Career Relaunch® podcast

Uncovering Hidden Blessings with Ben Kuhl- CR109

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All sorts of setbacks can come up during your career. You narrowly miss landing your dream job. You get put on a project you don’t love. You have a horrible manager. You go through a round of budget cuts. You have a family emergency come up. You have a sudden health issue. Or you realise you’ve taken the wrong job.

We all experience disappointments, stressors, or unexpected twists and turns in our career that test our resilience, patience, and fortitude. Career setbacks can’t be avoided. No matter how well you plan things out, stuff comes up, and your ability to navigate and manage those setbacks will make the difference between you getting stuck in a rut or bouncing back to find a better way forward.

In this episode of the Career Relaunch® podcast, Ben Kuhl, a sports and events hospitality management professional turned woodworking, shelf-making craftsman shares his thoughts on his shift from white-collar to blue-collar work, and I also share some thoughts on the hidden blessings behind career setbacks.

💡 Key Career Insights
  1. We all experience setbacks in our careers, and your ability to accept, embrace, and manage them can make the difference between getting stuck in a rut and opening a new, more promising chapter in your career.
  2. While career disappointments are inevitable, sometimes, they’re blessings in disguise that enable you to recalibrate and relaunch yourself down a more fulfilling professional path.
  3. The past roles you’ve had, even those that felt like a poor fit, can play a critical role in your career evolution. You never know how your past experiences will show up again and assist you in your future career.
💪🏼Listener Challenge

During this episode’s Mental Fuel segment, I talked about the importance of recognising and embracing career setbacks as an opportunity to shift your career in a new direction.

Consider a situation in your own career you’ve found stressful, unsettling, or disappointing. Then, think about what this experience may be telling you about what’s truly important to you at this moment in your life and career.

What’s one step you could take in the new year to honor that priority and move yourself in a more promising direction?

📖 Episode Chapters

00:00:00 Overview
00:01:07 Introduction: Career Setbacks
00:03:12 Ben Kuhl’s Career Journey
00:37:08 Mental Fuel®: Blessings in Disguise
00:45:03 Listener Challenge: Identify Career Setback’s Upside
00:45:32 Wrap Up

👤  About Ben Kuhl

Ben Kuhl initially built his career in sport management and hospitality, gaining experience in operations, events, and client service. After getting laid off from his most recent role in product management, he launched Shelf Expression, a Charlotte woodworking brand specializing in custom, high-end floating shelves and mantels.

His background gives him a unique edge in blending business strategy with hands-on craftsmanship. Today, his shelves ship nationwide while maintaining a focus on quality and design. Learn more about Ben’s work on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram, and be sure to check out Ben’s Etsy store.

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🙏🏻 Thanks to Vista Social for Supporting Career Relaunch

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📄 Episode Transcript

[00:03:22] Joseph: Okay, well let’s just start off by getting a lay of the land. What’s happening in your current life right now? Like what’s been keeping you busy both personally and professionally?

[00:03:33] Ben: I own my own business. Started a woodworking business back in the beginning of 2020, right before Covid. And ever since then, things have just absolutely exploded with work. So my woodworking business, I primarily focus on floating shelves and mantles. And yeah, things in 2020 just exploded and it’s just snowballed from there. So my life right now is woodworking out of my little two car garage and my family. So my wife, I have two kids, a nine year old and seven year old. So trying to figure out the balance between working from home, you know, on nights and weekends and also trying to be there for my kids is primarily what takes up most of my life at the moment. So maybe in a half hour for scrolling on Instagram before bed. But mainly those things.

[00:04:17] Joseph: It’s interesting when you’re running your own business. It’s kind of a balance between running your business, making sure you’re still spending time with your kids, making sure you have time to actually rest here and there, and also just have some downtime to just mentally check out a little bit, because I know it can be all consuming to run your own business. Can I hear a little bit more about the types of woodworking that you do at Shelf Expression, which is the name of your business?

