THE IMPORTANCE OF INTEGRITY IN THE BUSINESS LANDSCAPE
The asset you already have
When you start a business after redundancy, you begin with something most people do not think to name as an asset: a clean slate. You have no history of broken promises in this market. No clients you have let down. No reputation for cutting corners. That blank page is worth more than most people realise, and how you fill it in the first twelve months will shape what your business looks like for years afterwards.
This is why integrity is not just an ethical consideration for people starting out. It is a commercial one. In the world of small business, particularly in the UK where professional networks are tighter and more interconnected than they appear, how you operate travels. The way you handle a difficult client conversation, whether you deliver what you said you would, at the price you agreed; how you behave when something goes wrong. People remember these things. They share them.
The very specific temptation to oversell yourself
When you are newly self-employed and you need work, there is a strong pull towards presenting yourself as more experienced than you are. Clients want confidence. They want to feel they are hiring someone who has done this before. And so, the instinct is to imply a broader track record than you have, to say yes to things at the edge of your capability, to position yourself as an expert in an area where you are still developing.
Sometimes this works in the short term. You win the contract, you work hard, you deliver something that holds together well enough. The client is not unhappy. But the foundation is fragile, and in business, fragile foundations have a way of becoming visible at the worst possible moment. If anything goes wrong on a project where you overstated your experience, the gap between what the client expected and what you can actually deliver becomes very apparent very quickly. And repairing a damaged professional reputation takes far longer than building a good one would have.
The more durable approach is to be specific and honest about where you are. To say: I have done this, I have not done that; here is what I would recommend. Clients who hire you on that basis and find you excellent, become clients who stay, refer others, and build your reputation without you having to manage it. Clients who hired you based on a version of yourself you invented, will feel misled even if the work was adequate. The difference in long-term commercial terms is significant.
Pricing with honesty
Pricing is one of the places where integrity matters most and gets discussed least. New business owners tend to either undercharge because they lack confidence in their own value, or set a rate they feel they need to justify and then quietly do extra work to earn it without telling the client. Both patterns are problems.
Charging what your time and skills are genuinely worth, being clear about what that fee includes, and not adjusting your terms based on how much you think you can get away with, rather than what the work actually costs. That is what honest pricing looks like. It is also what sustainable pricing looks like, because clients who feel your rates are fair and your invoices accurate, do not look for reasons to negotiate every engagement.
On the topic of tax: declaring your income properly to HMRC is not optional, and the various schemes marketed to newly self-employed people that promise to dramatically reduce your tax liability are almost always a risk that significantly outweighs the short-term saving. HMRC pursues non-compliance through disguised remuneration and similar schemes aggressively, and the individuals caught in them frequently end up paying penalties that dwarf what they thought they were saving. Pay your tax. Keep your records. It is not glamorous advice, but it is the kind that protects you.
How integrity builds the relationships that actually grow a business
The most commercially successful freelancers and small business owners in the UK tend to share a specific characteristic. They do not have hundreds of clients. They have a smaller number of clients who trust them deeply and return to them consistently. Those relationships did not happen by accident. They were built through a pattern of doing what was agreed, communicating honestly when something was difficult, and being the person a client could rely on when things were uncertain.
That kind of trust starts with small things. The first time a client asks whether you can do something and you say: I can do this part of it well, I would suggest someone else for that part, you are doing something genuinely unusual in a market where most people say yes to everything. Unusual in that direction tends to be memorable. Clients who feel a supplier is being straight with them rather than telling them what they want to hear, form a different kind of attachment to that relationship.
How you treat the people you work with
If your business grows to the point where you are working with other people, whether employees, subcontractors, or collaborators, your operating standards become your culture. How you communicate when expectations are not being met. How quickly you pay invoices. Whether you give credit for contributions that are not yours. Whether you tell people what is actually going on in the business when things are difficult.
Small businesses are not immune from the dynamics that make people disengage in large organisations. Unclear expectations, late payment, credit withheld, and communication that is only forthcoming when something has gone wrong. These create exactly the same disengagement in a team of three that they create in a team of three hundred. The difference is that in a small business, there is nowhere for that disengagement to hide. It shows up directly in output, in client relationships, and in whether the people doing good work choose to stay.
When things go wrong, which they will
A project runs over. A deliverable is late. Something you produced does not work the way the client expected. How you handle those moments is where your operating integrity is most visible and most consequential.
The instinct is often to manage the situation. To minimise what has happened, to explain it in terms that shift responsibility slightly, to wait and see whether the client notices. That instinct is understandable and almost always counterproductive. Clients who discover problems on their own, feel ambushed. Clients who are told about problems early, with a clear account of what happened and what you are doing about it, tend to feel looked after. Even in difficult situations, that distinction is enormous.
Clients who have experienced problems handled well, sometimes become more loyal than clients who never experienced problems at all, because they have direct evidence that you can be trusted when things are hard. That is ultimately the quality that matters most in any long-term professional relationship. And it is only demonstrable in the moments when things do not go to plan.
Building something worth having
For anyone rebuilding after redundancy, the business landscape can feel like a place where you need to compete hard, promise a lot, and move fast, just to get a foothold. And there is some truth in that. Competition is real and the market does not hand anything to you for free.
But the people who build businesses that last, in the UK and anywhere else, are almost never the ones who competed hardest and promised the most. They are the ones who delivered consistently, told the truth when it was uncomfortable, and treated the people around them the way they would want to be treated themselves. That sounds simple because it is. The gap between knowing it and actually doing it, especially under financial pressure, is where most of the work is.