Tea with the Queen

How to Manage Expectations in Business Without Burning Out

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Expectations are sneaky.

They sit quietly in the background, shaping how you measure your life, your business, your relationships, your body, your progress. And the tricky part is you don’t always realise you’re living under them until reality doesn’t match the picture in your head.

Then it hits. Disappointment. Frustration. That weird mix of “I should be grateful” and “Why doesn’t this feel like I thought it would?”

This is my relationship with expectations. In life and in business. And if you’ve ever felt like you’re doing well but still somehow falling short, this is probably why.

The Expectations We Inherit (and the Ones We Make Up)

When I was young, I had a very clear plan. Married by 18, pink meringue wedding dress, house full of kids. The whole thing.

Life had other ideas.

I became a bonus mum by marrying a wonderful man with children already. Then came heartbreak, multiple miscarriages, and a journey to having Evie that looked nothing like the story I’d written in my head.

And here’s what I’ve learned. Expectations don’t just disappear when life changes. They linger. They shape how you interpret what happens next. They can make a beautiful life feel like a consolation prize if you’re still comparing it to an old version of the dream.

Over time, I’ve gained something I didn’t expect either. Perspective. The kind that comes from sitting with grief, healing slowly, and realising you’re not the only woman carrying a story like this. It’s why I talk about it. Because so much of this is lived quietly, and it shouldn’t be.

Expectations in Business Can Be Brutal

Business is where expectations really like to show off.

You set a goal. You build the plan. You do the work. And even when the results are objectively good, expectations can still find a way to make it feel like you failed.

I’ve had launches that looked successful on paper. People joined. Revenue came in. The numbers were great. And yet I felt flat, because my expectations had painted a different picture of what “success” was meant to look like, and how it was meant to feel.

That’s the danger. Unchecked expectations can turn wins into disappointments. They can make you feel behind when you’re actually moving forward. They can make you question your leadership when you’re simply in a different season than the one you planned for.

Expectations We Set For Our Clients

When you’re a coach, a mentor, a service provider, you can often see someone’s potential before they can. And that’s a beautiful thing, until it turns into you carrying their expectations for them.

A mentor once said to me, “Never work harder than your clients.” I didn’t love it at first. I sat with it for months. Because if you care, you want to help. You want to push. You want to rescue them from their own hesitation.

But over time, I realised that line isn’t harsh. It’s healthy.

I worked with a client launching a new program who was stuck in that internal battle. She had expectations about the numbers, sure, but more than that, she had expectations about what success should feel like. She thought if it didn’t feel a certain way, it didn’t count.

We used a “good, better, best” framework and it gave her room to breathe. It helped her see progress without tying her self-worth to one outcome. She still had standards. She just stopped letting expectations bully her.

Expectations Aren’t the Enemy, But They Need Managing

Expectations aren’t bad. They become heavy when they’re outdated, unrealistic, or unspoken.

Here are a few ways to work with them, without letting them run your life.

1. Name them

If you can’t see your expectations, you can’t adjust them. Write them down. Get them out of your head and onto paper.

2. Ask where they came from

Are these expectations actually yours? Or are they inherited from family, culture, the internet, or a past version of you who didn’t know what your life would look like now?

3. Do a season check

Your expectations need to match your current season. Your energy, your health, your responsibilities, your capacity. If they don’t, they’re not motivating you. They’re crushing you.

4. Make success scalable

Good, better, best. Give yourself options. Let success have levels. Let it be flexible. Because life is.

5. Align actions with expectations

This one matters. If your expectations are high, your actions need to match. Not in a hustle way. In an honest way. Sometimes the gap isn’t your capability; it’s your follow-through.

6. Revisit and update

You’re not the same person you were a few years ago. Your expectations shouldn’t be either. Update them like you update your goals. Regularly. On purpose.

Life doesn’t always look like we pictured. Business won’t always hit every forecast. Clients won’t always do what we hope they’ll do.

And that’s okay.

Expectations can be softened. Updated. Rewritten. They can become something that supports you instead of something that constantly tells you you’re behind.

If your expectations are weighing you down right now, consider this your permission slip to adjust them. Not because you’re lowering your standards, but because you’re choosing reality over pressure.

Be gentle with the expectations you carry. They’re powerful. And when they’re managed well, they can become stepping stones instead of shackles.

