219. MUST YOUR BUSINESS PURSUITS ALWAYS BE NOVEL? Jack’s Redundancy Empowerment - empowering redundancy - empowering redundant workers - empowering redundant staff - empowering redundant employees - making redundancy work for you - is redundancy a dead end? - is redundancy the end of the road? - making the most of redundancy - empowering the redundant worker - Jack Lookman - Rita Nnamani - Olayinka Carew - Ola Carew - Jack Lookman Limited - Amebo - Olofofo - Ire o - Ire kabiti - Empowerment and Inspiration - Empowering And Inspiring Generations - Yinka Carew - Olayinka Carew aka Jack Lookman - Jack’s Empowerment and Inspiration - Profesor Jack - E go beta
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For many UK workers, starting a business feels like a chance to reclaim control after losing it. In the heat of the moment, a risky assumption is frequently made. The belief that your business idea must be absolutely unique, disruptive, or never done before. This idea slows people down more than any other mindset throughout a transition.
Novelty appeals to people because it evokes feelings of safety. If no one else is doing it, you expect there to be no competition. You also envision adoration, acknowledgement, and a sense of uniqueness to compensate for the loss of status that duplication can cause. The difficulty is that innovation rarely equates feasibility, especially when you need money now rather than later.
Most sustainable businesses are not new ideas. They are familiar services delivered better, more consistently or to a specific audience. Cleaning services, consulting, tutoring, bookkeeping, copywriting, project management and virtual assistance are not exciting on the surface. Yet they quietly generate steady income for thousands of people across the UK. Their strength lies in demand, not originality.
After redundancy, time becomes a critical factor. Novel ideas often require education, market testing, positioning and long periods without income. They may succeed eventually, but they demand patience and financial cushioning. Many redundant workers do not have the luxury of waiting indefinitely. They need cash flow, not just vision.
There is also the emotional cost of novelty. When an idea is untested, every setback feels personal. Doubt grows quickly. You wonder whether the idea is flawed or whether you are incapable. This compounds the emotional weight of redundancy rather than relieving it.
Businesses that work tend to solve problems people already recognise. Familiar problems come with existing demand. When demand exists, selling becomes easier. You spend less time convincing people they need what you offer and more time delivering value. This accelerates confidence and income recovery.
Another misconception is that doing something familiar makes you replaceable. In reality, differentiation does not come from inventing something new. It comes from perspective, experience and execution. Your background, communication style and understanding of clients shape how you deliver even common services. That uniqueness cannot be replicated easily.
There is also a financial prudence angle. Familiar business models are easier to cost, price and scale realistically. You can estimate expenses, forecast income and plan growth with more confidence. Novel pursuits often hide costs until later, increasing financial risk.
This does not mean creativity has no place. Creativity improves service delivery, marketing and customer experience. It enhances existing models rather than replacing them. Innovation within structure is safer than invention without foundation.
This is a Legacy Project Of Olayinka Carew aka Jack Lookman.
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