In this post you’ll learn:
- The one thing you can’t delegate in your business
- How to move from fledgling knowledge to financial mastery
- The biggest mistakes entrepreneurs make with money
Being financially literate is as important to your success as understanding your customers.
Maybe more.
Nearly 20 years in this game, I’ve watched a lot of entrepreneurs get hurt by misunderstanding money. Cash flow crunches that sink growing businesses. Leverage that looked like easy money until it took twice as long to pay back. Owners betting everything on an exit that never comes. Financial reports that might as well be written in a foreign language.
The mistakes are common, but they’re not inevitable. So I put together a framework. Eight pillars of financial mastery for store owners.

The 8 Financial Commandments
1. Your money, your responsibility.
It’s easy to think we can outsource financial decisions to the experts. Hire a good accountant, find a financial advisor, let them handle it. But experts get it wrong sometimes, and you’re the one who pays the price. No one cares about your money as much as you do. You have to fully own the decisions and outcomes in this area, even if you have great people advising you.
2. Master your financial reports.
Understand how your income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement actually work and interconnect. This isn’t sexy, but it’s essential. Too many store owners have a vague sense of what these reports say without really understanding the story they’re telling. When you deeply understand them, you make better decisions about inventory, hiring, marketing spend, and everything else.
3. Prioritize your profit levers.
Not all profit levers are created equal. Three things move the needle most: pricing, your fixed overhead costs, and optimizing for post-tax profitability. These deserve disproportionate attention. A small pricing increase can have an outsized impact on your bottom line. Keeping fixed costs lean gives you flexibility. And what matters isn’t what you make—it’s what you keep after taxes.
4. Borrow wisely.
Few things can get you into trouble as fast as leverage. I’ve seen it over and over again—taking money looks like easy money, then it takes two, three, four times as long to pay back as expected. Leverage can be incredibly powerful and incredibly destructive. You need to deeply understand when and how to use it, and when to walk away from it entirely.

5. Invest outside your business.
If you’re betting everything on a future exit that may or may not happen, you’re taking a big risk. How do you know when to start taking dividends out? How do you balance investing back into your business versus building your personal balance sheet? These are critical questions most entrepreneurs don’t think about until it’s too late. Build your personal net worth alongside your business, not after.
6. Earn your freedom, choose your work.
Get clear on when you’re financially free. Not so you can retire on a beach—most entrepreneurs would be bored in a week—but so you can work on things you truly love and believe the world needs. How do you know when you have enough? How do you start making trade-offs that optimize for meaning over maximum profitability? This pillar is about understanding that inflection point.
7. Evolve your habits.
How you interact with money has almost nothing to do with how much you have and almost everything to do with how you were raised. We all carry biases and patterns from childhood that shape how we spend, save, and think about money. Some of those patterns serve you. Some don’t. Understand your biases and work to correct for them.
8. Pass it on.
If you’ve built something meaningful, you have an opportunity and a responsibility. How do you give back and enrich the world? How do you raise financially literate and responsible kids, especially if you have resources? How do you mentor the next generation of entrepreneurs? This pillar is about using what you’ve built to make a broader impact.

That’s the framework. I’ll be diving deep into each pillar over the coming weeks.
To follow along – and for regular insights from our community of 1,000 7- and 8-figure owners – stay in touch.
