The Profit Letters

I want to take you back to my childhood.

In our house, music was everywhere.

My mom took me to choir rehearsals at church when I was probably eight or nine years old. We had piano lessons. Voice lessons. We went to concerts. She served on the symphony board, the opera guild, and supported the ballet.

Music wasn’t something we did once in a while.

It was simply part of life.

We sang at family parties. We sang at church. We listened to music constantly.

So it’s probably no surprise that I eventually owned a music school for ten years and taught voice lessons on and off throughout my entrepreneurial journey.

Recently, a friend jokingly told me:

“It’s just not fair. You, your husband, and all three of your daughters are so musical.”

I laughed.

Because the truth is, it wasn’t magic.

It was exposure.

It was time.

It was focus.

Meanwhile, her two children were amazing athletes.

They were always on a field, at practice, winning trophies, and developing skills that my girls never developed.

Why?

Because that’s where they spent their time.

You can’t focus on everything.

What you spend time on grows.

I love this picture of my four-year-old grandson.

His mom took him to choir practice last Sunday, and after everyone left, a family friend gave him a tour of the organ.

He got to stand on the pedals.

Push the buttons.

Explore.

I’m sure it was complete chaos.

But that’s not the point.

The point is exposure.

The same thing is true for business finances.

Many entrepreneurs tell themselves:

“I’m just not good with numbers.”

But most of the time, that’s not true.

You’re not bad at finances.

You’ve simply had very little exposure to them.

If you spend your time learning marketing, sales, customer service, and operations—but never spend time understanding your numbers—there will be consequences.

Not because you’re bad at math.

Because you’ve been focusing somewhere else.

And that’s okay.

The problem comes when you continue avoiding it.

Because the money itself isn’t creating the anxiety.

The avoidance is.

I call it financial fog.

The longer you avoid your finances, the thicker the fog gets.

But once you start looking at the numbers, organizing your accounts, and understanding what’s happening, the fog begins to lift.

If you’ve been putting this off, we can help.

Most business owners spend 4–8 hours trying to connect their bank accounts and credit cards inside QuickBooks Online.

Our team can do it quickly and correctly for you, so you can stay focused on running your business instead of troubleshooting software.

For a one-time setup fee of $249, we’ll:

• Connect your business checking accounts to QuickBooks Online
• Connect your business credit cards
• Confirm transactions are syncing correctly
• Connect multiple business accounts and multiple credit cards if needed

So if you’ve been putting this off, maybe it’s time to stop avoiding it.

A little exposure can change everything.

Profitably Yours,

Karen Lake

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P.S. What you focus on grows. If you want a more profitable business, start giving your finances the attention they’ve been waiting for. 💜