When I started my career in the corporate world more than two decades ago, the definition of success was remarkably simple: find your lane and stay in it.
The deeper your expertise, the more you were respected and ultimately the more valuable you became. But that thinking has evolved in a post-Covid era where being a multi-hyphenate is considered the ultimate compliment and people running three businesses simultaneously are a dime a dozen. In today’s world, it is no longer about mastering a skill, it’s about building an ecosystem around that skill. Your expertise is the foundation, not the end goal. The question every entrepreneur, founder, executive, and creator should be asking is: How can I scale what I know beyond the central skill?
I like to call it Scale Your Skill, and it is something I have done for almost a decade.
It begins with identifying the one thing you are exceptionally good at. Then, instead of treating that expertise as a single career path, you start looking in every direction around it. What else can it teach? Who else can it serve? What adjacent opportunities naturally emerge from it?
Your core competency becomes the center of an expanding ecosystem.
For nearly twenty years, I defined myself as a charity auctioneer. Standing onstage helping nonprofits raise millions of dollars remains one of the greatest privileges of my career. I could have happily spent my entire professional life auctioneering. In fact, that’s exactly what most people in my profession do. But nearly two decades into my career, I did something that unintentionally changed everything.
I wrote a book titled The Most Powerful Woman in the Room is You.
Almost every night when I got offstage there was someone, most often a woman, who would tell me that she could never do what I did on that stage. The command, the confidence, the public speaking, the ease with which I held the attention of 1,000+ people in a job where people were used to watching a man command the stage in a different way. But, I could also tell something else: most of them wished they could do what I did onstage. Coming to tell me they couldn’t do it was also them asking me how they could. I realized on the surface, it wasn’t even about auctioneering. It was about confidence, selling, negotiation, and what I had learned as a woman commanding a room filled with CEOs, philanthropists, founders, and world leaders. Auctioneering is an incredibly niche profession, but confidence isn’t, and public speaking isn’t. Neither is executive presence.
What I realized was that while very few people wanted to become auctioneers, almost everyone wanted to become more confident, and more effective communicators.
That book became the first unlock. It forced me to articulate skills that had become second nature after thousands of hours onstage. More importantly, it taught me something I now believe applies to every entrepreneur:
If you can learn something, you can teach it
Once I stopped defining myself solely by my job title, entirely new opportunities appeared and my eco-system started expanding as I followed the thread.
Speaking engagements led to leadership workshops. When someone attended a leadership workshop and wanted individual help it became executive coaching. When I realized that more women needed thought leadership from people who had come before them, I launched a podcast titled Claim Your Confidence.
As I continued to take auctions, the auction requests for me personally were nearing 300 requests a year, and I realized I needed to scale my business. I created the first talent agency for non-profit auctioneers. As that has built success, I now advise founders on how to jump in with both feet. The common thread in this story wasn’t that I had abandoned auctioneering. It was that auctioneering had become the foundation upon which everything else was built. Every opportunity connected back to the same central skill.
Too often I meet people who think about their careers in straight lines. They are always thinking “What’s the next promotion?” or “What’s the next client?” or “What’s the next business?”
A more valuable question is, “What else does my expertise make me qualified to do?”
If you’re the founder of a successful company, your business isn’t your only product. Your experience is. Think of all the things you have had to learn how to do: raise capital, hire employees, build culture, recover from failure, manage uncertainty, negotiate partnerships, and make decisions with imperfect information. Other founders want to learn those skills. Investors value those insights. Companies will pay for that perspective.
If you’re a fitness instructor, your business isn’t limited to the number of classes you can physically teach each week. Think of all the things you can do: create digital memberships, educational content, branded products, retreats, nutrition programs, coaching communities, certification programs, or corporate wellness initiatives.
The list isn’t endless because you’re chasing every opportunity. It’s endless because you’re building adjacent opportunities that naturally reinforce your expertise. Building an ecosystem isn’t about becoming distracted, it’s about becoming more resilient.
When every part of your business supports every other part, you’re no longer dependent on a single revenue stream or a single platform. Your speaking drives your consulting. Your consulting informs your content. Your content builds your audience. Your audience buys your products. Your products reinforce your brand, which creates more speaking opportunities. You can move in every direction because everything comes back to your core. Each piece strengthens the next. That’s how modern businesses compound. It’s also how personal brands become enduring businesses.
The entrepreneurs who thrive over the next decade won’t necessarily be the ones with the most specialized expertise. They’ll be the ones who understand how to brand, teach, and multiply that expertise across multiple channels.
Your job title is not your identity and your business is not your ceiling. Your central skill is simply your starting point.
The future belongs to people who understand that mastery is only the first step. The real opportunity lies in building an ecosystem around that mastery—one where every new product, platform, audience, and opportunity reinforces the others.
Because in today’s economy, your lane isn’t where your career ends. It’s where your ecosystem begins.
