
This newsletter is for every corporate professional who worries that starting a side business might harm their career or make others question their commitment. I’ll share why those fears are often misplaced, how to build a business professionally while you’re still employed, and why your career could be the very thing that gives you the greatest advantage as an entrepreneur.
A few years ago, I remember hesitating before publishing the first LinkedIn post about my fitness coaching business.
It wasn’t controversial. It was simply the first time I had spoken publicly about fitness on LinkedIn, a platform where most people knew me as a Private Wealth Manager working in a well-known Private Bank.
At the time, I was starting to build a fitness coaching business online alongside my corporate career. My employer knew about it, but a part of me still wondered how it would be perceived. You can see the screenshot of this post below.

Looking back now, I realise those concerns weren’t really about LinkedIn. They were about reputation – my professional reputation.
Like many professionals, I had spent over a decade building credibility in my career, and I didn’t want to do anything that might undermine it. Especially since I had only just started my fitness coaching side business and was still very early in my entrepreneurial journey.
What I’ve learned since then is that one of the biggest misconceptions about building a business while still employed is that it automatically creates a conflict with your career.
Many professionals assume that the moment they start posting online, colleagues will question their commitment, leaders will assume they are planning to leave, and their professional reputation will somehow be damaged.
These concerns are understandable.
Most corporate professionals have spent years, sometimes decades, building their credibility. They’ve earned leadership positions, developed trusted relationships and built reputations they value. The idea of doing something outside their corporate identity that could potentially jeopardise it can feel risky.
Yet over the last 6 years, building my own coaching business alongside a full-time corporate career, I’ve come to a different conclusion.
When approached professionally, building a business doesn’t have to weaken your professional reputation. In many cases, it can strengthen it. It can position you as a thought leader, deepen your expertise, expand your network, and create opportunities that may never have existed if you had remained only a corporate employee.
The reason for this is that professional credibility itself has changed significantly over the last few decades.
Your expertise no longer has to stay inside your organisation
Twenty years ago, expertise was largely hidden inside organisations.
You could spend an entire career building deep knowledge and valuable insights, but very few people outside your immediate workplace would ever know or understand your expertise.
Today, that has changed.
Professionals who consistently share thoughtful perspectives, personal experience or transformations, practical lessons and industry insights are often viewed as leaders in their field. They become known for something beyond their job title.
This is one of the reasons personal branding has become such a powerful career asset.
Unfortunately, many people associate personal branding with influencers, self-promotion and endless social media content.
That’s not what I’m talking about.
I’m talking about thoughtfully sharing what you know – your experiences, your observations, your expertise, or even your lessons, mistakes and your own transformation.
Done well, this isn’t self-promotion. It’s how you build professional credibility beyond a corporate title.
Your career is probably your biggest business advantage
Where people often get themselves into trouble is when they position their business as an escape from their career and create conflicts with their 9-to-5.
We’ve all seen those contents.
Posts that portray corporate life as a prison.
Messages suggesting that anyone with ambition should quit their job.
Stories that frame employment as failure and entrepreneurship as the only path to freedom.
While this messaging style may attract attention online, it creates unnecessary tension for professionals who are still employed.
More importantly, it misses an important truth.
For many of us, our careers helped us develop the expertise, skills and experience we can now monetise. Our corporate experience also taught us what we want and don’t want when building a business of our own.
My years in financial services taught me how to communicate with clients, solve problems, build trust, get comfortable with sales, manage relationships and deliver professional advice.
Those skills became incredibly valuable when I started coaching and getting my own clients.
My business didn’t emerge despite my corporate career.
It emerged because of it.
When you recognise that, your content naturally changes.
Instead of talking about what you’re trying to escape, you start talking about what you’ve learned.
And that shift makes all the difference.
The unexpected career benefits of building a business
One of the unexpected benefits of building my coaching business has been the way it has developed the professional capabilities that I would not have been able to do by working in my 9-to-5 job alone.
Creating content has improved my communication skills.
Coaching has strengthened my ability to ask better questions and understand people’s challenges.
Running an online business has forced me to think strategically, solve problems and make decisions with limited information.
These are not just entrepreneurial skills. They’re leadership skills.
The reality is that many of the capabilities required to build a business are also highly valuable inside organisations.
When people see you consistently sharing thoughtful ideas, they often begin to associate you with expertise, leadership, and proactivity. And that does not come from what you said; it often comes from what you’ve demonstrated.
The line I never cross
Of course, building a business while employed requires good judgment.
I believe strongly in maintaining clear boundaries between my corporate role and my business.
That means respecting employment obligations, protecting confidential information and ensuring my business activities never interfere with the responsibilities I’m being paid to perform.
It also means being intentional about what I share publicly. I never blur the lines between my business and my corporate job; whether it’s clients, resources or just time, they are completely separate.
These aren’t just ethical considerations. They’re part of protecting the professional reputation you’ve worked hard to build, and they need to be managed professionally.
Why staying invisible isn’t actually the safe option
Quite often, I see corporate professionals assume they need to remain invisible until they’re ready to leave their job.
The thinking usually goes something like this: keep your head down, avoid drawing attention to yourself, and only start talking about your expertise once you’ve fully committed to building a business.
While that approach may feel safer in the short term, it often creates a different problem. By the time you’re ready to build something outside your career, you’ve spent years hiding the very expertise, experience and insights that could help create opportunities.
The professionals who build the strongest businesses rarely emerge from nowhere. Long before they launch an offer, they have already established a reputation for their knowledge, perspective and ability to help others.
That’s why thoughtful personal branding matters. Sharing ideas, lessons, and professional insights isn’t an announcement that you’re planning to leave your employer. It’s simply evidence of what you know.
Over time, that visibility compounds. Colleagues begin to recognise your expertise. Industry peers become familiar with your work. Opportunities emerge through conversations, introductions and relationships that would never have happened if you had remained silent.
When approached that way, building a presence around your expertise is not separate from your professional reputation. It becomes part of it.
The real value isn’t just the income
For decades, corporate professionals were taught that career security came from loyalty, performance and climbing the corporate ladder. I used to believe that too.
While those things still matter, the world has changed.
Redundancies are happening more often than ever with the adoption of AI. Industries change. Companies restructure. Roles that once seemed secure can disappear surprisingly quickly.
That’s why I truly believe every corporate professional should think about building something that belongs to them. Because creating another avenue for income, opportunity and professional growth gives you something incredibly valuable: options.
The goal isn’t necessarily to leave corporate. The goal is to reach a point where staying in corporate becomes a choice rather than a necessity. That’s what building a side business alongside your career can provide – a source of leverage and an income option, and ultimately, the freedom to shape your future on your own terms.
And 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 a GPT-powered tool to help you get clear on your online business idea, uncover demand, and validate an idea that could actually sell.