
She's That Founder: Business Strategy, Time Management and AI Magic for Impactful Female Leaders
You’re listening to She’s That Founder: the show for ambitious women ready to stop drowning in decisions and start running their businesses like the confident CEO they were born to be.
Here, we blend business strategy, leadership coaching, and a little AI magic to help you scale smarter—not harder.
I’m Dawn Andrews, your executive coach and business strategist. And if your to-do list is longer than a CVS receipt and you’re still the one refilling the printer paper... this episode is for you.
Each week, we talk smarter delegation, systems that don’t collapse when you take a nap, and AI tools that actually lighten your load—not add more tabs to your mental browser.
You’ll get:
- Proven strategies to grow your revenue and your impact
- Executive leadership frameworks that elevate you from manager to visionary
- Tools to build a business that runs without burning you out
So kick off your heels—or your high-performance sneakers—and let’s get to work.
Tuesdays are deep-dive episodes. Thursdays are quick hits and founder rants. All designed to make your business easier, your leadership sharper, and your results undeniable.
If you’re ready to turn your drive into results that don’t just increase sales but change the world, pop in your earbuds and listen to Ep. 10 | Trust Your Gut: Crafting a Career by Being Unapologetically You With Carrie Byalick
She's That Founder: Business Strategy, Time Management and AI Magic for Impactful Female Leaders
097 | How One Firm Went From “12% Growth” To Industry Domination—By Finally Getting Honest
What if your growth plan isn’t strategy—but just a percentage in a power suit?
Let’s be real: “Grow revenue by 12%” isn’t visionary. It’s just math dressed up as leadership.
This quick-hit episode delivers a $50K wake-up call—how one professional firm went from playing small to owning their entire market, just by ditching their safe goal and getting brutally honest about what they actually wanted.
You’ll learn how to shift from incremental goals to industry-shifting strategy—without getting lost in planning overwhelm.
🎧 Listen now if you’re done thinking small and ready to build something that actually lasts.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
- “Grow by 12%” is not a strategy—it’s a math problem.
- Why founders cling to safe goals (and how it keeps them stuck).
- The core difference between planning and strategy—and how to use both.
- The mindset shift that unlocked exponential change for one firm.
- The real reason your strategy probably needs to make you a little uncomfortable.
Grab it:
Related episodes to keep you in your CEO flow:
Want to increase revenue and impact? Listen to “She's That Founder” for insights on business strategy and female leadership to scale your business. Each episode offers advice on effective communication, team building, and management. Learn to master routines and systems to boost productivity and prevent burnout. Our delegation tips and business consulting will advance your executive leadership skills and presence.
She's That Founder
097 | How One Firm Went From “12% Growth” To Industry Domination—By Finally Getting Honest
Real talk. If your strategic plan is to just grow revenue by 15% next year, you don't have a strategy. You have a wish with a percentage sign.
Hey, hey, hey. Welcome to She's That Founder Thursday edition. These are the quick rants kick in the pants, velvet boot moments that represent me standing in the future, pulling you toward the even stronger, better, more powerful leadership version of yourself with AI as your copilot.
And today we are talking business strategy. So here is what set me off. This week I was working with a professional services firm, and I can't name names because NDAs are real, but picture this a room full of brilliant people each at the top of their field, we sit down for what they called their annual strategic planning session, and this is the first time I'm joining them as their business strategy coach.
And they shared with me where they were presented their first slide and it said increase revenue by 12% year over year. And I was like, that's it. That's the strategy. Of course, I didn't say this out loud, but I was thinking 12% of what exactly.
Doing more of what you're already doing. Hoping the same clients magically spend more praying that market conditions would stay exactly the same or be better so that you could incrementally tick upward. It wasn't a strategy, it was a math problem in a business suit.
And so here's what I did. I pushed back. Hard. I said, okay, uh, why 12%? What does that unlock? If it's unlocked? What does your firm look like five years from today?
If everything goes perfectly, what changes? And then what do you actually want collectively? What's the difference you wanna make? What's the impact? What will be different for yourself, for your employees, for your clients, for the world, for your community? If you get what you want.
