You’re not lazy, your intrapreneurship mindset is just bored

📎 This post unpacks how rigid workplaces dull creative minds and how to reignite your drive through small, bold moves inside your current role.


You’re Not Lazy, You’re Bored.

natal­ie ojevah MBE

Let’s get something straight right now: you’re not the problem.

No, you’re not lazy, you’re not unmo­ti­vat­ed, and you’re def­i­nite­ly not inca­pable, you just haven’t been able to acti­vate your intrapre­neur mind­set. The result? You become deeply, pro­found­ly, sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly bored. And you’re not alone.

I’ve spo­ken to dozens of peo­ple, from recep­tion­ists to mid­dle man­agers who’ve all said the same thing in, albeit, dif­fer­ent ways:

“I used to care, but now I just show up.”

“I’m good at my job… but I’m not grow­ing.”

“I’ve got ideas, but no one lis­tens.”

And here’s the thing, they’re not wrong. What we’ve got here is an exam­ple of a sys­tem prob­lem that sup­press­es intrapre­neur­ship, not a YOU prob­lem.

Obama stans intrapreneurship

There’s a very spe­cif­ic recipe for killing intrapre­neur­ship in the work­place:

  • A dash of good ideas get­ting shut down by some­one who’s “been here longer.
  • Three spoon­ful’s of an ambi­tious team mem­ber being told to “stay in their lane.
  • Sprin­kle in some­one ques­tion­ing the norm, then labelled as “dif­fi­cult.”

Now cook at 180° for a few hours while play­ing safe, keep­ing qui­et and tick­ing box­es.

Voila, your dish is served. That spark and Eton mess ener­gy you once had? Com­plete­ly gone. Replaced by a bor­ing, beige and some­what sog­gy sand­wich aura. The kind of sand­wich you find at the cor­ner shop and you’re pret­ty sure are at least a week out of date.

Intrapreneurship doesn’t wait for permission

Now lis­ten good, and lis­ten well:
If your brain works dif­fer­ent­ly, you might be what I call a 9–5 Entre­pre­neur. Some­one who oper­ates like a founder, with­in the com­pa­ny. You look at prob­lems and instinc­tive­ly try to solve them, you clock inef­fi­cien­cies and want to fix them, you want more than a payslip, you want to make an impact.

That’s intrapre­neur­ship, and you should­n’t want to hide it, you should be shout­ing about it!

But here’s the kick­er: no one’s going to hand you a shiny badge for it. You have to cre­ate the space your­self.

Three signs you’re an Intrapreneur in hibernation

So what now? Disrupt gently, and wake yourself up!

Here’s what I want YOU to try this month:

💥 1. Start a ‘Bore­dom Audit’

List every task you do that makes your brain melt. Now ask your­self: how would you improve it if you were the boss?

🧠 2. Pitch One Inter­nal Idea

Pick one small win: an email tem­plate, an onboard­ing tweak, an event idea and pro­pose it to your man­ag­er. Keep it sim­ple. It’s not about being ground­break­ing. It’s about being seen.

🗣️ 3. Ask This Ques­tion in Your Next 1:1

“What’s one thing you’d love to fix in this depart­ment if you had the time?”

Why? Because it opens doors. It shows you’re ready to solve prob­lems, not just sur­vive them.


A few final thoughts

You don’t need a new job, and you don’t need a full-blown busi­ness (yet). You don’t even need a pro­mo­tion.

What you need is to reclaim your fire and use it, smart­ly, inside the sys­tem you’re already in. Because the truth is: your bore­dom might be bril­liance, bad­ly man­aged.

Read­ing Time: 3 min­utes

Tar­get: UK employ­ees in cor­po­rate or pub­lic sec­tor jobs ques­tion­ing their pas­sion, pur­pose, or ener­gy at work

Theme: Unlock­ing hid­den intrapre­neur­ial poten­tial

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