Here’s a scenario that’ll sound familiar…
You’ve just spent $2,000 on a business coach. The session was brilliant – you walked away with a crystal-clear strategy, detailed action plans, and genuine excitement about your next six months.
Fast-forward three months: you’ve implemented maybe 20% of what you discussed. Sound familiar?
You’re not alone. And more importantly, you’re not the problem.
As small business owners, we’re drowning in advice. There’s a coach for every challenge, a mentor for every milestone, and a consultant for every crisis. Yet here’s what nobody talks about:
Most of us already know what we need to do.
The real challenge isn’t getting better advice – it’s actually following through on what we already know works.
Think about it:
So why aren’t you doing it?
Don’t get me wrong – good coaching has its place. Coaches excel at helping you clarify goals, develop strategies, and overcome specific skill gaps. But here’s where the traditional model breaks down:
It assumes that knowing equals doing.
Your coach gives you the perfect strategy, you nod enthusiastically, shake hands, and… then what? You go back to your office where:
In this chaos, even the best advice gets buried under the daily grind.
Mentoring faces similar challenges, though from a different angle. Yes, learning from someone who’s “been there, done that” is valuable. But mentoring relationships often lack the urgency needed for rapid change.
When your mentor says, “Give it a try and let me know how it goes next month”, there’s no real pressure to act immediately. Life gets in the way, priorities shift, and momentum dies.
Here’s what actually works: structured accountability programs.
Instead of focusing on what you should do, they ensure you actually do it.
Research from business psychology shows that when people commit to specific actions in front of peers, completion rates jump from around 25% to over 80%. That’s not a typo—three times more likely to follow through.
Imagine this instead:
Every day at 9 AM, you jump on a call with eight other small business owners. Each person shares:
Sarah from the marketing agency admits she didn’t follow up with three hot leads. The group helps her figure out why and what she’ll do differently.
Michael from the plumbing business nailed his social media posting schedule and shares what worked.
Lisa from the consulting firm is struggling with team meetings – the group brainstorms solutions.
You’re not just accountable to yourself anymore – you’re accountable to people who get it.
Why six weeks specifically? It hits a psychological sweet spot:
Weeks 1-2: Initial enthusiasm and commitment setting
Weeks 3-4: The midpoint kick – urgency builds as time pressure becomes real
Weeks 5-6: Sprint to completion with visible results
This timeframe prevents momentum loss (common in longer programs) while providing enough time for real habit formation and measurable results.
Let me share what happened to David, a landscaping business owner who tried both approaches:
The Coaching Experience:
The 6-Week Accountability Program:
Same business owner. Different approach. Dramatically different results.
With 97% of Australian businesses being small enterprises, most of us work in isolation. We don’t have the peer networks that big corporates take for granted.
Research from Australian business specialists shows that small business owners who have “accountability buddies” report higher satisfaction, better goal achievement, and reduced feelings of isolation.
The structured group model amplifies this effect – instead of one accountability buddy, you get an entire support network of people facing similar challenges.
Traditional Coaching/Mentoring:
Structured Accountability:
In a well-designed accountability program, you might:
It’s not about more meetings – it’s about consistent, gentle pressure that keeps you moving forward.
You don’t need more advice. You need better implementation.
You don’t need more strategies. You need systems that ensure you actually use them.
You don’t need more motivation. You need accountability that works when motivation fails.
Ask yourself:
If you answered yes to most of these, structured accountability could be exactly what your business needs.
The next Ascend Accountability Program kicks off soon – six weeks of structured accountability with like-minded small business owners who are serious about implementation, not just information.
Join the wait-list and we’ll let you know as soon as spots open up. Because the difference between knowing what to do and actually doing it is everything.
And that difference? It’s measured in weeks, not years.