23 Things Every Entrepreneur Must Know
He has spent 30 years talking to,
researching and writing about entrepreneurs. Recently he shared these wonderful
ideas about what entrepreneurs must know, and explained them to a group of graduate
students in the U.S.A.
In summary, here’s what he said.
1. The best way to predict the future is to create it.
2. The most important decision you can make is…where do you want to spend your time. You
only have so much time, energy and ability to focus. That means, as much as you
would like to, you can’t do everything. That’s a given. So is
this: The places which receive your full attention will do better than the
places that won’t. What follows from that is this: You need to make hard
choices about what you will do–and what you won’t. And it really is the
important decision you can make, because everything else you do will flow from
it…including the next point.
3. If you want to be a successful entrepreneur, there is no such thing as
work-life balance. I am not advocating that
you spend a disproportionate part of your life working on your company.
(I am also not advocating against it.) I am simply reporting that is what the
most successful entrepreneurs do. I have never found an exception.
4. The best entrepreneurs don’t come up with great
ideas, they solve market needs. You and I can come
up with wonderful ideas all day long but unless they satisfy a large enough
need, one that can support a business, they don’t do anyone any good.
5. The one thing all successful entrepreneurs have
in common is the desire to make their idea a reality. What
entrepreneurs need most of all—above motivation, focus,
hope, financing, marketing skills, a brilliant idea, etc.—is the will to bring
their idea into existence. Unless you truly want to make something happen, the
odds are nothing will. Without that desire, nothing else matters…or occurs.
Your life will be filled in other ways.
6. Action trumps everything. Stop
thinking and get underway.
7. Take small, smart steps towards your
goals. Contrary to the popular press, the most successful
entrepreneurs are not swing-for-the-fences,
bet-everything-on-one-roll-of-the-dice types. They are extremely
conservative. They take a small step toward their goal;
pause to see what they have learned from taking that small step and build that
learning into the next small step. Then they pause to see what they have
learned from that second small step, build that learning in and then take another
small step and so forth. They don’t take large risks.
8. If you want to build a successful company give up control. You can try to
micromange but: the business will never grow bigger than one person (you,
the CEO) can handle effectively; the company won’t be able to move
very quickly. Since everything will have to flow through you, you will
create a bottleneck; you won’t get the best ideas out of your people.
Once they understand the company is set up so everything revolves around you,
people are not going to take the time to develop their best ideas. “Why should
I,” they’ll ask. “He is just going to do what he wants anyway.” And
it’s exhausting.
9. Forget about working on your weaknesses, play to your
strengths. This is what will make you
successful in the long-run.
10. You need to be able to turn every obstacle into
an asset. Yes, every single one.
11. All you need to know about marketing
in exactly 30 words? Marketing, when you strip everything away, is
extremely simple: You figure out who you want to sell to, and then you
determine what it is that will get them to buy.
12. Here’s the only market research you need:
Get your product out in the marketplace and see if it sells.
13. If you insist on doing market research anyway,
here’s the one question you need to ask. Show
potential customers a prototype, or describe the service you are thinking
of offering and then say: ”Is this something you would buy,” and if they
answer yes, ask for the order then and there. If, as the cliché goes, they
are willing to put their money where their mouth is, you are probably on to
something. If they aren’t, you still have work to do.
14. You must figure out how you are going to collect what
you are owed. Nobody thinks about this before they get
underway and suddenly they learn first hand what they phrase “cash flow.
15. As much as you are going to fight it you
need a (really smart) advisory board. You want a board to: give
you new perspectives and ideas; to give you people to talk to and to
provide honest feedback.
16. If you want to get more done faster and better…create checklists. Checklists
are a wonderful way to make sure you don’t overlook anything, and that it is
true whether we are talking about the best way to treat someone in the
emergency room or if you are about to make a big presentation to a client you
really want to land.
17. How to motivate yourself and stay motivated. Starting
anything new is hard and the number of obstacles you are going to encounter can
easily get overwhelming. Click on the link here for proven ideas that can keep
you going.
18. If the dogs don’t like the dog food it’s bad
dog food. You don’t determine what a good product is. Only your
customer does. And if they don’t like your product, it’s a bad product.
Period. In others words, the customer is always right. Darn it.
19. If the customer doesn’t like the
product, there isn’t much you can do about it with pricing or promotion or
positioning. Unpopular products are going to remain so. It is
better to come up with a different version, than to keep trying to sell–at a
discounted price–the one people don’t like.
20. If you are going to fail, and sometimes
you will, fail quickly and cheaply. Always
take small steps toward your goal and pause after each one to make sure you are
staying on the right track.
21. (Really) learn from your mistakes. You
are going to make mistakes. That’s a) a given and b) okay, providing you truly
understand what went wrong.
22. Creativity and innovation must be linked to a
business objective. Creativity is wonderful. But creativity that
isn’t tied to making money is just a hobby. It isn’t a viable business
concept.
23. Get while you
still have your marbles. You never want to stay
too long at the fair, even if you own the fair.
I hope you’ve learnt a thing or two from this article.
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