Startup families: You’re not perfect
September 24, 2015 | Startland News Staff
I’m not perfect. At being a father or running a startup.
I’m 33 with two kids ages 7 and 5. I remember when they were younger. I would work until 3 a.m. on something I thought was extremely valuable at the time. My daughter would wake me up at 7 a.m., tugging on the sheets, “Daddy, get up.” Scrambling out the door, many times with their clothes on backwards, I’d throw some cereal in a red plastic cup with milk and a spoon for them to scarf down in the car.
Every morning was near chaos, only to arrive at school five minutes late, my two kids crying in the backseat, “Daddy, we can’t be late again!” Getting back in the car, I’d breathe, relieved to have survived the morning. But totally depressed and guilty for missing another moment in their lives. Rinse and repeat each morning and you have my children’s childhood.
We are all procreators. We strive to create things that outlive us and to scale ourselves. As parents and entrepreneurs, we have a double bottom line. How do we scale a business to make money? And how do we scale ourselves through our kids?
I remember one Christmas Santa brought our kids one of those building sets with a million small tiny pieces. Sometimes I think people like to torture us by giving gifts that stay embedded in every piece of furniture and tuft of carpet for eternity.
The kids fought over the pieces as they tried to create this replica elementary school building that was well beyond the age of difficulty. At every turn, my son would smash what my daughter built. Then my daughter would retaliate, stealing a piece from her brother. Tears ensued. Then timeout. And then the pieces would be packed up, only to be brought out days later, still half built with pieces missing.
Thinking back, this present was a perfect metaphor for our bottom line as fathers and entrepreneurs. We constantly switch our attention between the building blocks important to our children’s lives and to our livelihood — often leaving both half built.
Building a startup is hard. Building a startup and a family is even harder.
So, what’s my advice to you? Sadly, if there was an easy answer, we’d all have successful startups and families nestled in perfect houses with white picket fences.
If you’re a startup parent, go give your kids a hug today. If you know a startup dad or mom, go give him or her a hug. And give the advice a good friend once told me. You’re not perfect. You’ll never be. And it’s OK.
Stop building all the time, put the pieces down and enjoy the moment once in a while. Your kids and co-founders will remember that moment far more than the building you’re trying to erect.
Jon Kohrs works in user experience design in public policy and infrastructure sectors. Once a band geek, twice a father and forever a Wildcat, Kohrs was farm-raised in rural Kansas and is now rooted in Kansas City.

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Readers dub Kansas City’s top spots for coffee meetings
“Let’s grab coffee.” It’s a universal phrase in the world of business that can lead to friendship, a deal or even a new company. And with coffee serving as a global binding agent for businesspeople, Startland News wanted to figure out where Kansas Citians are most likely to convene to catch up. We surveyed more…
Report: Kansas City is the 8th-worst metro for entrepreneur diversity
It’s a dreary day for Kansas City in terms of successfully supporting a diverse entrepreneurial community. The City of Fountains is far below the national average — and the majority of the most-populated metros — when it comes to minority business ownership, according to the United States Census Bureau. The bureau on Thursday unveiled the…
With traction in tow, Super Dispatch is a model ‘lean startup’
Super Dispatch began like every tech startup: with a good idea. But as founder Bek Abdullayev will tell you, it takes more than that to be successful. In 2013, Abdullayev founded Super Dispatch, a software-as-a-service platform for the trucking industry intended to eliminate paperwork. Super Dispatch streamlines the communication of documents between truckers and their…
Pipeline Entrepreneurs accepting applicants for 2017 fellowship
Ahead of its first adventure abroad, Pipeline Entrepreneurs is accepting applications for its fellowship program that not only affords entrepreneurial education but also a network of powerful business leaders. The 2017 class will mark the organization’s 11th-annual program in which Pipeline accepts at least 10 entrepreneurs from the around the region to participate in a…

