BY PILOTADVISORS | DECEMBER 07, 2025
When Andrew Bielat was 12, his parents had already built a strong work ethic in him through simple yard chores they always praised. Like most kids, he enjoyed the approval — but he quickly realized money was even better. So he created “Wanted: Odd Jobs” flyers, printed 100 copies for a dollar, and posted them around the neighborhood at the 1970s equivalent of $1.10 an hour. The phone started ringing immediately. Neighbors wanted fences painted, weeds burned, lawns de-thatched — tasks that looked quick from a 12-year-old’s perspective but turned out to be endless, hot, and exhausting.
Andrew soon faced a classic founder dilemma: the business worked too well. He was booked solid yet hated spending entire Saturdays working when he wanted to play baseball. Trading time for money at minimum wage was profitable but not sustainable for a kid who valued freedom. Instead of quitting or burning out, he made the pivotal entrepreneurial leap — he recruited his friends to do the jobs while he coordinated and kept a margin. Overnight, odd jobs became a real business with employees, delegation, and leverage. He has run his own company ever since. Most corporate leaders believe scale starts with capital or technology. This story reveals it actually begins with the refusal to stay stuck trading hours for dollars — a constraint many middle-market companies still face today.
What would change if your organization recruited and delegated the same way a 12-year-old did to reclaim his weekends?
Andrew shares how childhood chores led to his first business at age 12: printing flyers, landing more odd jobs than he could handle, then solving the overload by recruiting friends to do the work while he managed everything. The highest-leverage insight is simple but profound — sustainable growth requires moving from doing the work yourself to building a system where others do the work under your direction, exactly the same shift privately held companies must make to break through plateaus.
“I realized I wanted to go home for lunch. I didn’t want to do all this work… So I turned it into a business. I got a hold of my friends and asked them to come start doing some of these jobs for me instead. Ever since I’ve had my own business.” Leaders miss that “busy” does not equal “scalable” — trading personal hours for revenue caps growth from day one The real constraint is rarely demand; it is the founder’s (or leadership team’s) willingness to let go of execution Delegating early — even at age 12 — created immediate leverage and freed capacity to sell and manage instead of labor Outcome: one boy’s side hustle became a 40+ year run of continuous company ownership with compounding freedom Directly applies to any $5–$50 M services, construction, or field-operations business still reliant on owner hours Where in your operation are your highest-paid people still doing minimum-wage thinking tasks because “no one else can do them right”? Ask Grok
“I realized I wanted to go home for lunch. I didn’t want to do all this work… So I turned it into a business. I got a hold of my friends and asked them to come start doing some of these jobs for me instead. Ever since I’ve had my own business.”
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BY PILOTADVISORS syndicated: DECEMBER 07, 2025 last updated: DECEMBER 07, 2025