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If I Were a Realtor
Do have you have the passion to believe in your idea, despite what others might tell you? There will be naysayers, you have to learn not to listen to them.
But, also do you have the intelligence to take advice from people who know what they are talking about? There are times when we all need help. It is usually there, we just have to be willing to accept it.
Are you willing to put in the hours it takes to grow a business? Being an entrepreneur takes a lot of time and energy.
Question #4 is tough love. Sometimes it is easier to run with an idea that you're in love with than face the facts that no one else will pay you for it or cares. I've suffered this many times. Thanks for the post!
Chris, your list made me realize I need to think harder about market segmentation in order to grow, evolve.
1. Passion - does the idea keep you up in the middle of the night?
2. Working tirelessly - are your ready (willing?) to work 15-20 hours seven days a week?
3. Customer service - there's a tremendous amount of mediocrity out there, are you prepared to provide BRAINHURTINGLY good customer service (everyday!)?
As, always, thanks for getting me thinking, Chris!
Also, how much of your business is "business" and how much is "You"? Too much "business" is hard to get excited about. Too much "You" means you can never take a break and makes expanding the business and building a team harder to accomplish. Striking that balance is always a struggle.
Thanks again for the great talking points, Chris.
And actually this is also what you do with your blog, too. Give a percentage for free and earn from direct / personalized consultancies.
I like your checklist approach to it, very effective. Thanks.
Excellent list. One more that I would usually add to it is: 'Is it profitable?' If you're losing money every time you make a sale, the business isn't going to last long unless there's an investor with very deep pockets and an end-game that has a way of turning that trend around.
I know that question could be seen as being the same as 'Is it sustainable?' but I see them as being slightly different. The question of sustainability has a much wider set of criteria to consider so its helpful to focus on profitability as a stand-alone question as well. (That's what comes of having early training in accounting.... :-) )
Vandy
I created a dating website, it is 100% free. But I can't bring anybody to join it! Any ideas?
Do you know how to promote it? ( I promoted it in facebook, myspace, google, directories.. nothing worked )
Can you grow it? (If I can't promote it... I can't grow it...)
Thanks
Antonio
http://www.russian-bride-agency.com
how to streamline process.
As Hugh MacLeod says- The market for something to believe in is infinite.
The tricky part is taking those amazing ideas and doing the plodding, hard work, day after day, it takes to make them a reality. Watch shows like Dragon's Den on BBC America and see how venture capitalists look at start ups, returns on investment and the like. It puts all of this into cold relief, and you are much better being objective about your plans from early on, knowing the short comings, and being prepared to slog through the tough parts.
Also I would add, "Who's your competition?" Common answer: "I don't have any." Wrong! It means that person hasn't thoroughly thought it through. In fact, no competition is usually a bad omen. It means there isn't an identifiable, reachable market with a problem and money to solve it. Of course, too much competition means too little opportunity.
For all those people who offered advice and have just started a new business...Bentley U. offers newer Boston area businesses the opportunity to have their students take a look at every aspect of the company and draft up new business plans complete with financial, marketing and operations perspectives. Its part of the GB 301 class that is mandatory for graduation. I did this project 2 years ago and it was hugely helpful to our "Client" at the time.
I would highly recommend this program. If anything, it offers people with a new business another perspective on how to run their company, and they can get it for FREE.
I do have a question, though: how does experimentation fit into all this? Isn't experimentation with price, for example, just part and parcel of starting a new business? Is it acceptable to answer question #2 with: "I -think- so?"
The journey to business success usually takes a lot of practice and experience. The drive to succeed often follows a need to make money. If you don't need the money, then your chances are diminished in my opinion.
Just of recent i registered a company in Uganda,got rent but things aare not easy.You can try to look for share holders but they fail to meet the standards of the company i dont know why!!
but i have started the journey and if there is any crue you can give me please do i also need to perform like professionals.
Michelle Chun-Hoon
CKR Interactive Intern
CKRInteractive.com
I think you could add these questions as a subset of question 6...
(a) Can you explain in simple words why someone would want to buy your stuff?
(b) Can you explain in simple words why your stuff isn't just another warmed over version of the same stuff they can get elsewhere?
If you can't effectively promote your business you never get the opportunity to succeed.
Of course- ideas are a dime a dozen. I work with DOZENS of clients who are learning - the hard way - that a great business idea doesn't become successful without a LOT of hard work and determination.
Over the last few years, I've seen quite a few business fail or just wind down, because they're not scalable, can't achieve the required mark-ups at scale (e.g. when moving from selling direct to the consumer to selling via a distributor), can't access the capital investment required for growth, etc.
For me though, the biggest lesson I've learnt in my own business over the last 18 months or so is about decision making and being risk averse. Sometimes, you just need to take lots of decisions and take them quickly, act on them, live or die by them. Some will hurt you, but maybe six or so a year will take you to new places. I always prefer to be at a point where I don't 100% know what I'm doing, as it means I'm out of my comfort zone. In that place, everything can seem a bit of a risk. I think in a new venture, you should spend quite a lot of time there, so if isn't comfortable for you, then it's worth considering.
On one hand it's a good thing because we have people who "specialize" in, for example, "promoting" things. On the other hand it's a bad thing because I forget or don't even consider the promotion of what ever we're doing.
Goal: start remembering to think about each step (and others) even if i don't own it.
Anyone else out there have this problem? I'd love your thoughts.
Thanks.
http://twitter.com/franswaa
Great to read the comments on this post!
Great article!
the answer is no.
Do you think even if # Do you know how to promote it? yes I know how to promotr it
# Can you sustain it? Yes.
# Can you grow it? Yes.
on this basis That business can still survive and succeed?
to summarize only 5 is no and you need to collaborate with the person who owns the know how.
Patricia
http://dataentryjob-s.com
Patricia
http://dataentryjob-s.com
"what makes you stand out from the competition (your USP) and
have you got the perseverence / resilience to overcome setbacks
Thanks for the insight.
Joe