[00:04:43] Ben: I started the business back, like I said, end of 2019, beginning of 2020, just making generic floating shelves to help pay for childcare, any additional unforeseen bills that came up and posted those on Etsy and they really took off. Then March of 2020 lockdown happened. Everybody was at home. They were redecorating their homes. They were trying to figure out how to bring a little bit more life into their office or their home offices. When everybody was at home in lockdown and things exploded. So right now I focus 95% on making floating shelves. It’s almost don’t really like to say that I’m a woodworker, because it’s one of the most, I wouldn’t say boring aspects of woodworking, but it’s shelf making. So I love being able to get creative and try to figure out different ways that I can keep my mind fresh on making the shelves as I go along. But yeah, 95% of my woodworking is making high end floating shelves and then also fireplace mantels, so hopefully continue to grow.

[00:05:45] Joseph: Well, I do want to come back to your time now as a shelf. I’m just going to call it a shelf craftsman.

[00:05:51] Ben: There you go.

[00:05:52] Joseph: Perfect. Yeah, I actually have some questions about shelves for you, which we can come back to later. But exactly. I do want to go back to your time before working in this space. And you used to work as an event manager and eventually as a director of product management for Sports Hospitality Company. But before we get to that, I’d love to hear a little bit more about you and just where you grew up. And I guess specifically, what do you remember being interested in during your childhood days?

[00:06:23] Ben: So I grew up in north central Ohio, right on Lake Erie, about 45 minutes west of Cleveland on a farm. So my childhood was always helping my dad out on the farm. When I was younger, as I got a little bit older it was more sports. So being involved in basketball and football and baseball, as I did through middle school and high school in the summers, waking up at five in the morning and picking sweet corn and being covered in pollen and always having that little bit of a blue collar mentality behind, you know, seeing my dad come home at 8:00 at night and being out for 14 to 16 hours drove home with me. The how important work ethic is to being successful and being a, you know, a son of a farmer really taught me that. You know, unfortunately, a lot of times, no matter how hard you work, you often aren’t as successful as you could be, especially in farming, because there are so many variables that play into being successful, like weather and markets and soil conditions, and seeing him work his tail off and being upset that it hadn’t rained in a month. Or maybe it’s rained five inches over the last two days, and knowing that your yield was going to suffer because of that really made me start to think about, you know, maybe carrying on the family farm isn’t something that I had as much interest in as I did when I was a kid. So that’s when once I started transitioning to being more involved in sports in the city I grew up in, started thinking about more about going off to college and getting a degree and getting out of north central Ohio. You know, my parents are so prevalent through my upbringing and the instilling of work your tail off and hopefully good things will happen. At least it’ll set you up to have a positive outcome for the rest of your life if you work hard.

[00:08:24] Joseph: As you may recall, when we first chatted, I actually grew up in Ohio, also myself. I spent about age 2 to 6 in Hamilton, Ohio. I grew up in a very not fully rural, but it certainly wasn’t in an urban area like you mentioned. Very blue collar, very kind of ordinary. I would say life, but it does instill you with a lot of good values and good work ethic. Now you would eventually go on to Ohio University and you ended up studying sports and Fitness Administration. You did mention that there was, at least I guess, a potential consideration of continuing with the family farm business. Was that a very straightforward decision for you, or was that something you had to kind of wrestle with? I’d be curious how you ended up going into that.

[00:09:09] Ben: It wasn’t necessarily something where my parents came to me and said, you know, if you want to continue on the family farm, it’s yours. I was the only male in my family tree that it kind of was implied that it would be mine if I wanted it. I would say probably around middle school I started to lose interest in continuing, and I think I’ve always had a sense of wanting to get out and see what else is out there in the world. As I transitioned to being more involved athletically, I was helping out less and less around the farm. So it wasn’t a hey, Ben, do you have any interest this in this or not? It was more of an unsaid. Okay, we understand that farming isn’t for you. So that’s kind of how the progression went.

[00:09:49] Joseph: Well, let’s talk now about your time working in event management? I understand you started off as an event coordinator, eventually became an event manager. Tell us a little bit about this chapter of your career and what you were focused on.

