Episode Description
In this episode, Paul challenges makers who feel stuck at $100K–$150K in revenue to confront the real barrier to growth: identity. Most craftsmen start their businesses because they love making things—not because they love running a business. But if you want to make a true living doing this work, a mindset shift is required.
Drawing from his own experience building Philadelphia Table Company while navigating his wife’s cancer diagnosis and growing family responsibilities, Paul explains how stepping fully into the role of business owner—not just craftsperson—was the turning point. He breaks down the math of solo production, the ceiling of top-line revenue, and why better dovetails won’t solve scaling problems.
This episode isn’t tactical—it’s foundational. It’s about obsession, ownership, and asking the hard question: What happens to your business if you stop making things for two weeks?
Key Takeaways:
- Your revenue ceiling is tied to your identity. If you still see yourself primarily as a maker, your growth will stall.
- Solo production has a financial cap. Even at $10K/week in revenue, realistic profit margins leave little room for reinvestment or true wealth building.
- Better craftsmanship won’t fix business bottlenecks. Systems, hiring, sales, and financial literacy will.
- Think beyond the garage. Growth requires planning for hiring, delegation, and infrastructure—even before you're “ready.”
- Obsession is normal. Building a business requires constant problem-solving and long-term thinking.
- This podcast is for professionals. Not hobbyists, but makers serious about building a sustainable six-figure (and beyond) business.
Paul also reaffirms that The Handcrafted Network exists to support that transition—from craftsperson to entrepreneur—through community, group calls, and business-focused learning.
If you want to build more than furniture—if you want to build a business—this episode is your starting point.