The ADHD Entrepreneur’s Guide to Actually Following Through
“I’ve got 47 browser tabs open right now.”
This used to be my default on a daily basis.
I’d have three tabs dedicated to different project management tools I swore would be “the one.” Two might have been half-finished sales pages. One was a focus app I opened to calm down after realizing I forgot about a Zoom call I had to be on. And the rest? Honestly, I have no idea. But I was afraid to close them because what if one of them was important?
This is the ADHD entrepreneur‘s existence.
We’re brilliant at starting things. World-class idea generators. We can see opportunities everywhere, connect dots others miss, and get so fired up about a new direction that we’ll stay up until 3am building the landing page.
And then… nothing.
The follow-through rarely comes. The course stays 80% done. The email sequence gets three emails deep and dies. The “game-changing” offer gets mentioned once on social media and then forgotten when the next shiny idea arrives.
I know this pattern intimately because I’ve lived it. And I’ve watched it destroy good businesses run by brilliant people who just couldn’t get out of their own way.
But here’s what I’ve learned after years of fighting my brain and finally figuring out how to work with it instead: You don’t have a follow-through problem. You have a systems problem.
The Friction Points That Kill Your Projects
Let me show you where neurodivergent entrepreneurs actually fall apart.
Friction Point #1: The “I’ll Remember” Delusion
You have a great idea during a client call. You’re sure you’ll remember it later. You don’t write it down because you’re in the middle of something and writing it down feels like friction.
Six hours later, it’s gone. Maybe you remember you had an idea, but the idea itself? Vanished into the ADHD void of your brain.
This is the result of working memory issues meeting the chaos of entrepreneurship. And every time it happens, you lose a little more trust in yourself. Eventually, you lose all trust in yourself, and then you’re REALLY stuck.
Friction Point #2: Context Switching Costs You Everything
You sit down to write that email sequence. But first, you need to check Slack. Oh, and there’s a notification about that ad campaign. And didn’t you need to invoice that client? Two hours later, you’ve done 24 different things, none of them the email sequence.
Neurotypical productivity advice tells you to “just focus.” Cool. Helpful. Might as well tell someone with bad eyesight to “just see better.”
The real issue? You’re trying to hold too much context in your head. According to a recent study by Cornell, every switch costs you 9.5 minutes of momentum. By the time you’re back in flow, something else pulls you away.
Friction Point #3: Perfectionism Paralysis Dressed Up as “Standards”
The project is 90% done. You just need to record that one video, write that one section, fix that one thing.
But it’s not quite right yet. So you wait for the perfect moment, the perfect energy, the perfect clarity.
Spoiler: That moment never comes.
What’s really happening? Your ADHD brain is protecting you from the discomfort of shipping something that might not be perfect. So it keeps you in the “preparing to launch” phase forever, where you’re busy but never vulnerable.
The Systems That Actually Work
Here’s what I do now. Not what I should do. What I actually do that gets things finished.
The Immediate Capture System
Every idea goes into one place immediately. Not later. Not when it’s more developed. Immediately.
I use voice memos on my phone because typing feels like friction and friction kills momentum for ADHD brains. I’ll record a 30-second ramble about the idea while I’m thinking it. Doesn’t have to be coherent. Just has to be captured by something.
Once a week, I go through the voice memos and decide: build it, save it for later, or delete it. Most get deleted. That’s fine. The point isn’t to build everything. The point is to stop losing the good ideas.
The Single-Context Rule
I only work on one project per session. Not one project while checking email. Not one project with Slack open “just in case.” One project. Everything else is closed.
This feels impossible at first. What if something urgent comes up? What if someone needs you?
That fact is, nothing is as urgent as you think. And the cost of context switching is way higher than the cost of responding to something two hours later.
I use time blocks. Mondays I have ZERO meetings. I use that day to create content. Tuesday through Thursday mornings are for building my business. Tuesday through Thursday afternoon are for client work. Monday and Wednesday afternoons are for content. Friday is for admin, cleanup, and meeting with my coach. Saturday morning is a work block for writing, followed by a maximum of two client coaching calls. If something doesn’t fit the day’s context, it waits.
This is a protection system. Protection from my own brain’s tendency to fragment my attention into uselessness.
The “Done is Better Than Perfect” Forcing Function
I ship on deadlines, not quality thresholds.
If I’m creating a lead magnet, I give myself two days. The lead magnet goes out whether it’s perfect or not. Because “perfect” is a moving target my ADHD brain will chase forever.
Here’s the forcing function: I tell my coach or a trusted friend that it’s coming. I create external accountability because internal motivation is unreliable for ADHD brains.
Does this mean I ship imperfect things? Absolutely. But imperfect and shipped beats perfect and stuck in your Google Drive every single time.
The Energy-Based Task Matching
Not all tasks require the same energy. Writing sales copy requires high focus. Scheduling social posts requires low focus.
I stopped trying to power through low-energy moments with high-focus tasks. That’s a neurotypical approach that doesn’t work for ADHD brains.
Instead, I keep a list of low-energy tasks for when I’m fried. Email cleanup. Canva graphics. Invoice follow-ups. When my brain is mush, I do mush-brain work. When I’m sharp, I protect that time fiercely for the hard stuff.
This alone has probably doubled my output because I stopped spending three hours trying to force my brain to do something it wasn’t capable of in that moment.
The Uncomfortable Truth About Follow-Through
You’re never going to follow through on everything. And you shouldn’t.
The ADHD brain is wired to explore, not execute. We’re the people who see possibilities everywhere. That’s a gift. But it becomes a curse when we treat every idea like a commitment.
Most of your ideas should die. They should die quickly, quietly, and without guilt.
The goal isn’t simply to follow through on more things. The goal is to follow through on the right things. The things that actually move your business forward. The things that serve your clients and build your freedom.
Everything else? Let it go.
What This Looks Like in Practice
Last month, I had an idea for a new offer. My brain immediately went into overdrive. I could see the sales page, the delivery method, the marketing angle, everything.
Old me would’ve spent three days building it, gotten 80% done, and abandoned it when the next idea hit.
New me? I voice-memo’d it. Sat with it for a week. Realized it was a distraction from the client work that actually pays my bills. Deleted the memo. Moved on.
That same week, I needed to finish a marketing strategy for a client. My brain didn’t want to do it. Too hard. Too much thinking. The new offer seemed way more fun.
But I had a deadline. I told the client it’d be done Friday. So I blocked Thursday morning, closed everything else, and finished it. Was it perfect? No. Did it deliver massive value and move their business forward? Absolutely.
This is what follow-through looks like for ADHD entrepreneurs. Not superhuman discipline. Just systems that work with your brain instead of against it.
Your ADHD is a Gift
The business world is built for neurotypical brains. Linear thinkers. People who can “just focus” and “just be consistent.”
If you have ADHD, that’s not you. That’s not me.
But here’s what we have that they don’t: Pattern recognition. Creative problem-solving. The ability to see connections others miss. Hyper-focus when something catches our interest.
These are superpowers. But only if you build systems that let you use them without burning out or drowning in unfinished projects.
Stop trying to follow through like a neurotypical entrepreneur. Start following through like an ADHD entrepreneur who’s figured out how to work with their brain instead of fighting it.
Your business doesn’t need you to be someone else. It needs you to be you, with systems that actually work.
Now close some of those browser tabs and go finish something.
What’s your biggest follow-through friction point? Hit reply and tell me. I read every response, and your answer might become the next article. If you suspect you’re an ADHD entrepreneur, watch this video with me and Craig Ballantyne to learn more.