We all start the day with good intentions. Then the emails arrive. The phone rings. A customer needs something. A team member has a question. A small problem becomes urgent, and before you know it, the work you planned to do never gets done.
For entrepreneurs, that’s more than frustrating. It can be dangerous. Because the most important work in a business is often the easiest work to postpone.
Today, I am joined by Mridu Parikh, founder of Life Is Organized. Mridu is a productivity coach, speaker, host of the Productivity on Purpose podcast, and author of Accomplish It: 7 Simple Actions to Get the Right Things Done and Achieve Your Goals.
She’s also a Ted X speaker (I can feel the envy running through my veins!)
She is also known as The Stress Squasher, helping busy professionals and entrepreneurs take control of their demands, distractions, and priorities so they can focus on the work that matters most.
In this conversation, we’ll talk about her entrepreneurial journey, how she built her business, and then we will get very practical.
We’ll discuss how to reset when the day goes off the rails, how to create a to-do list that actually works, how to manage distractions, and how entrepreneurs can make time for revenue-generating work without sacrificing their own well-being.
https://lifeisorganized.com
https://www.dearfoundher.com
Mridu’s Book:
Accomplish It: 7 Simple Actions to Get the Right Things Done and Achieve Your Goals
https://tinyurl.com/mv44ndh3
Mike Konrad entered the electronics manufacturing industry in 1985. Four decades later, he continues to dedicate his career to advancing reliability within the industry. In 1992, he founded Aqueous Technologies, an equipment manufacturer serving the electronics sector. Becoming an entrepreneur was never part of his plan, he simply had a passion for a product he designed. When his employer declined to build it, he realized the only way forward was to create it himself.
Mike entered business with strong technical skills but no business acumen. His early assets were ego, passion, arrogance, ignorance, and above all, a poor assessment of risk. Ironically, those traits proved useful in the beginning, ignorance really was bliss. But as his company grew, Mike recognized that those same traits could lead to its downfall. To survive, he had to transform himself, developing business acumen, adopting sustainable strategies, and evolving from reckless enthusiasm into purposeful leadership.
Today, with 40 years of industry experience, Mike shares both his technical expertise and his entrepreneurial journey, offering lessons from personal and professional growth, the near-misses that almost derailed him, and the strategies that carried him forward. He is also a strong advocate of “conscious marketing”, moving beyond traditional chest-thumping advertising toward education-driven authority building. By offering value through knowledge rather than hype, Mike helps organizations connect with a new generation of decision-makers who prefer independent research over bold claims.