[00:10:02] Ben: Graduating from OU or Ohio University with a sports management degree. All I wanted to do was work for a professional sports franchise. So after graduating from college, moved out to Seattle to work for the Seattle SuperSonics. It was an amazing experience being on the ground floor. We were charged with basically being telemarketers, trying to call anybody who had expressed interest within the last five years in Seattle supersonic tickets, trying to get them to upgrade to a season ticket package. That part wasn’t the most. It wasn’t the best perk of the job. So also, working game nights really gave me an idea into what it could be working in event management, being on the floor when the players are coming out. Being close to the locker room, that was what really excited me, and sales was never Really a driving factor for me to want to work in sport management. Unfortunately, to get your foot in the door in sport management, you usually have to start as a some type of sales position, whether it’s inside sales or group sales. So after being there for a few years, the Sonics moved to Oklahoma City and then worked for a car sharing company, Zipcar, which I believe. I think they’re still around.

[00:11:13] Ben: Yeah. As a marketing coordinator in the Seattle branch, and my main task was planning events in conjunction with the marketing manager in Seattle. And that kind of really got me into the event management mindset. Really loved starting with a blank sheet of paper, six months or even a year out and whiteboarding exactly what we wanted the event to look like, what our goals were for the event, and kind of forming the event around our goals and trying to figure out how we were going to meet those goals. So Zipcar, I would say my love for event management really started there. And then from there we decided that we wanted to do something where we felt like we were giving back to the community, and we decided that we were going to quit our jobs as a professional and move to Thailand and teach English.

[00:12:01] Joseph: What year was this, Ben?

[00:12:02] Ben: 2010 2011.

[00:12:04] Joseph: Okay.

[00:12:05] Ben: So we moved back to Pittsburgh, where my wife was from, to save up some money. I continued my job with Zipcar in the Pittsburgh market as an event manager, and we moved overseas and we taught English in Thailand for seven months in travel. Yeah, it was a very 180 on our career path. Our family and friends were telling us that it was career suicide, that, you know, people were going to look down on the gap in our resumes when we came back. But we would never change that in a million years. What happened before I left for Thailand? I helped out a friend working the masters with an event company that he works for, and I hit it off with the event manager prior to leaving. And on the way back. And this is in Charlotte now, on the way back from Thailand, I reached out to her and asked her if there was, you know, by chance, any roles that were available to come and continued my path in sport and event hospitality and event management. And there is a role that was available to me. And I came and we moved from Thailand back to Charlotte, and I started in event hospitality.

[00:13:13] Joseph: I understand part of this is about selling tickets, getting people to events, but when you talk about the hospitality side of it, what exactly did that entail?

[00:13:21] Ben: So a leagues and venues will have a certain percentage of tickets that they’ll sell a la carte to anybody who has access to them, and then they’ll set aside a certain amount of tickets where they will couple on site hospitality with those tickets, so that on site hospitality would be a tent or a VIP room, that the people who purchased these hospitality tickets will have access to. And we’ll go ahead and we’ll couple other exclusive offerings like player meet and greets. High end food and beverage. Backstage passes, behind the scenes tours with those hospitality packages. And those will be sold obviously as a premium above what the ticket prices were sold at and the venue or the organizing body that we were partnering with, we would get a percentage of those sales. So it was just a way for them to another revenue driver for that business.

[00:14:12] Joseph: And how are you finding that experience so far? Like what was running through your head at this point in your career, having come back from Thailand, now you’re working in event management and hospitality management. Did you enjoy it? Were you finding it rewarding? Like what was your level of satisfaction?

[00:14:29] Ben: This was a little bit of a foreshadowing to what I do now, but the work leading up to the events was always tough. I’m not going to sugarcoat it. Long hours being away from home. Very stressful because you have people, understandably so. You have people that are spending thousands and thousands of dollars on these packages. And if something doesn’t go right with that, you are the person that hears about it. You are the person who has to try to figure out how to put out the fire. So there was a lot of stress involved with it. But once you got to the event and everything was running smoothly, and you looked around and you saw all these people with the biggest smiles on their faces and having an amazing time. The finished product always made the work leading up to it worth it. I see that a lot now as a parallel to what I do now. There’s a lot of work with the shelves that I do the way a lot. You know? My hands are constantly covered in splinters and wood stain. But getting the pictures and the reviews, once my customers have them installed on their on their walls and the glowing positive things that they have to say about it makes it worthwhile to just knowing that I had a part in bringing a little bit extra something into their home. So. Same with event management. Leading up to extremely stressful, very high paced environment because we were 20, 30, 40 events a year. So you’re planning for one, you’re executing another, you’re starting the planning process and another all at the same time. But when you’re there, it was an amazing feeling, very formative, I would say.

