Off The Clock Journal:

 Inspiration for Entrepreneurs

Who Refuse the Ordinary

By Travis Bertram March 16, 2026
Almost every entrepreneur runs into the same moment at some point. At the beginning, starting a business feels like freedom. You finally get to work for yourself. You control your schedule. You make the decisions. The income reflects your effort instead of someone else’s pay scale. Then one day the realization hits. Running the business turns out to be very different from doing the work. That realization came up naturally in a recent conversation among a group of business owners talking about what happens after someone buys or launches a company. One of the stories described the experience of purchasing an existing business and assuming the job would look similar to what the previous owner had been doing on the surface. It didn’t take long to discover something important. The previous owner wasn’t just standing behind the bar or chatting with customers. There were systems, suppliers, scheduling, finances, staffing, inventory, and countless operational details that kept everything running behind the scenes. The job suddenly became much bigger than expected.
woman entrepenuer
By Travis Bertram March 16, 2026
At some point in almost every entrepreneurial journey, a simple question shows up: Did I build a business… or did I just create a job for myself? The distinction sounds small. In practice, it shapes how a company grows, how much freedom the owner eventually has, and whether the operation can survive without the person who started it.
By Travis Bertram February 25, 2026
“Pressure’s a privilege.”
By Travis Bertram February 25, 2026
Inside Off The Clock conversations on fatherhood, pressure, and building businesses without losing what matters most.