In a recent episode of the EO Philadelphia Ignite & Inspire Podcast, Tina Hamilton sat down with Bernard Williams of Company Counsel LLC, a business law firm that provides legal advice and representation to small businesses and entrepreneurs in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York. Bernard shared a story that a lot of business owners will relate to, even if they work in completely different industries.
They discussed how sometimes success looks like prestige:
A high-profile career.
A respected title.
A path that makes sense on paper.
But sometimes, even after achieving all of that, something still feels off.
Before founding Company Counsel, Bernard worked in big law. He had elite credentials, worked on major cases, and built the kind of career many people spend years trying to reach.
But despite the success, he realized something important: He was operating in an environment where the goal often felt like “don’t make a mistake.”
As he described it, it felt like playing not to lose instead of playing to win.
A lot of leaders may experience versions of that feeling at different points in their careers.
Eventually, Bernard made a major shift.
He left the legal world entirely and started a tutoring and test preparation business. The idea was meaningful and purpose-driven. He wanted to help students learn and grow while building something of his own.
But the business struggled.
And ultimately, it failed.
Bernard described a place where he felt like everything he touched turned to gold, only to suddenly face the reality of building something that didn’t work.
That kind of setback changes people. But in his case, it also gave him something incredibly valuable: perspective.
For the first time, he truly understood what it felt like to be a business owner making decisions in real time without the benefit of hindsight.
And he realized something else too: Most entrepreneurs are really good at a handful of things. And not very good at several others.
What Bernard noticed during his first entrepreneurial experience eventually became the foundation for his law firm.
Small business owners constantly came to him with legal questions, not because they necessarily wanted to, but because they didn’t know where else to turn.
Legal support felt intimidating, expensive, unpredictable, and difficult to access.
So instead of simply building another law firm, Bernard started asking a different question:
What barriers are keeping people from getting the help they need?
That shift completely changed the way he built his business.
Instead of relying entirely on unpredictable hourly billing, he created flat-fee structures for common legal services so business owners could budget and plan more confidently. Instead of making legal conversations feel transactional, he built ongoing advisory relationships around quarterly goals and business strategy.
The focus wasn’t just legal work. It was helping entrepreneurs feel supported.
This lesson applies far beyond the legal industry. A lot of businesses unintentionally create friction for customers without realizing it.
Sometimes it’s pricing confusion.
Sometimes it’s complicated processes.
Sometimes it’s making people feel intimidated, judged, or uncertain about asking questions.
And when that happens, people delay getting help they probably needed earlier.
We see this in HR all the time too. Business owners wait to address people issues because they’re worried about cost, complexity, or feeling overwhelmed by compliance and regulations.
But most of the time, the earlier leaders get support, the easier problems are to solve.
That’s why the idea of removing barriers is an important part of this conversation. Businesses that build long-term trust are often the ones that make support feel approachable.
Like many entrepreneurs, Bernard was thinking about growth. But not purely through expansion or competition.
He talked about building relationships with other like-minded firms and professionals so clients can get trusted support even outside his geographic footprint.
That mindset feels especially relevant right now.
Not every business relationship has to be transactional.
Not every company has to grow by trying to dominate everyone around them.
Sometimes growth comes from collaboration, trust, and building strong networks of support.
The strongest businesses are rarely the ones trying to appear the smartest or most impressive. They’re usually the ones paying attention to where people feel stuck, frustrated, intimidated, or unsupported.
And then asking:
How can we make this easier?
Sometimes innovation isn’t inventing something entirely new.
Sometimes it’s simply removing the barriers that kept people from moving forward in the first place.
It's easy to look at a successful business and assume the path was clear. That everything lined up.
But most of the time it doesn't happen that way. Success isn't random, but it rarely looks the way you expect it to.
The full conversation offers a thoughtful, real-world look at leadership, growth, and the people decisions that shape lasting organizations.
Watch on YouTube,