REGISTER NOW: Uncomfortable Conversations: The Skills Crisis
REGISTER: 8THIRTYFOUR Skills Survival School Founding Cohort

Planning for the Worst, Hoping for the Best

Written by

Share This Post:

Stickers at the 8THIRTYFOUR office say, "This train has sailed" and "We are not assholes."

…and screaming in your car is totally normal.

Owning a small business is the fastest way to develop anxiety, insomnia, and a drinking habit you call “networking.”

I’ve been running 8THIRTYFOUR for 17 years, and I can tell you right now—this shit ain’t for the weak.

2008: Housing crash.
2020: Global pandemic.
2016–25: A political circus starring a walking lawsuit and a recession dressed in red, white, and “oops I deregulated that.”

And yet, here we are. Still standing. Still scrappy. Still screaming into the void (or into our pillows) and making payroll.

How? Because I don’t just hope things work out—I plan for when they don’t.

I Love Hope. I Just Don’t Trust It.

Hope is great. It’s nice for some people. It’s the Golden Retriever of emotions (I’m more of a Doberman). If that’s your strategy, you’re about to experience one hell of a ride.

Good businesses make it through the hard times because they plan like everything’s going to fall apart tomorrow—and then act like everything might just be okay.

I call it paranoia with purpose.

Four Exit Strategies and Iced Red Wine

I always have 2 to 4 courses of action in my back pocket – thank you ADHD. When things hit the fan, you don’t get to panic—you have to move. Fast.

I’m not talking about “Maybe we post more on social” or “Let’s try a webinar.” I’m talking about what actually keeps the business alive.

Get ready to find comfort in the uncomfortable.

Protect the business at all costs

You love your team. I love mine. But this is business, and when survival’s on the line, you have to prioritize the company over everything else. That means asking the awful questions:

  • Reevaluate your benefits and make temporary adjustments
  • Pause the IRA match
  • Reduce hours or cut salaries across the board
  • Lay someone off?
  • Cut subscriptions, pause vendor services

No one wants to do this. But pretending you can “culture” your way through a cash flow crisis is fantasy. Leadership means making the hard calls, and carrying the weight so your team doesn’t have to.

Show Up Louder

When everyone else is retreating, you have to double down on visibility. That’s not a suggestion—it’s a requirement. If no one knows you exist, you will not survive.

This is when marketing matters most:

  • Invest in public relations to stay top of mind and relevant. Lean into thought leadership—write, speak, share your story, take a stand
  • Don’t ghost. Post on social, provide value, record the podcast and help others be visible
  • Commit to digital marketing. Organic content + paid strategy = longevity, run those ads.

Your brand is your safety net. People don’t hire companies they can’t see, and they don’t stick with the ones that go silent when times get tough. You don’t need to be everywhere—but you do need to be visible, valuable, and very loud about what you do best.

Timing is Everything (and You’ll Still Second-Guess It)

There is no sign that says “ACT NOW.” Look at the following and then make your move.

  1. Data – Not vibes. Numbers. Revenue, margins, close rate, retention. If they dip, start prepping.
  2. Gut – Not to be confused with anxiety. Learn the difference. I’ve ignored my gut before. It cost me.
  3. Team feedback – If your team seems stressed, overwhelmed, or twitchy, it’s not just “Q2 energy.” Talk to them.
  4. Would I regret not doing this now? If the answer’s yes, there’s your answer.

And once you decide—rip the Band-Aid off – indecision is a killer.

You’re Not Alone (But It’ll Feel Like It)

Small business ownership is isolating as hell. We don’t have shareholders. We are the board. We don’t get to hide behind layers of management. We have to stand in the fire, smile during the team meeting, and then scream in our car at 6:42 p.m. after someone asked for “just one more revision.”

I see you. I am you.

Planning for the worst isn’t negativity. It’s leadership. It’s survival. It’s building something that outlasts the chaos, the politicians, the algorithms, and the toxic clients.

We don’t get to daydream. We get to fight.

Honestly? That’s kind of our thing.

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Recent Posts

Something on Your Mind?

The power of the Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship, in a graduate's own words:

"Growth is never accidental, it comes from being willing to learn, adapt, and embrace change. After nine months of dedication, reflection, and business development, I proudly graduated from the Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship (WEF) during the Small Business Association of Michigan Annual Meeting.

Throughout the program, I challenged myself to evaluate every aspect of my business, celebrating what was working while identifying opportunities for growth and improvement. The journey was made even more meaningful through the support of an incredible cohort of women entrepreneurs, the guidance of mentor Gina Jacquart Thorsen, and the leadership of bodespeaks and her team.

A sincere thank you to smallbusinessassocofmichigan for investing in second-stage women business owners and creating opportunities that empower entrepreneurs to build stronger, more sustainable businesses."

— Mary A. Barton, President and CEO of Equitable Accounting Solutions and proud WEF graduate.

Applications for the next cohort are now open. Link in comments.
"Out of failure comes growth – you have to see it as an opportunity." 

bodespeaks joined cuzzinjustin on the strictlyfromnowhere Podcast for an honest conversation about entrepreneurship, embracing your superpowers, and building a personal brand that's actually yours, the wins, the setbacks, and everything in between. And naturally, dropped an f-bomb or two along the way. You don't want to miss it.

Full episode in the comments 👇
AI doesn't treat every source equally; it trusts what's credible, cited, and current, like news coverage.

Showing up in the right places isn't just good PR. It's how the robots (and the humans) get you right.

Read the full blog at the link in bio.
"If you don't get up and grind every day, the needle isn't gonna move."

We sat down with brandonmccraney, founder and Master Blender behind olderaleighdistillery in Zebulon, North Carolina. Brandon spent fifteen years just thinking about whiskey before he finally opened his doors, and even then it took four more years, a dozen rejections, construction delays, and a global pandemic to get there. Two years later, Olde Raleigh had already won Best Micro Distillery in the US.

Check out the latest episode of Happy Hour Hustle, where Brandon shares what it actually took to grow a business through COVID, the military discipline that kept him going when everything else said quit, and how working with people turned out to be the hardest part of the job.

Listen to Happy Hour Hustle on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and watch the whole episode on Youtube. Link in bio.
It's 9 months that is impossible to sum up in a video - but here's just a taste. 

This Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship is resources, mentorship, and connections that you can't build anywhere else. We're so exicted for what the next cohort will bring.

Apply now at the link in bio.
smallbusinessassocofmichigan