[00:15:58] Joseph: I’d love to shift gears here a little bit, Ben, and talk about your shift away from that world into the world of, do I have this correct? Dental conferences and trade shows, which seems very different. Like how did you how did you make that pivot and what triggered you to make that pivot?

[00:16:12] Ben: I was just ready to move on at that point. I was with the previous company for three years. I think it was the non-stop nature of the events and maybe a little bit of the high stakes nature of the customer interactions burnt me out very quickly. You go into 15, 20 events, it was something that I needed to change the pace from. I had lots of great memories those first three years. I was able to go to some amazing, amazing sport events like the Super Bowl and the Masters and the Kentucky Derby that I would never be able to go to otherwise, and It was very thankful for those first three years. I just needed something else. And you know what better place to pivot from sports than into dentistry? A lot of parallels between the two. Right. So exactly. I wanted to take my event management experience and then parlay that and continue down the event management path. And there’s just an opportunity available with a dental products manufacturer. And I saw it and applied for the job and I got it. And so when we started, they had us a celebration of the 30th year of this dental product, this machine that they produced. And I mean, anybody who’s in dentistry knows what the product is, knows the company name. They’re the forefront of dental manufacturing in the world. And I had the opportunity to come in and work with the events and marketing team to help plan the 30th anniversary of this product.

[00:17:41] Joseph: Sounds like this is going well. A lot of transferable skills into this very different industry. I know that you would be there for a couple of years before you then returned back to your old former company, and you would go back as the director of product management. And I would be really interested to hear what prompted you to return to that world of sports, having stepped out of it. You mentioned before that you felt like it was time to do something different. This is an example of what we call sometimes a boomerang employee, where you leave a company or a sector and then you, you voluntarily choose to go back to it.

[00:18:14] Ben: So I received a call from the president at that point in time, asking if I’d be interested in exploring any type of option of coming back. And we talked about it for a little while. My wife and I, we had my daughter at this point in time. We understood that travel would pick back up again going back to this company and the stress levels probably were going to increase as well. But I went back and I was now the director of product management, and my main roles were managing the ticket inventory across all the different events that we sold into.

[00:18:47] Joseph: What do you remember about returning back to the company that you’d originally chosen to leave behind? I’m just thinking about, like the emotions of that and the psychology of going back to something you left behind. What was running through your head at the time? Do you remember?

[00:19:03] Ben: There was a lot of familiar faces that were still there, which was great, but there were also a lot of people that were new. It was odd at first, but once we got right into it, it was like never leaving. So it turned out to be a great experience.

[00:19:17] Joseph: Just to do a bit of a timeline check here. So you go back to this company in 2017 and while you’re working full time, you start to go through a bit of a side hustle transition. Do I have that correct? Can you take me through the evolution of your time there between, I guess, 2017 and 2020, what was happening on this side during this time? And I mentioned 2020. And so the pandemic is part of this.

[00:19:42] Ben: So 2018, two years into being back and I wanted to make a few floating shelves for our TV wall, I wanted to get a bigger TV, but my wife wanted to put shelves there instead. So she won and I looked up a DIY tutorial on how to make floating shelves. Found one on YouTube just using standard dimensional lumber from Home Depot and standard household tools at this point in time. In 2018, beginning of 2019, my son was going into daycare, so my daughter was in daycare. At this point in time, son is going into daycare and it was expensive to say the least. We were really trying to figure out ways to make some money on the side. My wife is a photographer in addition to her full time job, she would go out and she would have shoots on the weekends to bring in some side cash, and I wanted to do the same. So I thought that if I posted these shelves that I made on Etsy, I could figure out if there was a way to, you know, make an extra $1,000 a month on selling these shelves. How could I do it if I could sell an extra, you know, 10 to 20 shelves a month? Just working on my little two car garage. It would drastically make a huge difference in, you know, our quality of life. We’d be able to afford daycare a little bit better. And I posted a listing on Etsy. I posted a listing on Facebook Marketplace and got my first sale. It was actually on Facebook Marketplace where I got my first sale in middle of 2019.

