Mumtrepreneurs’ Advice To New Moms Starting Businesses

Juggling motherhood and business is no easy feat, yet an increasing number of mums are proving that it鈥檚 possible to thrive in both. From start-ups born during maternity leave to established brands led by inspiring mothers, the world of mumtrepreneurship is growing fast.

Not only is it growing, but these women are kicking ass and taking names. Launching and running multi-million (and聽产颈濒濒颈辞苍)听dollar businesses, these moms are innovating and thriving in the business world.

But, it’s not easy –聽 so,聽how do these women do it?

We spoke to successful mumtrepreneurs who share their journeys, struggles and the invaluable lessons they’ve learned along the way. Whether you鈥檙e a new mum considering a business venture or already managing the delicate balance of parenting and entrepreneurship, their insights will help you navigate the challenges and seize the opportunities ahead.

From time management hacks to mindset shifts and practical business tips, these women offer real advice for making it work – without the mom guilt. Because being a great mum and a successful entrepreneur aren鈥檛 mutually exclusive. Here鈥檚 what they wish they knew when they started.

 

Our Experts

 

  • Leona Burton: Founder of MIB International and CMO of ZZATEEM
  • Sarah Abel:聽Director at TNB Skills Training
  • Liv Conlon: CEO of The Property Stagers
  • Chandra Holt: Founder and CEO of Incredibrew
  • Emily van Eyssen: Founder at Remote Recruitment
  • Yi Lou: CEO and Founder of Eunice AI
  • Claire Ayles: Co-Founder at Eleven Hundred Agency
  • Francesca O鈥機onnor: Founder of Litmus

 

Leona Burton,聽Founder of MIB International and CMO of ZZATEEM

 

Leona-Burton

 

I wish I鈥檇 known that success doesn鈥檛 have to mean being switched on 24/7. You can build a thriving business while being present for your children, but only if you stop trying to be everything to everyone. Let go of the guilt, accept the chaos some days will bring, and ask for help when you need it, that鈥檚 a BIG one.聽聽One of the greatest lessons I鈥檝e learned is that you don鈥檛 have to do it all alone.

That idea that successful women are somehow superhuman is a myth. What they often have is support and community and for me that鈥檚 the piece that changed everything and could be what helps you the most as well.

When you鈥檙e starting out, invest in building your network, even before you build your brand. Show up in the Zoom room, at the coffee chat and at drinks, but not to pitch yourself, but to connect. Some of my best business opportunities and lifelong friendships have come from the most unexpected conversations and I know that you never know who鈥檚 watching, listening, or ready to cheer you on.

You don鈥檛 have to be the loudest or the most polished, just be open, be real, and be willing to take up space and that鈥檚 more than enough.聽I started Mums in Business International because no mum, or woman, should feel like she鈥檚 building her dream on her own. There鈥檚 power in women lifting each other up, and there鈥檚 a place for everyone at the table.鈥

 

Sarah Abel, Director at TNB Skills Training

 

sarah-abel

 

This is something I wish I had known when I first started out – you CAN build an incredible business, without burning out!

Asking for help is not a weakness. It鈥檚 being smart and it鈥檚 also essential, so make sure you invest in good mentors. Build systems in your business and trust your gut. Importantly, don鈥檛 try to do it all alone.

Whatever your business, there is funding out there to support your vision – so make sure you use it! If you don’t know how, find someone who can help.

Balance isn鈥檛 about doing everything perfectly, it鈥檚 about setting priorities that align with your values and sticking to them no matter what.

You鈥檙e not just building a business, you鈥檙e creating a legacy for your family.

Believe in yourself, even on the hard days. You鈥檝e got more power than you think.

Last, but not least – failures are just learnings. The most successful business owners have failed more than won but remember to also celebrate your wins.

 

Liv Conlon,聽CEO of The Property Stagers

 

liv-conlon

 

“There is a lot of fear mongering that you鈥檒l be less driven in business and career-wise when you become a mum, however, it wasn鈥檛 the case for me.

Yes, my priorities shifted, but I think in a good way, I prioritised my son over work, but it made me even more productive during the time I did have, and the biggest reason why you can possibly have.

Mums need to know that starting a business won鈥檛 be easy with children, but it will give you another deep purpose which I believe enriches your time with your children and gives you another empowering identity.”

 

Chandra Holt,聽Founder and CEO of Incredibrew

 

chandra-holt

 

“As a founder, you quickly learn that every day brings a new challenge鈥攁nd a new hat to wear. No one hands you the roadmap; you have to build it yourself. There were moments I wished for a crystal ball, but the reality is, entrepreneurship is about resilience, adaptability, and pushing forward even when the next step isn鈥檛 clear. The hard days come, but so do the wins鈥攁nd at the end of the day, there鈥檚 nothing more rewarding than building something that鈥檚 truly yours.

Moms are natural entrepreneurs. We鈥檙e expert multi-taskers, problem solvers, and strategic thinkers鈥攚e juggle schedules, manage chaos, and keep everything moving forward. That鈥檚 exactly what building a business requires. My advice? Embrace the long game. Success doesn鈥檛 happen overnight, but the persistence and patience that motherhood teaches you will serve you well. Start small, stay consistent, and trust that every step forward is building something bigger.”

 

Emily van Eyssen, Founder at Remote Recruitment

 

emily-eyssen

 

“In the beginning, I thought I had to handle everything – business strategy, marketing, and family life – but the real growth happened when I learned to delegate. By building a team I could trust and outsourcing wisely, my workload started to ease. Letting go of control was tough, but it was necessary for my business to thrive.