This is where it got interesting.
It turns out when we actually had the conversation, when we stopped hiding behind percentages and safety and started talking about their actual vision, didn't want 12% more revenue. They wanted to completely own their specialty in the market. They wanted to be the name.
Everyone thought of in their field across the country. They wanted to expand into a practice area that they had been scared to touch, and they wanted to build something that would outlast them, that could be handed down to partners in the future. But none of that was in their strategic plan because they'd convinced themselves that increasing revenue by 12% was strategic thinking.
And that's not strategic thinking. It's safe thinking. And it's a trap that so many founders fall into, especially when you've bootstrapped something from the ground up. Because here's the thing about real strategy.
Real strategy is mother effing uncomfortable. It requires you to name what you actually want, which means risking that you might not get it, that you might not know how to get it, that you might make everybody else uncomfortable, that you might not have all the answers.
I mean, it's way easier to hide behind incremental, safe goals that sound responsible. But let me be clear what we're talking about here.
Planning is tactical. It's the what and the when we're launching this service in Q2, hiring two people in Q3. Updating our website in Q4. That's planning and it's absolutely important, and it marries up nicely with strategy, like they go hand in hand.
But strategy is different. Strategy is the why and the who. It's the direction, it's the North star, it's the, we're becoming the firm that completely transforms how this industry thinks about X, or we're making a life changing difference for founders who are drowning in their own success.
That's my strategy, by the way. You need both, but most founders are drowning and planning and starving for strategy. Incremental goals keep you incremental. They don't force you to rebuild systems to rethink your business model or invest in what would truly, truly change the game for you. They just keep you doing slightly more of what you're already doing, which may be great at this moment in this stage of growth for your business.
But the firms that actually transform, they stop playing small with their strategy. They get honest about the audacious vision and then, this is the key, they work backward from that to figure out what has to change.
Now for that firm that I mentioned. Once they admitted they wanted to dominate their space, everything shifted all of their hiring plans. They threw 'em out the window and started over many of their business systems. We took down to the nuts and bolts and started over. Like we tore down their business while it was still operating and started from scratch to rebuild it because they realized that their current systems wouldn't allow, wouldn't support that vision.
Their team structure did not work. Their service delivery had to evolve so much had to be documented and delegated. Even their office layout changed, and none of that would've happened if they stuck with 12% growth. It also made everybody really freaking nervous, but also extremely excited and enlivened and proud to go after the goal.
So here's your mindset tweak. Stop asking. How much more can we make? Start asking real questions, like real strategic questions. Who do we wanna make a life-changing difference for as a service business? What do we wanna be known for? What do you wanna own?
What space? What corner of the market is yours and yours alone? What impact do we wanna have that goes beyond our bank account and across all the different stratas, your own in leadership, across your teams, your clients, your community, and beyond. What impact do you wanna have that goes beyond your bank account?
And then what has to be true for that to happen? That is strategy in a nutshell, and I will be real with you. It is very difficult to see without outside help, especially when you're going much bigger. So I get it. Big visions are scary. vulnerable as a leader to say out loud what you really want.
And there's always the voice that says, who are you to want that much? How dare you? But here's what I know. After 23 years of doing this work, the founders who change industries, who build legendary companies who actually get to step back and lead instead of drowning in operations, they are not the ones playing it safe with percentage increases. They're the ones who got honest about the biggest possible goal, as they say the BHAG, the big hairy audacious goal. Something that is almost beyond your imagining. And then they built everything to match it.
They pushed all their chips onto the table and bet big. So if this hits home for you, I'm inviting you to download 10 ways AI will make you a better leader at hellodawn.live/10ways. There is a whole section on using AI to pressure test your strategy and make sure you're not just doing math when you should be doing vision work.
Your business doesn't need another incremental goal. Incremental goals are for your teams in your departments. For the folks that are running pieces of the business below you, but it does need you to get honest about what you're actually building.
Look forward to future episodes where we talk more strategy. It's my favorite thing to do. And until then, go think bigger, believe it's possible, and go be that founder. All right, Lovie. see you next time.