If karma sounds like a spiritual side hustle to you, then you don’t realise it runs a tighter ledger than any accountant ever.
Karma in business is simply actions meeting consequences. Cut corners and it comes back with interest. Do right and it quietly compounds in your favour until one day you realise you have built something solid.
Take the manager who loved to say, “We are all family here” while underpaying staff and calling it “managing costs.” Two years later, half the family had walked out, the rest were scrolling job ads on their lunch break and Fair Work sent a letter that was not bragged about as their “achievements” of getting away with underpaying were.
Some operators think morality is optional and integrity slows you down. They chase quick wins and shady deals. For a moment it looks like they are winning. The profits stack, the growth looks unstoppable and they believe they have cracked the code. But business without integrity is a house of cards. One gust of scrutiny from regulators or authorities and the whole thing collapses.
Then there is the business that chose the better path, recognising its people and respecting its customers. Staff got credit when it was due, wins were celebrated and appreciation was never optional.
Customers received the same. No gimmicks, no loyalty schemes. Just fair prices, consistent service and the kind of personal touch that makes people feel remembered.
The result was staff who stayed and customers who passed dozens of other options just to come back.
Staff talk, clients remember and regulators eventually wake up.
Bad karma does not delay forever. When it arrives, the ending is rarely pleasant.
Good karma though sometimes takes longer. And if you have not seen it yet, then as a roughly translated line goes: “If it has not ended well, then it is not the end yet.”