a service and support others going through something they have already navigated themselves.
The idea is usually not the issue.
The issue is asking this hard question: Do you actually want this?
Not the fantasy version. Not the version where the business looks polished, the clients arrive easily, the money flows in, and everyone on the internet applauds your bravery.
I mean the real version. The version where you are not fully confident in selling your products and services. The version where you send a message and someone does not reply. The version where work gets busy and you still have to decide whether this matters enough to protect one or two hours a week.
This is also the version where you question yourself; where things move more slowly than you hoped; where you realise that building a business is not just about having a great idea; it is about becoming the kind of person who follows through on the idea.
That is the part people do not talk about enough.
Because when you still have a stable corporate income, there is often no real urgency. Your life may feel frustrating in some ways, but it is not completely falling apart.
The bills are being paid. The salary arrives. The structure is there. The role may be stressful, but at least it is familiar. And because it is familiar, the business stays optional.
You can keep telling yourself you will start when work calms down. When the kids are older. When that work project has finished and you have more time. When you feel more confident. When life finally creates a perfect little opening for you.
But life rarely does that.
Especially not for women with careers, families, responsibilities, ageing parents, school calendars, households, and a brain that already has 47 tabs open before breakfast.
At some point, you have to stop waiting for life to make it convenient. Because comfort delays urgency.
That is the trap.
When something is painful enough to complain about, but not painful enough to change, it can keep you stuck for years. You can dislike the dependence on one income, but still not act. You can feel frustrated with work, but still not build anything else. You can want more options, but still keep postponing the very actions that would create them.
And again, there is no judgement in this.
But there does need to be honesty. Because the real question is not, “Do I have time to work on my side business?”
The real question is: Am I willing to start building the future I keep saying I want?
If your honest answer is no, that is okay.
There is nothing wrong with staying in corporate and choosing employment as your main income path. There is nothing wrong with deciding that building a business is not for you right now. There is nothing wrong with saying, “I know relying on one income has risks, but I am willing to accept those risks.”
That is an answer. And at least it is honest.
But if your answer is, “No, I do not want to be in the same position five years from now,” then something has to change. Not dramatically or recklessly. Not by quitting your job tomorrow and trying to manifest your mortgage repayment through positive thinking. Please do not do that.
But something has to change. You have to be willing to bet on yourself in a strategic way. More importantly, you have to be willing to give yourself time. Maybe two years, or even longer.
You have to be willing to build something slowly alongside your career while protecting your corporate income; You have to be willing to test ideas and have real conversations with your ideal clients before they feel perfect; You have to be willing to take small, slightly uncomfortable actions before you feel completely ready.
Because that is how income options are built.
Not through thinking, or talking about it for three years. Not through saving another LinkedIn post about someone else’s success.
Through action – small and imperfect action.
This does not mean you need to decide today whether you will leave corporate one day. I think that is where many women put unnecessary pressure on themselves. They think starting a side business means they must have an exit plan; they think they need to know whether they want to become a full-time entrepreneur; they think they need to make some huge identity shift and declare, “I am done with corporate.”
But you do not need to make that decision now. That decision comes much later. You can still have a lot to give in your corporate role and build something of your own at the same time.
That is one of the reasons I stayed in corporate for many years while building my business. I still had value to give in my role and I still wanted the stability of my income while building my online business. But I also knew I did not want my future to depend on one employer, one salary, and one path.
So the first decision was not, “Am I leaving corporate?”
The first decision was, “Do I want to create more options for myself?”
That is a much calmer question.
And it is a much more useful starting point as well. Because when you take the pressure off needing to know the whole future, you can focus on the next honest step.
Your first step in taking action does not need to be impressive. It just needs to create evidence.
Because evidence is what changes everything.
Evidence shows you whether the problem is real and whether people want your help; Evidence shows you how they describe their struggle and what they are willing to pay for. Evidence builds confidence.
And confidence built from evidence is very different from confidence built from thinking. Thinking confidence disappears the moment things get uncomfortable.
Evidence confidence says, “I have done this before. I can take the next step.”
That is what my friend missed. Despite being incredibly capable, three years had passed, she never moved from idea to evidence.
That is the part I keep coming back to.
Three years will pass anyway; Five years will pass anyway.
You can spend that time circling the idea, talking about the frustration, waiting for the right season, and wondering why nothing has changed.
Or you can spend that time building slowly – One conversation. One offer. One client. One refinement. One small piece of proof at a time.
So if you are stuck in the ‘thinking’ mode, ask yourself, “Do I want my life to look different five years from now?”
And if the answer is yes, then the next question is:
“What is one honest action I can take this week?”
Most people do not need another idea. They need to decide whether they are willing to act on the idea they already have. That is where the real work begins.
And honestly, that is also where the freedom begins. Not the internet version of freedom with the beach laptop and suspiciously clean white linen pants.
Real freedom. The kind where you know you are building options; where you know your skills can create value beyond your job title; where you are not waiting for someone else to decide what your future looks like.
That kind of freedom is not built overnight. But it can start with one small move.
And that is available to you now.
If you’re still in the idea stage, I’ve created something to help you move out of your head and into clarity. You can access my free guide and AI validator tool here: Validate Your Coaching Idea in 30 Minutes. It’s a fast-action workbook plus GPT-powered tool to help you get clear on your online business idea, uncover demand, and validate an idea that could actually sell.