[00:21:10] Joseph: Now, hang on just a second here, because you mentioned you decided to put up your own shelves. Now, if I needed to put up shelves, I would not have any idea where to start with that. And even if I looked it up on YouTube, I still probably wouldn’t be very good at it. Did you ever think about just buying shelves and sticking them up? Or like, what prompted you to decide that you wanted to do this by yourself and that you knew that you could do this?

[00:21:30] Ben: I mean, I’ve always had an interest in woodworking. I had shop class all four years in high school. There were a few things around the house that I had made with, you know, a very rudimentary circular saw. My father in law gave me a few random drills and made a few things, and it just kind of sparked something in me that, like I mentioned with events, the finished product, looking back and saying, I can’t believe I made that is a driving factor in wanting to do this.

[00:21:55] Joseph: While you get your first sale on Facebook Marketplace. And what were you thinking at this moment? Were you thinking, oh great, like, that’s kind of cool. I might make a couple more of these just for the fun of it. Or were you starting to think, you know what? Like maybe this is something that could turn into more than just a side business?

[00:22:11] Ben: Not at that point, no. I think my Etsy listing went live in mid December, January and February. It was increasing a little bit and maybe at this point 15 to 20 shelves a month. And I was happy I was reaching my goal of making that extra $1,000 a month, wasn’t spending too much time in the garage, maybe a few hours in the evenings and a few hours on the weekends, and was being successful with that, and then also juggling all the responsibilities from my full time position as well.

[00:22:41] Joseph: This is early 2020 and then the pandemic hits. And what happens to your full time work and what happens with the side business of making shelves?

[00:22:51] Ben: We had just completed the last event prior to lockdown, which was the NBA all Star game, so it would have been mid-February. Covid was starting to really ramp up in China. I believe the hospitality passes came printed from China. So we went through and we were disinfecting every single hospitality pass because at this point in time, no one knew how severe it was. We just saw all these news stories about what’s going on in China, and we’re worried about it coming to the US. The All-Star game passed and then we had the first case in the US. Obviously, all these sports events that I was managing the ticket assets for are being canceled, or they’re being played without any fans in attendance. At the same time, everybody was at home. Everybody was trying to figure out how they were going to improve their homes, beautify their offices, and sales just absolutely exploded your sales. Yeah, going from 15 to 20 shelves at a time to a month to a hundred at a month.

[00:23:57] Joseph: Wow. Okay.

[00:23:58] Ben: It was very overwhelming. But I just remember being outside one day, and this was probably late March with our neighbors. And all of us are in our little circles. We drew in the cul de sac where, okay, you say in your circle, we’ll stay in ours. We can all be sociable and we can all have our community still, but we just won’t get close to each other. I just remember hearing that. Cha ching, cha ching, cha ching.

[00:24:17] Joseph: Is this on Etsy?

[00:24:18] Ben: Yeah, this was Etsy. Yeah.

[00:24:20] Joseph: Okay. All right.

[00:24:21] Ben: And it was an amazing feeling. But at the same time, it was how am I going to manage my 9 to 5 and do this. And most of my 9 to 5 was spent in the garage making these shelves, trying to figure out how I was going to fill all these orders. And March and April were spent mostly in the garage. You know, I’d work and hop on conference calls. And also keep in mind that we had two little kids at home at the same time as well, because daycare was closed down.

[00:24:48] Joseph: So kids were closed, right?

[00:24:49] Ben: We had a two year old and a four year old at home, managing that in my 9 to 5 and taking care of the kids, so it was pretty overwhelming.

[00:25:04] Joseph: And what were you thinking at this moment, Ben? Were you thinking, I can keep going for a while like this or that? Something needs to give. How are you thinking about just your capacity?

[00:25:17] Ben: I realized I couldn’t do both. I couldn’t, you know, work 9 to 5 in the office and then come home and work from 6 to 11. This is something that I think is viable. I think it’s something that if it continues at the pace that it’s going, I can make a full time gig out of this. I could leave this highly stressful work environment where you’re responsible for millions of dollars of ticket assets and become my own boss. In June, I was teetering on the edge. There was someone that I worked with, and we would go back and forth and she would tell me that, you know, now is probably the time to pull the trigger if you’re going to pull the trigger, all these events are being canceled. You’ll be able to preserve all these relationships that you have. And I was still really hesitant because, you know, I was scared.

