Tablet displaying the Boundary Reset Scorecard on a clean desk with a laptop and a cup of coffee, representing a calm, intentional check-in for service providers to review boundaries and time use.
Created by Shannon Baker, Business Operations Strategist helping service providers build calm, intentional support behind the scenes.

You weren't supposed to become the system.

 

Take the Boundary Reset Scorecard and discover where your business depends on you more than it should.

Here's what the Boundary Reset Scorecard helps you discover:

Most business owners don’t intentionally create “Open Access”. It happens one client exception, one accommodation, and one “I’ll just handle it myself” decision at a time. Before long, your business starts depending on you more than it should.

The Boundary Reset Scorecard helps you identify where that’s happening so you can create more breathing room without sacrificing great service.

Once completed, you’ll have a clearer picture of where your time, attention, and energy are being pulled by default and where a few small shifts can create meaningful relief.

What you’ll notice after completing the Boundary Reset Scorecard

You weren’t supposed to become the system.

The Boundary Reset Scorecard helps you identify the places where your business depends on you more than it should, so you can create more breathing room without making sweeping changes.

You’ll gain clarity around where availability has expanded, where expectations need guardrails, and which small adjustment can help your business support you instead of relying on you for everything.

Most business owners don't realize they've become the system.

How does this happen? It rarely happens all at once. It happens one client exception, one accommodation, and one “I’ll just handle it myself” decision at a time.

Over time, availability expands. Expectations shift. More decisions flow through you. And before you realize it, your business depends on you for far more than it should.

The Boundary Reset Scorecard helps you spot those patterns.

Instead of guessing what’s creating the pressure, you’ll identify where access has expanded, where expectations need guardrails, and where small changes can create meaningful breathing room.

You don’t need to overhaul your business. You just need to see where your business is quietly relying on you more than necessary.

That’s often where the biggest opportunities for relief begin.