Sometimes a business doesn't die from bad management or a terrible product. Sometimes the world just shifts beneath your feet, and you're left holding a quarter-million dollars in debt wondering what happened.
That's where Ashley from San Francisco found herself when she called into The Ramsey Show. She used to run a consulting firm that brought in $2.5 million a year helping schools and corporations donate unused furniture and supplies to global charities. It was a solid business model until it wasn't.
When Everything Collapses at Once
"A lot of the current administration's policies have hit about every single section of my job," Ashley explained to co-hosts George Kamel and Ken Coleman. She pointed to revoked university grants, reduced school funding, and recent tariffs as the culprits behind disappearing contracts.
Coleman captured the essence: "So bottom line is that the money has dried up. What was coming in freely to pay for your consultancy services has dried up."
Ashley tried everything to keep the ship afloat. She laid off staff, slashed benefits, and restructured expenses. Then life threw another punch—her husband, who also happens to be her business partner, got seriously ill and spent two months in the hospital.
Now she's running the business solo while staring down $250,000 in debt. The breakdown is grim: $60,000 owed to a subcontractor, $90,000 in lease obligations for work vehicles, $80,000 in credit card debt, and a $5,000 monthly office lease that keeps ticking regardless of whether any money comes in.
Coleman's response was immediate and unfiltered: "Go get a job!"
Ashley mentioned she has large contracts lined up for spring and summer, but there's essentially no revenue coming in now. That's a long time to wait when you're bleeding cash.
The Reality Check Gets Real
"You built a house of cards with all of this debt that's mounted," Kamel told her. "So there's pressure."
Coleman didn't soften his message. "You have to go get some income in for you and your husband first and foremost." Kamel added that she should use her skills to do something else until those contracts materialize next year—if they materialize.
Ashley resisted the advice, particularly the suggestion to consider relocating from California with its notoriously high cost of living. "Where am I going to go?" she asked, pointing out the expense of moving and starting over somewhere new.
Coleman pushed back hard. "We're not mad at you, but we're frustrated for you. The fix here is you got to bring in some income now in the short term, or this whole thing collapses."
He also recommended she call the vendor she owes $60,000 and have an honest conversation. Explain the situation, outline a repayment plan, and give them a realistic timeline. Most people appreciate transparency over silence.
The hosts wrapped up the call with clear marching orders: pause the business, find work immediately, and only revisit entrepreneurship once her finances are back on stable ground.
"We're talking about urgency," Coleman said. "That's all we got for you."
It's a tough spot to be in—going from making millions to needing any job that will have you. But sometimes the hardest business decision is admitting when it's time to step away, even temporarily, before the debt becomes impossible to climb out of.