As entrepreneurs, we believe that if we are not working every available hour in the day, we are not worthy or deserving of the results of the success we achieve.
Socially-motivated entrepreneurs are especially vulnerable to working themselves into the ground. If you're flirting with burnout, start taking these 4 steps today.
The human spirit is more resilient than we know and may have previously experienced. Trust that there is something good coming next, and that we have the power to co-create that together.
Stop defining your life by the number of meetings you take or the number of events you attend. Let's shift our perspective on what being "busy" really is.
In a world of relentless productivity and unfettered determination, there's a surprising lesson to be learned from one of the world's greatest lumberjacks.
Entrepreneurial life is intense and all-consuming. In the long run, you need to invest in friendships outside the entrepreneurial world—or you’ll burn out.
We often hear founders calling their startup their "baby.” Sadly, entrepreneurs often fail to show actual friends and family that same level of priority.
Do you feel like there are never enough hours in a day to get everything done? Good news, you are not the only one. Read this post for tips on how you can become a Productivity Ninja.
Gandhi didn't take vacation for fifty years. He didn't need it. Read this post to find out how being an entrepreneur isn’t about sacrifice—it's about indulgence.
If it’s hard for entrepreneurs to have a life, it’s doubly so for entrepreneurs solving the biggest problems in the world, but having a healthy life is better for both you and your company.
If we’re serious about breaking down silos, we could start by holding fewer sector-specific events and running more on issues and challenges—and other common themes running through the ‘for good’ sector.
How many times have you justified your pizza by telling yourself the tomato sauce and veggie toppings are providing some nutritional value? Or maybe that, yeah, you had two slices of pizza, but at least you didn’t have three? Avoid those sorts of rationalizations by internalizing the following two food rules