[00:26:08] Joseph: To quit your job.

[00:26:09] Ben: Well, not necessarily. So in July, I was actually laid off. So, okay, I made this analogy before where I was at the door of the airplane trying to decide whether to jump or not, and I got kicked out.

[00:26:22] Joseph: But you were on the verge of voluntarily resigning.

[00:26:26] Ben: Potentially I was.

[00:26:27] Joseph: Okay, I see. Then you get laid off in July of 2020 and the decision is made for you.

[00:26:35] Ben: It was a blessing in disguise. I mean, obviously, it’s never an easy thing. Being laid off, right. There’s a little bit of an ego aspect to it, you know? But at the same time, it was such a blessing to have that done for me.

[00:26:50] Joseph: Can you remember what was running through your head at that moment, when you found out that this decision had in some ways, been made for you?

[00:27:00] Ben: I was angry, I didn’t understand why. If it was based on the last three months of me not performing at the level I needed to be, then I wish I would have had that someone would have that conversation with me and I probably would have changed things. But the previous 14 months, I felt like I knocked it out of the park. I think it was overwhelming at the time and trying to figure out how we were going to make this work. But once I realized that it was such a blessing in disguise that that it happened and someone made that decision for me, I started to come to grips with the fortunate situation I found myself in, because not many people get laid off and have a solid backup plan like I had already in place.

[00:27:44] Joseph: Can you tell me a little bit about how things have been going for you since then with shelf expression?

[00:27:50] Ben: I kept on seeing ads on Facebook for a shelf bracket that just launched, and I think they launched in 2019, and they came on the market and I emailed them and I said, hey, I saw you guys on YouTube. I noticed that you don’t have any type of authorized providers. I was wondering if we could partner in some way. And this is love to shout them out. This is hover. Solutions brackets. They make the most incredible floating shelf brackets on the market. I’m not being biased, but maybe a little bit. So I partnered with them and I started creating hardwood floating shelves that could be coupled with this floating shelf bracket. And instead of pine, I’m now making shelves out of walnut and white oak and cherry, and all of a sudden my margins are a lot better. It was a way for me to take my company that I’d make 20 shelves and make 500 or $1000 a month to a company that I could make 100 shelves and make $15,000 a month. It’s blown up since then. So working with interior designers, contractors and becoming the solution for them for their floating shelf needs is has been pretty remarkable. And everything has been self-taught on my end too, as far as my business and the non shelf floating aspect of running the business.

[00:29:12] Joseph: The last thing I was hoping to talk with you about before we wrap up, is that work that you’re doing right now, both as someone who is making the shelves, but also as someone who’s running your own business. And I would be, first of all, interested in just hearing about what’s been the most surprising thing about shifting from I’m just going to broadly label it a white collar job to a more doing stuff with your hands blue collar job. And I’m using those labels because I think they make sense to people. But how have you found that shift? I know you’re a business owner now at the same time, but just the shift from going to white collar office work to more blue collar, hands on work.

[00:29:49] Ben: Yeah, it’s been for me so, so rewarding building that. And there’s a huge chunk of my responsibility is I still have that white collar responsibility. Right. It’s website design.

[00:30:02] Joseph: Client management.

[00:30:03] Ben: Customer relationship management, my ad social media. So I haven’t completely given that away. But being proud of a finished product and and being proud of the process has been probably the greatest reward for making the transition from a quote unquote, white collar to blue collar job.

[00:30:21] Joseph: What have you learned about yourself making the transition from employee to business owner?

[00:30:26] Ben: I thought I would get the most enjoyment out of being in the shop and making the shelves and seeing the finished product, which I do, but I also get a huge, huge kick out of trying to figure out how to grow my business and how to scale, and how to make it become more of a a nationwide brand that everybody is familiar with. And coming up with partnerships and different marketing angles is something that I really enjoy.

