There is a common saying that running a successful business and having a successful career is a “marathon, not a sprint”. The saying is meant to remind people to think long term, to pace themselves and have longevity in mind, rather than just short-term results.
At first, the metaphors of the sprint and the marathon may seem a fitting comparison for a business and/or career. They bring to mind images of results-focused individuals putting whatever they can into their respective races, to get the best result they can. People committing themselves to getting ahead and staying ahead of the competition.
However, when you look at the complete lifecycle of a business, the metaphor is flawed. A marathon or sprint implies a race where you are supposed to exhaust all your resources to get to an end point ahead of your competitors and, as such, it misses an important measure of a successful business and career. Surely one of the measures of a successful businessperson is whether they have built something that will carry on after they have gone… something that is sellable.
Famous successful businesspeople (Ray Krok with McDonalds, Steve Jobs with Apple, Bill Gates with Microsoft, Ingvar Kamprad with Ikea, etc., etc.) are seen as such, not just because of what they were able to build themselves, but also because they were able to build something that was more than them alone. They were able to exit, and the business survived and thrived after their exit.
In this respect, if we are going to compare running a successful business with a running race, it is much more like a relay race than a sprint or a marathon.
For those unfamiliar with the relay, it is a race where several runners from the same team take turns running. Each runner runs their interval of the race to the best of their ability; at the end of each runner’s race, they need to pass a small rod - the ‘baton’ - to the next runner, without slowing down, giving the main responsibility for the race to someone else from that point forward.
Having a successful business and career involves being focused both on your individual race and being able to ‘pass the baton’.
Your individual race is incredibly important. As a dentist, the measure of this will be your ability to gather a large and loyal patient base and run a profitable practice for many years, with a good reputation for ethical and quality clinical work.
Working out how to “pass the baton” successfully in a business means having an exit plan, so that you are able to sell your practice at the end of your time on the track. Without this, you will miss out on a significant financial component of your career and your business/practice’s legacy will end with you.
When a business owner understands this, they start to shift their business game plan and the way they approach practice decision making, recognising the larger strategy of building towards a handover event. For example:
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