For any mums out there launching a business: don鈥檛 wait until you feel totally ready. There will never be a 鈥榩erfect鈥 moment. And don鈥檛 underestimate the power of structure, because having clear processes in place can really take the pressure off and help balance family commitments.

Empathy isn鈥檛 a weakness. Leading an all-woman remote team has shown me that kindness is a huge driver of success. Being empathetic and being sharp can work together. Surround yourself with positive, supportive people, whether that鈥檚 mentors or a strong team. They鈥檒l help carry you through the tough times.

Flexibility is one of your greatest strengths. When you build a business that reflects your values, not just someone else鈥檚 model, you set yourself up for success in both work and life. Make your path your own.”

 

Yi Lou,聽CEO and Founder of Eunice AI

 

yi-lou

 

“I鈥檝e always felt that if we鈥檙e going to talk about ‘mumpreneurs’, we should be equally comfortable running features on ‘dadpreneurs’. The real conversation is about parenting while building a company – not just motherhood.”When I began fundraising for my startup just four months after my daughter was born, the harder question wasn鈥檛 鈥渉ow did I do it?鈥 – it was how my husband managed a lot without me. Honestly, I found those early months a gift in some ways: long hours breastfeeding gave me unexpected time to think deeply, while my partner and our nanny took on the heavy lifting. I know a unicorn founder who raised her seed round while pregnant and closed her Series A while breastfeeding. It鈥檚 not just about whether the mom is ready – it鈥檚 even more about whether the dad or the support system is.

Being a founder is hard. Being a parent is hard. Doing both forces you to become ruthlessly efficient, focused, and deeply pragmatic – and that鈥檚 not a liability but an edge. We rarely ask high-achieving fathers how they manage. We shouldn鈥檛 ask that of mothers either – at least not with a tone of surprise.”

Claire Ayles, Co-Founder, Eleven Hundred Agency

 

claire-ayles

 

“Starting my PR agency when my children were 10 and 13聽taught me that timing is everything. There鈥檚 never a 鈥榩erfect鈥 moment to launch a business as a mother, but having kids who were a little more independent gave me the flexibility I needed.
Those early years were a balancing act, but with slightly older children, they could better understand my work commitments. Kids pick up on more than we realise, and I found that involving my daughters in age-appropriate conversations about my business helped them feel included rather than in competition with my work.
The guilt of missing certain moments is inevitable, but having a true parenting partner in my husband has made all the difference. At the same time, my daughters have learned valuable lessons about independence. I was both surprised and moved when my youngest daughter’s teacher told me she had chosen me as the woman she most admired for International Women鈥檚 Day.
Building a business while raising a family is undoubtedly challenging, but with a strong support system and a balanced approach, you don’t have to give up one for the other 鈥 both can thrive.”

 

Francesca O鈥機onnor, Founder of Litmus

 

francesca-oconnor

 

“When I left agency life after having two kids, I didn鈥檛 leap, I crawled. Slowly. Out of burnout. Out of the mental load. Out of meetings that should鈥檝e been emails. I wish I鈥檇 known that starting a business isn鈥檛 an escape plan. It鈥檚 a recalibration. You don鈥檛 get balance handed to you on a plate, you have to build it, day by day, in a way that actually works for your real life.Here鈥檚 what I鈥檝e learned:

Burnout doesn鈥檛 magically disappear when you鈥檙e your own boss. You can still overload yourself, only now you鈥檙e the one writing the to-do list. You also get to edit it. Protect your energy. Be honest about what drains you and what fuels you. That goes for people too – pay attention to the energy you鈥檙e drawn to and the kind that quietly depletes you. When you find the right community, one that really gets you and lifts you up, it can be rocket fuel. But be selective. Not every room is your room.

Treat your business like a business, and it will treat you like one. If you treat it like a hobby, it鈥檒l cost you like one. I learned this the hard way. In the early days, I squeezed my work into the leftover crumbs of time, and hadn鈥檛 quite worked out how to be productive with my time. Things shifted when I started honouring my business with proper time, structure, and space. Respect your work. Even if it鈥檚 just you at the kitchen table, act like the CEO.

Understand your rhythms. One of the most game-changing things I did was get brutally honest about when I work best, and when I don鈥檛. I鈥檓 no good for deep thinking after 8pm. And barely after 3pm some days! Now I work with my energy, not against it. Real productivity isn鈥檛 about doing more – it鈥檚 about doing the right thing at the right time. Discipline actually feels really good when you get it right. There鈥檚 confidence in knowing you鈥檝e built a system that works for you, not some Instagram version of a 鈥渂oss mum.

You don鈥檛 need to be 鈥渙n鈥 all the time. One of the most surprising things was how powerful it is to build a business that actually looks and feels like you. Not polished, perfect, filtered you – but real, passionate, slightly frazzled, fully committed you. That鈥檚 what draws people in. Authenticity isn’t just a buzzword, it鈥檚 a strategy. Your mess can be magnetic if it鈥檚 shared with honesty and purpose.

Ask for help. Sooner than feels comfortable. You don鈥檛 get extra points for doing it all. Hire the virtual assistant. Say yes when someone offers to watch the kids. Outsource the stuff that drains you, if you can. Get a coach or mentor who鈥檚 walked this road before. The faster you stop doing everything yourself, the faster you can focus on what only you can do.

Motherhood has secretly been your training ground. No one gets shit done better than a working mum. Motherhood builds a kind of resilience, clarity and focus. You make decisions faster. You don鈥檛 have time to overthink. You know how to prioritise under pressure. These aren鈥檛 just soft skills, they鈥檙e serious leadership assets.

And finally – don鈥檛 wait until it鈥檚 perfect. Start with what you鈥檝e got. My year one strategy was experiment and collaborate, which I was laser focussed with and it gave me space for things to not be perfect.”