“We Do Everything” Is Quietly Killing Your Business
Almost every founder says it at some point: “We do a little bit of everything.” And it’s usually true.
You’ve built your business by being flexible, capable, and willing to figure things out. You’ve said yes to opportunities, expanded your services, and learned as you’ve gone. That’s how most businesses grow.
But over time, the thing that helped you grow starts to work against you.
What people hear (even if it’s not what you mean)
When you say “we do everything,” you might mean you’re experienced, adaptable, and able to handle a range of needs. But what a potential client often hears is something else: they’re not sure what you’re actually best at, they don’t know if this is the right fit, and they’ll have to do more work to figure it out.
Most people won’t. They’ll move on to the option that feels clearer.
The real problem isn’t your services
Doing multiple things isn’t the issue. The issue is trying to communicate them all equally.
When everything is emphasized, nothing stands out. When everything is included, nothing feels specific. Clarity doesn’t come from listing more; it comes from deciding what leads.
It’s similar to a restaurant with an oversized menu. If a place serves pasta, sushi, burgers, and tacos, you start to question what they’re actually good at. You might assume they do a lot, but none of it exceptionally well. If you want to be known for great food, you don’t build a menu that covers everything—you highlight what you do best.
The same is true for your business. You can offer a range of services, but if everything is presented equally, it becomes harder for someone to understand what you’re best at and why they should choose you.
What this actually looks like in practice
This is where it tends to break down.
Before:
“We offer branding, logo design, website design, marketing strategy, consulting, and more for businesses of all sizes.”
After:
“We help small businesses clarify their brand so their marketing actually works.”
It’s the same business with the same capabilities, but the second version gives someone something to recognize themselves in. It’s easier to understand, easier to remember, and easier to refer.
A simple way to shift this
Instead of asking how to explain everything you do, ask what the core idea is that connects it.
If you couldn’t list your services, how would you describe your business?
That answer is usually the beginning of your positioning.
Why this matters more than you think
When your positioning is clear, everything else gets easier. People understand what you do faster, the right clients recognize themselves, and referrals become more natural. You spend less time explaining and more time doing the work.
Just as important, you start making better decisions about what to say yes to.
What this doesn’t mean
This doesn’t mean you have to narrow your services overnight or turn away good work. It means choosing a clear way to frame what you do so people can understand it without effort.
You can still do multiple things. Your brand just needs to make sense of them.
Where this leads
When you stop trying to say everything, something clearer starts to emerge. Your messaging gets simpler, your website becomes easier to navigate, and your business starts to feel more focused—even if what you offer hasn’t changed.
If you’re recognizing your business in this, this is exactly the kind of work I do in a Brand Clarity Workshop—defining the through-line so everything else has something solid to build on. Schedule a call with Jenn to see how we can help.