You Don’t Need to Be Ready — Just Willing to Start
Because “ready” is a myth, and your idea deserves a chance to breathe.

“Ready” Is Just Procrastination in Yoga Pants
Let me guess.
You’ve got an idea (maybe three). You’ve downloaded the PDFs, binge-watched the YouTube gurus, saved a Pinterest board titled “Business Branding Inspo 💡”.
You may have even bought the domain.
I did.
In fact, this very domain — The Marketing Leap — sat there untouched for four years. Just… parked. Like a car in a garage waiting for the right road trip.
Because I told myself I needed:
- The perfect strategy
- A signature framework
- A stronger coffee routine
- And obviously, more research (because what’s another Google Doc?)
But “ready” never came. And eventually, I realised the only way to build something was to start — imperfectly, unpolished, and without a clever funnel name.
So if you’re waiting for readiness, I want to let you off the hook:
You don’t need to be ready. You just need to be willing.
Let’s unpack what that means — and how to leap before you lose momentum.
The Myth of Readiness (Also Known As the Pinterest Trap)
We’ve been taught that readiness looks like:
- A crystal-clear plan
- A colour-coded calendar
- A Canva-perfect brand palette
But really? That’s just high-functioning procrastination.
(And I say this with deep affection for a good Google Sheet.)
The truth is, readiness is often:
- A disguise for fear
- A stall tactic in a stylish blazer
- A way to delay starting without admitting you’re scared
I waited four years. You don’t have to.
Starting with What You’ve Got (Even If It’s Just a Voice Note and a Vision)
You don’t need a 10-step strategy to begin. You need… well, you.
You, and the willingness to try before it feels perfect.
Try This:
Step 1: Embrace B- Work
Yep. Not A+. Not “This-could-be-on-Forbes.”
Just done. Progress beats polish every time.
Step 2: Pick One Offerable Idea
Choose the idea you could explain over coffee without checking your notes. That’s your start.
Step 3: Say It Out Loud to One Person
Tell a friend. Tell your dog. But speak it into the world.Step 4: Help One Person, One Way
Could you offer a 30-minute clarity call? A checklist? A 3-page how-to guide?
Boom — you’re in business.
Willingness > Readiness (Every Single Time)
Let’s compare the two:
“Ready” says… | “Willing” says… |
“I need to have a full business plan” | “I’ll test this one idea first” |
“I need a better website” | “Let me create a Notion page and share it” |
“What if people laugh?” | “What if they need this?” |
“It has to be perfect” | “It just has to be useful” |
One gets stuck in preparation.
The other builds momentum.
Guess which one becomes a business?
The Inner Critic Isn’t Invited to This Launch Party
If you’re like me, your inner critic probably has a clipboard and a megaphone.
It’ll say things like:
- “Who are you to do this?”
- “But you’re not techy!”
- “You don’t even post on LinkedIn!”
Here’s what I learned:
Your inner critic is not your CEO.
It’s your over-caffeinated, risk-averse assistant trying to protect you from rejection.
Be kind to her. Thank her. And then gently ignore her while you make your offer anyway.
5 Tiny Leaps You Can Take Today
If you want to move forward without a spreadsheet, try one of these:
- Open a blank doc and write the first sentence of your “About” page
- DM someone and ask, “Would this offer be helpful to you?”
- Sign up for ConvertKit, Carrd, or MailerLite and just explore
- Record a 90-second voice memo explaining what you want to create
- Post on Instagram: “Thinking of launching something that helps [insert audience] with [insert problem]. Would this interest you?”
You don’t have to launch today. But you can take a leap today.
Recap: Start Where You Are
You don’t need:
- A logo
- A funnel
- A 12-week business blueprint
You need:
- An idea
- A willingness to act
- A little courage, and maybe a cuppa
And you need to know that it’s okay — more than okay — to start where you are.
Because while “ready” is comfortable…
willingness is where the magic begins.
You’ve got this. I’m cheering you on (messy desk and all).
— Sini