⚡ Quick Summary

Clinging to your current identity is the hidden reason most entrepreneurs stay stuck. Real change starts with behavior — not motivation or mindset shifts. Do the new thing before you feel ready, repeat it for 90 days, and your self-image will update to match. I've watched this work for clients across Dubai: act first, transform second.

🎯 Key Takeaways

  • Your current identity is a collection of past decisions u2014 not a permanent personality trait. It can be updated.
  • Behavior change comes before identity change: act first, and let your self-image catch up to the evidence.
  • The 90-day rule: consistent new behavior for 90 days is enough to shift how you see yourself, not just what you do.
  • Comfort is not a virtue in business u2014 in fast-moving markets like Dubai real estate or AI tools, comfortable means falling behind.
  • Don't try to change everything at once. Identify one limiting belief, attack it with a single repeated action, and build from there.
  • Changing yourself is not losing yourself u2014 it's upgrading your capabilities while keeping your core values intact.
  • The entrepreneurs I see winning with AI and GoHighLevel are not the most talented u2014 they're the ones who stopped protecting who they used to be.

🔍 In-Depth Guide

Why 'Being Yourself' Can Be the Biggest Trap in Business

There's a version of 'be yourself' advice that sounds inspiring and holds you back at the same time. If your current self procrastinates, avoids learning new tools, and justifies staying small u2014 being that self is not a virtue, it's a liability. I work with business owners across Dubai who are brilliant at what they do, but they've made their identity inseparable from their current methods. One real estate trainer I coached refused to try AI-generated marketing content because 'that's not how I've always done it.' Six months later, his competitor u2014 using the exact tools I teach u2014 was closing twice the leads with half the effort. Your identity should serve your goals, not protect your comfort zone. Ask yourself: is the version of me I'm protecting still earning its place?

The Practical Process for Changing Who You Are (Not Just What You Do)

Real change happens in layers, not overnight flips. The first layer is behavior u2014 you do something new before you feel ready. I tell my course students this constantly: don't wait until you feel confident with GoHighLevel or ChatGPT. Build one workflow, break it, fix it, repeat. That process rewires how you see yourself. The second layer is environment u2014 surround yourself with people already doing what you want to do. I deliberately joined AI-focused communities when I was transitioning my business model, not because I had answers, but because I needed new questions around me. The third layer is identity u2014 after enough repetitions, you stop saying 'I'm trying to be someone who uses AI' and you just say 'I use AI.' Give yourself 90 days of consistent new behavior and watch the internal story shift without forcing it.

What to Actually Change First u2014 A Practical Starting Point

Most people try to change everything at once and change nothing permanently. My recommendation: pick one belief that's limiting your results and attack it directly with action. If you believe you're 'not a tech person,' spend 30 minutes this week building your first AI prompt inside ChatGPT or your first automation in GoHighLevel u2014 even a broken one. That single act contradicts the belief with evidence. In my training sessions, I've watched people who called themselves 'non-technical' build functional lead nurture sequences in under two hours. They didn't change their brain first u2014 they took action and the brain updated to match. Start with the smallest possible version of the new behavior. Don't redesign your whole identity. Just give yourself one piece of proof today that the new version of you is already real.

📚 Article Summary

Most people fail at change not because they lack willpower — they fail because they’re protecting a version of themselves that no longer serves them. I see this every week training entrepreneurs in Dubai. They come to me wanting to automate their business with AI, but the moment things get uncomfortable, they retreat to what’s familiar. Old habits. Old excuses. Old identity.Here’s what nobody tells you: your current self is not a fixed thing. It’s a collection of decisions you made in the past — and most of those decisions were made with less information than you have right now. When I started shifting from traditional real estate marketing to AI-driven workflows for my clients, I had to stop being the person who did everything manually. That version of me was comfortable. He was also getting left behind.Change isn’t about becoming someone else entirely. It’s about making deliberate upgrades to how you think, act, and respond — the same way software gets updated. You don’t throw out the whole system. You patch what’s broken and install what’s better. I’ve seen clients go from running 10 hours of manual follow-up per week to under 2 hours after implementing GoHighLevel automation — but only after they let go of the belief that ‘personal touch’ meant doing everything themselves.The real danger is staying comfortable. Comfort is the slowest way to fall behind. In real estate marketing here in Dubai, the agents who resisted digital tools in 2020 are struggling to compete in 2025. Not because the market punished them — but because they refused to change when the window was open. Change on your terms, before circumstances force it on theirs.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Change starts with behavior, not feelings. Pick one specific habit or skill that represents who you want to become, and do a small version of it daily for 30 days before you feel ready. Research from habit formation studies suggests 66 days is the average to form an automatic behavior. In my experience coaching entrepreneurs, the ones who change fastest don't wait for motivation u2014 they act first and let the confidence follow. Use a tool, take a course, run an experiment. Evidence changes belief faster than inspiration.
Because your brain treats identity as a survival mechanism. Changing who you are feels like a threat, even when staying the same is the actual risk. Psychologists call this 'identity-protective cognition' u2014 you unconsciously reject information that contradicts your self-image. The fix is to make the new behavior low-stakes and repetitive. I've seen business owners in Dubai resist AI tools for months, then adopt them in two weeks once they reframed it as 'testing' rather than 'changing who I am.' Lower the emotional stakes and raise the experimentation rate.
It depends on which version of yourself you're talking about. Your core values u2014 no, don't change those. But your habits, skill set, daily routines, and the story you tell about what you're capable of? Those are absolutely worth changing. Sawan Kumar's point in this video is that clinging to your current identity out of comfort is not authenticity u2014 it's stagnation dressed up as self-respect. The most successful people I work with have updated their identity multiple times based on what the market and their goals require.
Meaningful behavioral change typically takes 60u201390 days of consistent practice before it feels natural. Identity-level change u2014 where you no longer have to convince yourself to do the new behavior u2014 takes 6 to 12 months of evidence accumulation. In business contexts, I advise clients to measure change by output, not feelings: if you're running workflows you couldn't three months ago, you've changed. Waiting to 'feel different' before acting is the wrong sequence. Act first, feel different later.
Losing yourself means abandoning your values to please others. Changing yourself means deliberately upgrading your capabilities and mindset to match your goals. One is reactive and external, the other is proactive and internal. A real estate agent who learns AI-driven marketing hasn't lost their expertise u2014 they've amplified it with better tools. I always tell my clients: the goal is not to become a different person, it's to become a more capable version of the same person.
Yes u2014 and honestly, you should build your change strategy as if you'll have zero motivation, because most days you won't. Systems beat willpower every time. Schedule the new behavior like an appointment. Remove friction from doing it (set up the tool in advance, block the time, join an accountability group). In my GoHighLevel courses, students who succeed are rarely the most motivated on day one u2014 they're the ones who built the smallest daily habit they could actually stick to, like spending 15 minutes on one new automation per day.
Sawan Kumar

Written by

Sawan Kumar

I'm Sawan Kumar — I started my journey as a Chartered Accountant and evolved into a Techpreneur, Coach, and creator of the MADE EASY™ Framework.

Free Mini-Course

Want to master AI & Business Automation?

Get free access to step-by-step video lessons from Sawan Kumar. Join 55,000+ students already learning.

Start Free Course →

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here