Break through barriers

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By Nelson Semanu BOANDOH-KORKOR & Elizabeth BOANDOH-KORKOR

“Life is a series of problem-solving opportunities. The problems you face will either defeat you or develop you depending on how you respond to them. (Rick Warren)

In the world of business, as in life, obstacles are inevitable. Sometimes the doors are too crowded, the path too blocked, the market too saturated. But when you believe in your mission, you don’t stop at the first roadblock. You find a way in—even if it means going through the roof.

There’s a story tucked into Mark 2:1–12 that every marketer, entrepreneur and problem-solver should study. It’s about four men who carried their paralysed friend to see Jesus. When they arrived, the house was packed. No one would make room. So, they did something extraordinary: they climbed up, tore open the roof, and lowered the man down.

It’s one of the boldest acts of faith and ingenuity in the New Testament. And it’s a textbook example of creative problem-solving—something every modern business must master if they want to break through crowded markets and indifferent audiences. Obstacles are often opportunities wearing work clothes. These four men saw a closed door, and instead of waiting for it to open, they built a new entrance.

That’s what great marketers do. Jesus had returned to Capernaum, and the word spread quickly. People flooded into the house where He was teaching, so much so that not even the doorway was accessible. The crowd wasn’t hostile—they were hungry to hear Him—but their presence formed a human wall. Now imagine being one of the four friends. You’ve carried a full-grown man across town, sweating and straining, only to find there’s no way in. Most people would’ve called it a day. But these friends had something stronger than fatigue: they had vision and persistence. They looked up—literally—and tore a hole in the roof.

This act of faith and creativity did two things:

  1. It got attention
  2. It got results

And that’s the dual goal of every great marketing campaign.

Creativity is a biblical mandate

Many Christians mistakenly believe that creativity belongs to the world of entertainment, not entrepreneurship. But the Bible opens with a Creator who formed beauty from chaos. When God made man in His image, He made us imaginative, adaptive and capable of solving problems.

Those four friends weren’t just determined—they were creative. They took inventory of the situation: crowded house, no entry, limited time. Instead of waiting for perfect conditions, they worked with what they had: hands, rope, a stretcher and a roof. In modern terms, they pivoted their strategy. And it paid off. The paralysis that held their friend down was no match for their creativity and faith.

The marketing parallel – Barriers in the business world

Most entrepreneurs hit the same wall these friends did—figuratively. The market is crowded. The attention span of the average consumer is short. According to a Microsoft study, it’s now just 8 seconds—shorter than a goldfish. Traditional marketing channels—email, social media, paid ads—are packed with voices shouting to be heard. Your audience may not be hostile, but they’re overwhelmed. And when your product, message or service can’t reach them through the door, what do you do? You stop asking if there’s a way in. You start asking where the roof is.

What breaking the roof looks like today

Some of the most successful businesses in recent years have been led by “roof breakers”—people who approached a tired model with fresh vision.

  • Red Bull didn’t just sell energy drinks. They redefined energy itself—through extreme sports, skydiving events and the now-famous Stratos space jump. They didn’t shout louder at the door of soda advertising. They climbed up and rewrote the rules of branding.
  • Zoom, in the thick of the 2020 pandemic, broke through the saturated video-conferencing market by focusing on simplicity and reliability. While other tools had been around for years, Zoom’s laser-focus on user experience made it the platform of choice. Daily meeting participants skyrocketed from 10 million in December 2019 to over 300 million by April 2020.
  • Even Chick-fil-A, a fast-food chain in a crowded field, decided to close on Sundays—breaking an unspoken “rule” in retail. The result? More loyalty. More clarity. And more per-store revenue than any other fast-food chain in the country.

These businesses didn’t wait at the door. They found the roof.

Obstacles as creative catalysts

I happen to believe strongly in constraints. I often tell people that limitations, when handled with prayer and vision, are not to be feared but embraced. He once told a story of a business owner who couldn’t afford a traditional radio campaign. Instead, he handwrote letters to local churches offering his services. The result was a tight-knit, loyal customer base that grew through referrals, far more powerful than a thirty-second ad. The point? Creativity often blooms under pressure.

That’s exactly what we see in the story of the four friends. Limited space. No access. Urgent need. And out of that came one of the most unforgettable acts of compassion in the Gospels. In business, constraints should be seen not as barriers, but as filters for innovation. One of the overlooked elements of this story is teamwork. The paralysed man couldn’t have gotten to Jesus on his own. It took four friends, working together, not only to carry him—but to coordinate the logistics of lifting him, breaking through and lowering him gently.