[00:30:49] Joseph: If one of the components wasn’t there, it would kind of make the whole experience perhaps less complete or less rewarding. And I hear you that you’re saying like the business ownership is important, but you also like the hands on creation part of it. It really is both of those two things combined that is creating your professional life right now, which is really interesting. And you’re also borrowing and leveraging a lot of your past experiences in directly relevant ways right now. So it’s kind of interesting your trajectory here. Final question before we wrap up what you’re doing now, what is something that you wished you had known that you now know about making a radical career change.

[00:31:29] Ben: Instead of turning to agencies to find the perfect solution for my ads and for my website design. I wish I would have taken the time to really learn the intricacies behind each and did it myself. Took on more of a DIY approach. I spent a lot of money and did not see the returns that I was hoping for. So now whenever I go down any of these different paths, whether it’s website design or marketing, a lot of times it’s all self-taught and that’s been the process is before you spend money on something, understand it, because a lot of times these agencies will come in and they’ll start spouting out these acronyms and these different KPIs, and if you don’t understand what they’re talking about, then you’re just as lost as anybody. And you need to at least know the ins and outs before you hand something like that off to somebody else.

[00:32:18] Joseph: That’s really interesting, Ben. I’ve also found that to be the case myself as I’ve gone through, like I’ve been running my own business now for over a decade, and I did the same thing. Like I started off outsourcing quite a bit, including PR that was kind of one of the things where I outsourced to a PR agency, and these days I do most of that myself just because I feel like I’m in more control. And that’s part of the benefit and the upside of running your own business. I’d love to wrap up with what you are now focused on right now, which is both running your business and also making shelves. And I can’t let you go without asking you about shelves, because as someone who specializes in making shelves, what are a couple things that someone should look for in a high quality shelf, whether it’s a floating shelf or a freestanding shelf.

[00:33:03] Ben: Yeah, aside from making sure it’s made by shelf expression, of course. No, I would say if you’re looking for something that you want to last a long time, make sure it’s made out of solid hardwood. A lot of these shelves that you can purchase through Amazon or Wayfair are probably made out of MDF or particle board, and you know it when you see it. Just like anything that you find for cheap, making sure that you have a quality bracket, I think is another thing. As far as if you’re looking for a floating shelf, Something that is handmade by family business as well. I feel like that’s something that plays a part in it, because then you know that the people who are making it are pouring every ounce of sweat into making it perfect and making sure that it’s the quality that you that you deserve. So that’s the big thing is, you know, a lot of times when you see these manufacturers that are a little bit more mass produced, reviews are a great way to dig into what the quality is, is like. And that’s something that I really take pride in, is making sure that everything that I put out, I would want hanging on my grandma’s wall. And I think finding someone who has that level of care and detail is really important.

[00:34:11] Joseph: Very last question for you. Before we tell people where to find you, can you tell me a little bit more about what’s next for shelf expression? Where do you see this going, and how would you like your life and work to look in the months and years ahead, both personally and professionally?

[00:34:26] Ben: My three year plan is to eventually scale out where I can get into a bigger space. My wife really wants to park her car in the garage at some point in the next three years. And hiring people, having someone come in and like I said, I love making the shelves, but I love running the business more. So if I could bring people in who have the same level or close to the same level of attention to detail as I have, that would allow me to try to figure out how I can scale this. I recently launched a designer program. I’ve been reaching out to interior designers and home contractors across the country, inviting them to join. So aside from the retail customers really trying to focus on how to build my B2B customer base as well, having those repeat customers that I can rely on as a solid base is a goal of mine over the next year. Yeah, eventually getting out of the garage and having someone lend a hand so I can focus on the bigger picture is the ultimate goal of mine.

[00:35:18] Joseph: And if people want to learn more about you, or if they are looking for a good set of floating shelves, where can they go?

[00:35:25] Ben: So my website is self-expression net. Instagram handle is self-expression NC. Etsy store name is self-expression. Take a look and would be happy to answer any questions anybody has.

[00:35:37] Joseph: Well, thank you so much, Ben for telling us more about your life. As a former event manager and Director of Product management, your shift into woodworking, making shelves, and also your transition from employee to business owner. So best of luck with all of your work and moving into a bigger space as shelf expression continues to grow.

[00:35:54] Ben: Thank you very much, Joseph. I appreciate the time.

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