Home
Categories
EXPLORE
Comedy
Education
Business
Society & Culture
Religion & Spirituality
History
Health & Fitness
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Loading...
0:00 / 0:00
Podjoint Logo
EC
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts126/v4/14/d4/80/14d48003-b2fa-d293-6b8f-3fe2c4befba6/mza_8886612960718504327.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
The DH Podcast
DH Podcast
46 episodes
6 days ago
All access to DH International. Build a family, build a business.
Show more...
Marketing
Business
RSS
All content for The DH Podcast is the property of DH Podcast and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
All access to DH International. Build a family, build a business.
Show more...
Marketing
Business
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/production/podcast_uploaded_nologo/10988528/10988528-1638161031831-4b11a9995d8cf.jpg
Business Killing Character Flaws
The DH Podcast
37 minutes 36 seconds
3 months ago
Business Killing Character Flaws

The worst character flaws for someone building a business:


1. Arrogance

• Thinking you know it all kills learning, mentorship, and team collaboration.

Example:
A business owner refuses to listen to feedback from mentors or clients because they think they "know better." As a result, they miss critical market changes and lose customers to more adaptable competitors.

Lesson: If you stop learning, you start losing.


2. Laziness

• Building a business requires extreme discipline; half-hearted effort destroys momentum.

Example:
An entrepreneur makes a big announcement about launching a product but procrastinates on the hard work behind the scenes. Deadlines slip, quality suffers, and the market opportunity disappears.

Lesson: The gap between dreams and reality is called "work."


3. Inconsistency

• Success demands daily, disciplined actions; inconsistency erodes trust and progress.

Example:
A business builder works hard for two weeks, then slacks off for a month. Their team becomes confused, clients lose trust, and momentum dies.

 Lesson: Success doesn't come from what you do occasionally — it comes from what you do consistently.


4. Entitlement

• Expecting rewards without earning them will sabotage your reputation and relationships.

Example:
Someone expects rapid success because they "showed up" a few times. When rewards don’t come fast enough, they get bitter and quit — right before a breakthrough.

 Lesson: You don't get what you think you deserve; you get what you earn.


5. Poor Integrity

• Cutting corners, lying, or failing to keep promises will eventually collapse everything you build.

Example:
A leader promises bonuses, promotions, or timelines they never honor. Word spreads, morale collapses, and top people leave for competitors they trust.

Lesson: Your name is your brand — protect it like your life depends on it (because it does).


6. Fear of Responsibility

• Leaders carry weight. Dodging responsibility kills your credibility and leadership potential.

Example:
When problems hit, a leader hides, blames others, or ignores the situation. The team loses confidence, and the business loses customers.

Lesson: Leaders don’t run from fires — they run into them with solutions.


7. Short-Term Thinking

• Obsessing over quick wins blinds you to the real work of building a lasting business.

Example:
A businessperson cuts corners to save money today but damages their brand long-term. Cheap products, sloppy service, and burned bridges cost them future revenue.

 Lesson: Don’t sacrifice what you want most for what you want now.


8. Emotional Reactivity

• Inability to manage emotions leads to bad decisions, broken relationships, and team instability.

Example:
A team leader blows up during a tough meeting or takes criticism personally. People walk on eggshells around them, creativity dies, and opportunities are missed.

Lesson: Emotional control is a business superpower.


9. Blame Shifting

• Blaming others instead of owning mistakes keeps you from growing and earning respect.

Example:
When goals aren't met, a business owner points fingers at the economy, their team, or their "bad luck." They never improve because they never take ownership.

 Lesson: Leaders own everything — wins and losses alike.


10. Lack of Vision

• Without a clear “why” and a bigger picture, you’ll lose passion — and so will everyone following you.

Example:
A business starts strong but drifts because the leader never sets a clear mission. The team becomes disoriented, priorities clash, and the business plateaus.

 Lesson: If you can't see the finish line, neither can the people running with you.

The DH Podcast
All access to DH International. Build a family, build a business.