Too many entrepreneurs fall into the lone wolf trap. They try to carry everything on their own shoulders—marketing, product development, customer service, accounting. But most breakthroughs are not solo events. They are the fruit of collaboration.

In Jim Collins’ best-selling book Good to Great, he emphasises the importance of having the right people on the “bus”. But more than that, the best teams are those who can solve problems together under pressure. In the tech world, this is why so many start-ups thrive on cross-functional teams—people from marketing, engineering and design working together. The problem isn’t solved in a single department—it’s solved through a collective climb to the roof.

Disrupting with purpose, not chaos

One might think that tearing through a roof is disrespectful or chaotic. But in this case, it wasn’t destructive—it was redemptive. Jesus didn’t rebuke them. He honoured their faith. This is a critical distinction in business. Disruption for disruption’s sake doesn’t help anyone. But disruption rooted in purpose—in solving a real problem for real people—is always welcome.

Apple didn’t create the first smartphone. But it created the first one that felt intuitive, beautiful and empowering. It wasn’t just new—it was useful. Too many entrepreneurs fall in love with novelty instead of necessity. The four friends weren’t trying to show off—they were solving a life-or-death issue. That’s why their bold move was honoured.

Faith-fuelled risk

Breaking through the roof wasn’t safe. What if the owner protested? What if they dropped the man? What if Jesus didn’t heal him? But faith pushed them past “what if” into “what now?” We  frequently counsel business leaders to pray over every financial decision—not in fear, but in faith. “There are no risk-free ventures,” he’d say, “but there are faith-filled ones.” These four friends remind us that faith is not the absence of risk. It is the presence of trust.

Marketers who want to stand out must take bold steps. Launch the podcast. Pitch the idea no one has tried. Invest in storytelling when others are buying clicks. Your “roof moment” may be scary. But it could be the very act that opens the heavens.

The result: Healing and awe

When Jesus saw what they did, He first addressed the man’s spiritual need: “Son, your sins are forgiven.” Then, after a confrontation with the sceptics, He told the man to rise and walk. And he did. But the story doesn’t end there. Scripture says that the crowd was amazed and glorified God, saying: “We’ve never seen anything like this!” That’s the result of creative, compassionate problem-solving: not only is the customer changed—but the whole room is, too. Great marketing doesn’t just sell. It inspires.

Practical applications for today’s marketers

If you’re a business owner, ministry leader or creator trying to reach people in a saturated space, here are a few ways to live out the “tear the roof off” strategy:

  1. Study the bottlenecks: Where are customers getting stuck in your journey? Is it price? Access? Clarity? That’s your roof.
  2. Reimagine the channel: Don’t just copy competitors. Ask: “What’s a new way we can reach our audience?” Think SMS over email, voice over text or community over ads.
  3. Cross-train your team: Encourage collaboration between departments. Sometimes your next campaign idea will come from a customer service rep, not the CMO.
  4. Prototype small, scale big: Test creative solutions in a small group first. If they work, expand. Innovation doesn’t have to be loud—it has to be effective.
  5. Pray through resistance: Not every door will open. That may be God nudging you to find a roof. Seek His guidance in every redirection.

What roof is blocking you?

The world is full of crowded doorways and blocked entrances. But it’s also full of roofs waiting to be broken through by people with enough love, vision and creativity to act. The friends of the paralytic didn’t wait for the crowd to part. They didn’t ask for permission. They saw a need, imagined a solution and executed it in faith. And Jesus honoured their effort, not just with healing, but with history. Always remember, “God doesn’t call us to safety. He calls us to stewardship”. Sometimes that stewardship means stepping onto a roof with nothing but rope, hope and a mission. So what roof is in your way today? Start climbing.

>>>Nelson Semanu Boandoh-Korkor: Nelson is a respected author, publishing consultant and Christian business coach. He is passionate about financial evangelism and is also a forex trader, cryptocurrency investor and metaverse enthusiast. Elizabeth Boandoh-Korkor (CA): Elizabeth is a highly accomplished Chartered Accountant with nearly two decades of experience in financial management consulting. She has worked extensively in both the non-profit and banking sectors. You can reach out to them at +233549762233 or [email protected]