Not Easy

Some say EOS is simple, not easy.

The Entrepreneurial Operating System is simple – 20 simple, practical tools, implemented in logical order following a simple, step-by-step process to strengthen all 6 Key Components of your business. See below to hear what business owners are saying:

Keeping it simple, eliminating complexity, plays a huge role in making it easy. That said, there are aspects of running and growing a business that can be very hard:

  1. Choosing one path over another when such decisions eliminate something or someone good
  2. Setting our egos aside, allowing others to see who we really are and acknowledging we don’t belong in a seat
  3. Subordinating our preferences and personal interests for the greater good of the team
  4. Embracing change
  5. Confronting ourselves or others with the painful truth
  6. Honoring commitments when it hurts

EOS won’t eliminate having to do hard things, but it will make doing hard things easier. Applied as prescribed, EOS:

  • creates clarity – making it easier to pick the right path and make those tough decisions
  • gives you a framework to communicate even painful truths openly – making it easier to get right people into right seats and on the same page
  • reduces everything to the essentials – making it easier to focus resources, execute with consistency, honor commitments and grow

Advancing a business is not easy, but it’s a lot easier with EOS. If you’re not fully running on EOS, I encourage you to take that important step towards a simpler and easier existence.

Related Posts

Finding Your Team’s GWC™ Flow Channel

Having the right people in the right seats is essential to your organization’s success. GWC (Get it, Want it, Capacity to do it) serves as the criteria for determining if a person is operating within their true skill set. But how does GWC work over time? That’s where finding your team’s GWC Flow Channel comes in.

Read on »

The Key to Business as Usual (BAU)

Scorecards are often a highly undervalued tool. Plus, it can be hard to develop a good one. In reality, it can take months to get it right. Even when you’ve nailed it, you will still want to review it every 90 days to make sure it gives you data that you can use to make better business decisions.

Read on »

Subscribe to the EOS Blog

Subscribe to the EOS Blog:

LOGIN TO

Base Camp

LOGIN TO

Client Portal

LOGIN TO

ORGANIZATIONAL CHECKUP

Search the EOS Worldwide Blog

Skip to content