There’s a version of “building a business for your kids” that means leaving them money. That’s the shallow version. The deeper version is building something they can actually respect — watching how you operate, how you treat people, how you handle the weeks when nothing’s working, and deciding that’s a model worth following.
Kids don’t learn discipline from a lecture. They learn it from watching what their father actually does when no one’s making him do it. Showing up to build something difficult, on the days it’s not fun, is worth more instruction than any conversation about hard work will ever be.
The hardest part of building multiple businesses while raising kids isn’t the hours. It’s protecting the hours that matter from the hours that don’t. Every founder has infinite low-value work available at all times — one more email, one more scroll through analytics, one more “quick call.” None of that is worth trading against actual presence with your kids. The business will absorb every hour you’re willing to give it. Decide in advance which hours it doesn’t get.
I think about the Hamilton and Rae lines a lot in this context — men who built things across genuinely brutal conditions, who named their sons after the relatives whose example mattered to them. That’s not sentimentality. That’s a family deciding, generation after generation, what’s worth continuing.
I want my sons to inherit a pattern, not just a balance sheet: build things that are true, tell the truth when it’s inconvenient, and take care of the people depending on you. Everything else is negotiable. That isn’t.
Fatherhood and entrepreneurship get treated as competing priorities. They’re not, if the business is actually built right. A business that requires you to be absent to succeed is a business built wrong. Fix the business before you accept the absence.