Read The Full Transcript

[00:00:00] Expectations. They're funny things. We carry them quietly. We build our lives around them. And when reality does not match the picture we had in our head, the disappointment can be deeper than we'll ever admit. Today. I wanna talk about expectations. The ones that life handed me, the ones I put on myself.
[00:00:22] The ones I place on my clients, mainly by accident, and most importantly, how to reshape expectations so they lift you up rather than crush you.
[00:00:32] Expectations sit underneath so many decisions, frustrations and moments of self-doubt in business and in life. The expectations, you start with the expectation life rearranges for you, the ones you clinging to without even realizing the ones you need to soften so you can breathe. Again, this episode is personal. and my hope is by the end of it, you'll be able to [00:01:00] hold your expectations with a bit more KINDNESS and a bit more CLARITY
[00:01:04] when I was young, I had a very clear picture of how life would go. I thought I would be married by 18. That did not happen. I wanted to wear a pink meringue dress. Also did not happen. I thought I would have babies Early did not happen. Life had completely different plans for me. I married a wonderful man who already had children, so I became a bonus mom first, which was one of the greatest joys of my life.
[00:01:34] Then later, after miscarriages and heartbreak and long stretches of disappointment, we had Evie. She was very hard to conceive, and I carried a lot of grief about not being able to give her a sibling. At 37, I was told I was heading into perimenopause. That revelation came at the same time that I had miscarried for the third time.
[00:01:54] Again, not part of the plan, but here's what time gives you it gives you a bit of perspective, [00:02:00] a bit of healing, and the ability, which I do not take for granted, to sit beside other women who are walking through the same heartache and truly understand what they're going through. This is the gift I could not see back then from clients to friends, to colleagues.
[00:02:20] Wow, a lot of this stuff is not talked about, which is why I wanna talk about it today.
[00:02:25] Expectations do not stop with life. I carry them into business as well. I expect myself to perform. I expect myself to lead well. I expect myself to create impact. I expect myself to show up for my community even when life is full and when things don't go the way I had pictured, it can hit hard
[00:02:48] You will have heard the episode about the thriving and launch the 12 week runway, should I say, the 12 week runaway low, the work heavy workload, the [00:03:00] emotional season I was in, and the disappointment when the numbers didn't quite match the expectation I had already placed on myself and from the outside.
[00:03:08] The launch was a huge success. Inside my expectations made it feel like it fell a bit short. And that's the danger of expectations. Sometimes they can make a win, feel like a loss.
[00:03:20] Then there's these expectations that we hold for the people that we serve. I mentor once told me, Emma, you should never work harder than your clients. And I remember sitting with that for months because I care deeply. I see what is possible for women long before they can see for themselves. I want them to succeed.
[00:03:42] I want them to rise, but I can't carry their business for them
[00:03:46] . Oh, how I wish I could. But I can't, when a client does not do the work, I feel disappointed. I feel that disappointment rise in my gut, not because I'm annoyed at them, but because [00:04:00] I can see their potential so clearly, and I hate to say it, but my mentor was right.
[00:04:05] There is this boundary between supporting and then overworking between coaching and carrying. And I walk that line a little bit more gently. Now, one of my clients recently launched a new program. She had a beautiful group offer already tons of experience, and she was ready to leverage it into a membership.
[00:04:30] When we mapped out her strategy, I asked her to map her expectations too. Not just the numbers, but how she thought success would feel, and we created three guiding markers for her baseline, what was good, the baseline that validated her idea and showed her that it had legs.
[00:04:48] That was good. What was better? The result that showed the momentum. And what was best? What was the dream outcome that stretched her? Now, let me say good, better, best, [00:05:00] all. Awesome anyway, and I sit with this quandary all the time about if we keep our expectations low, we can't get disappointed. If we keep our expectations high, then maybe we'll get disappointed.
[00:05:12] But also, if we don't stretch ourselves, what's the point or the things? And this one simple tool, good, better, best, gave her emotional room to breathe. She was able to celebrate progress without making the outcome mean something about her worth or her ability. You see, expectations can be like anchors.
[00:05:32] They can be like pressure cookers. I feel like good, better, best takes the pressure outta the process.
[00:05:39] I know some people, maybe it's you, maybe you sitting there going, oh, this is me. Are afraid to set any expectations. ' cause this the way they're not disappointed. But here's the thing, if you don't set any expectations, you don't grow, you don't stretch. You're much less likely to achieve all [00:06:00] the things that you can achieve in this big, bold one life we've got. take a minute. Start small. Just pick one, one expectation that you can craft for yourself. Here's what's taken me quite some time to learn. Slow learner. Sometimes life will rewrite your expectations. Business will challenge them. Clients will test them, and you'll surprise yourself when you rise above ones you thought would break you. expectations are not the enemy. But they do need to be examined, sometimes softened, sometimes rewritten, and sometimes replaced altogether.
[00:06:44] When we do that, we create space for clarity and confidence. Again, I wanna give you some tools that you can use today. Grab a piece of paper and a cup of tea. We love this, right? I want you to name the expectation. [00:07:00] What is the expectation that you've got? Say it out loud, write it down. Most disappointment comes from unnamed expectations, so you get it out on a piece of paper.
[00:07:10] Then ask yourself, where did this come from? Is it mine or is it inherited? Is it from family? Is it from culture? Is it social norms? Is it past versions of yourself? All the things I want you to. Do a fit check to see if it fits in the season that you're in. got an expectation. Does it fit with where you are right now, energetically, your health, your responsibilities, your reality, and your capacity right now? And then I want you to redefine it using the good, better, best framework. Create some breathing space. Let success be scalable. Then I want you to see if you can match your actions to your expectations.
[00:07:56] So if you expect something big, your effort has to reflect [00:08:00] that I expected something big in thriving women, and I left nothing on the table. Alignment matters more than intensity,
[00:08:07] and then you might need to adjust your expectations as you evolve. You are not who you are five years ago, I want you then to do an expectation check in. Try saying that five times really fast. Expectation. Check in. Expectation, check in. Yeah, right, right. Before making any big decisions.
[00:08:24] So ask yourself a couple of questions. What am I expecting from myself? What am I expecting from others? And what outcome would still feel like progress because that keeps you grounded.
[00:08:37] I know sometimes expectations can hurt, but they can also guide us when we hold them with a sense of kindness. Your life may not be the way you pictured your business may not unfold the way you mapped it. Your clients may not always meet the standard that you hoped for, but expectations can be reshaped.
[00:08:59] [00:09:00] It's like butter. They can be softened. They can be updated, or they can be completely rewritten. You are allowed to grow beyond the expectations you once had for yourself. You're allowed to create new ones that match the woman you are today.
[00:09:13] If this episode has touched something in you and you know your expectations are either weighing you down or keeping you stuck, we would love to help. We can work together one-on-one. We can look at your season, we can look at your capacity. We can look at your goals. We can reshape those expectations and make sure that they lift you rather than drag you.
[00:09:34] And we build a business that fits in real life, the life that you are living now, not a life that you once imagined, or the one that you're still holding onto until next time, be so gentle with the expectations that you carry. And remember, extraordinary things can still unfold even when the path looks.
[00:09:53] Nothing like what you once expected.