Some entrepreneurs are the black sheep of their family. Even the successful ones face the dreaded question at the Thanksgiving dinner tableтАФтАЬSo when are you going to get a real job?тАЭ┬а
You would think it would be different for Dylan Ogline, founder of boutique digital marketing agency Ogline Digital and entrepreneur-training mastermind Agency 2.0.┬а
Dylan doesnтАЩt descend from a family of card-punchers or wage-slaves. In fact, his father is a career entrepreneur, founder of several businesses throughout his lifetime. His brother, ten years his senior, is also an entrepreneur, founder of a used-car dealership.┬а
But they still ask him when heтАЩs going to get тАЬreal work.тАЭ┬а
Dylan recalls a conversation between himself, his brother, and a peer who owned a pool-cleaning business.┬а
тАЬWe were discussing vacation destinations or something,тАЭ Dylan recalled, тАЬand I had a lot of input about where to go and what to do. But it seemed like every suggestion I made, they dismissed. ItтАЩs like my opinion didnтАЩt matter.тАЭ┬а
Dylan called his brother out on it, and his elder brother had a curt answer as to why he valued his pool-cleaning entrepreneur friend moreтАФтАЬHe works for a living.тАЭ┬а
Ogline Digital was on the way to a seven-figure year when DylanтАЩs brother made that dismissive comment. Rather than argue the point, he let it slide. He understood his brotherтАЩs logic, even if he didnтАЩt agree with it.┬а
What Dylan does for a living doesnтАЩt look like work, in the traditional sense. It looks like jetsetting to exotic locations, Instagram posts in front of waterfalls, chilling on a tropical balcony typing on a laptopтАФyou know, the device most people spend time playing games on.┬а
How could he be working? He doesnтАЩt look nearly miserable enough.┬а
Dylan and his brother are technically the same, but they are worlds apart. By birth year alone, Dylan is a Millennial, while his brother is Gen X and much more of a piece with his father.
To them, building a business is a titanic effort, and rightly so. If you donтАЩt have to crawl through tar and broken glass (metaphorically speaking) to тАЬmake it,тАЭ youтАЩre not trying hard enough. Nor do you ever make it. Not at six figures, not at seven figures, not at eight. You can always work┬а
harder and build bigger. And if you get comfortable, youтАЩre doing it wrong and donтАЩt belong at the Big BoyтАЩs table. Keep slogging away until you drop.┬а
Dylan is afraid that drop is exactly what they will do. Both his father and brother are in poor healthтАФoverweight, cancer, Type II diabetes. Smokers and drinkers to cope with the grinding path they have set for themselves.┬а
Meditative and aggressively health-conscious, Dylan takes an entirely different approach. When Ogline Digital hit seven figures, he slowed down considerably. He realized he had the тАЬmoney thingтАЭ handled. If his business never grew again, could meet every financial goal he had for the foreseeable future. It was time to stop living his life for тАЬbiggerтАЭ and тАЬmore.тАЭ┬а
Time to enjoy the fruits of his labor after his own twelve-year slog, spinning his wheels on failed business ventures until Ogline Digital finally clicked.┬а
Time to give back and help others do the same by coaching aspiring entrepreneurs through Agency 2.0.┬а
Time to travel, to enjoy quality time with loved ones, to work to live rather than living to work.┬а
Dylan is part of a generation working smarter, not harder. Prioritizing the experiences money can buy, rather than money for its own sake. Prioritizing happiness, rather than suffering to prove a point to no one at all.┬а
Thanksgiving dinner is just one night a year, after all. Maybe one day heтАЩll decide to тАЬwork for a livingтАЭ тАж but heтАЩs too busy making money and living life to make time for that right now.