You’ve
identified a niche and are poised to meet a need. You’re prepping to deliver a
wonderful product into a market you hopefully know like the back of your hand.
Feels good, doesn’t it? The tips may provide some lift to your business wings
during your entrepreneurial flight and ensure sustainability along the
way.
1. Warm up your
wings before you leave the nest — or crash like a rock. There are thousands of risks in
starting a new company. Reducing those risks as much as possible beforehand is
vital. It’s an unknown road, yes, but without the unknown, we don’t really have
an entrepreneurial adventure on our hands. Foresee the ups and downs of your
journey; no one else will do it for you, and it will also help you feel less
stressed as you navigate uncharted territory. The clever predictions you’ve
forged from your upfront due diligence will serve you well
Sustainability
is the operative word here. Once you get going, don’t stop. Anyone can start a
company, but few can sustain one. The key is seeing every possible outcome and
determining the required pivot you must make along the way. Remember, this is a
journey, not a destination. What do the first two years look like? What are the
major milestones? Do you have all you need to meet your goals? Validate your
revenue model for roadblocks. Create a journey map for your business that
highlights the first major achievements.
2. Welcome the
opportunity to punch holes in your business – from everyone. Entrepreneurial wisdom can be found
in the strangest of places, but be careful where you seek it. Great advice can
carry the side effect of fear, so maintain your energy throughout and let
nobody dampen your flame. Most times, good advice from friends or family is
exuberantly given from a personal obligation to see that you don’t fall on your
face. Don’t let them take the wind out of your sails.
The
worthiest advice can be given from those with defeatist attitudes and the worst
advice can sometimes come from those who are most qualified to give it. The
least qualified can sometimes be the best for challenging your assumptions
early on. They also bring an added layer of creativity, as they’re not informed
on the traditional roadblocks in your industry.
Validate
what you see as real threats and have a system for solving them. Punching holes
in your business will serve you extremely well. Leverage all the minds around
you to mitigate risk while putting your pride aside.
3. Form your board of
advisors: The Specialists.
Once you get past the embryonic phases of your business concept, one of the
quickest and easiest ways to sidestep landmines is to form a team of advisers,
ideally consisting of successful entrepreneurs who have made the journey at
least once, and leverage their expertise and experiences often. Believe it or
not, most entrepreneurs love helping other businesses. They miss the startup
phase and like to join in the conversations. Start with one or two people that
you can call at anytime for advice. Ask family members and friends to refer you
to people they know. Look for ‘specialists’ with knowledge in a specific area,
such as obtaining funding or taking a new product to market. You don’t need
anything formal and your “board” never even has to have official meetings. In
fact, my personal board of advisors has never gathered together to meet since
we’ve been in business, but I know I can call on each one of them to advise
within their specialty. They really enjoy it.
4. Find your tribe. Find the local, entrepreneurial
tribes on the same journey as you and get involved. Attend all the events and
discover the ones for you. Try entrepreneur.Meetup.com, Cofounderslab.com,
LinkedIn entrepreneurial groups, and spend some time on Google searching for
entrepreneur societies and small business groups in your city. If you cannot
find anything, create your own. The university or college near your city will
probably have an entrepreneur institute on campus. Contact the director and see
how you can get involved.
Co-working
facilities are my favorite places to connect locally. They cater to
entrepreneurs and host mixers and business pitch nights to share ideas and
contacts, and are great places to meet all types of local mavens; I met my
developer at one. The most important thing is to be involved; after that, the
possibilities will present themselves.
If
your tribe is not present locally, find them digitally. Ask your social network
to make recommendations.
5. Sell the idea that
your business is great in 30 seconds.
Nail down a succinct description of your business that you can communicate in
30 seconds or less. Know it by heart. Whether you’re taking to an investor, an
advisor, or a random person at a football game, it’s essential that you
describe your business consistently and effectively. This also helps sharpen
the way you describe your company to press, video, social media, etc. You’ll
use it more than you know, so really know your company and its reason to exist.
6. Create a business
plan that you actually use.
Unless you need capital, you don’t really have to have a formal business plan.
Business plans tend to be stagnant documents that are read once and then
forgotten. Instead, create a living “planning document” that is continually
updated and revised as needed, with next steps and actionable line items that
can be instantly assigned as tasks to be performed. Keep a good two-page
executive summary on your company that you constantly update and are able to
send out to those who express interest. Find a cloud solution that allows you
to store your business work in a central location and assign out tasks with
ease to others working with you. This makes it easily accessible to anyone on
your team and more apt to evolve with your business. It’s great for instantly
adding new team members to the conversation as well.
7. If you need capital,
multiply whatever you think you need by two, and then assume you won’t get it. Raising capital may be the biggest
challenge for businesses. It was definitely the hardest thing I’ve ever done in
my business. Many entrepreneurs don’t want to ask for the amount of capital
they really need because they don’t want to scare off potential investors, but
then end up underfunded and unable to sustain the business. It also signals to
the investor that you don’t know the industry and the operational requirements
for your company. Break the real number out and try to raise it in tiers.
Make
100 per cent sure that if you miss an investment round, you can still keep your
company in business. Funding is a moving target; it usually won’t happen when
you think it will. It’s vital to have strong insulation by assuming you won’t
raise the capital at the intended time. There is no way to put a timeframe on
when investment will occur, but you do know when your own money will run out.
When you estimate the month you need to secure the next round of working
capital, add another 8 months to that and find a way to keep things moving
until then. See where you can cut some up-front costs to add this investment
padding.
Start
with a short list of where you can go to raise the first round of capital you
need–friends, family, bank, etc. Learn the art of crowdfunding. Learn all the
platforms (Kiva.org, Kickstarter.com, indiegogo.com, Fundable.com,
Peerbackers.com). The recent Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act
encourages funding of small businesses by making it easier to raise money from
many small investors instead of a few large ones. It can help you bridge the
gap in funding for things like prototypes before you get to larger investors.
What happens on crowdfunding sites is also valuable for validating whether or
not your concept really has wings. When you’re ready to approach larger
investors, divide whatever you think your business is worth by 1.3.
Entrepreneurs are notorious for overvaluing their companies. This keeps you on
a level with what the investors will be thinking.
Set
up your business to function even if there is an economic downturn, or if you
do not secure investment at the intended time. Have backup suppliers. We have
Indie Peace to the point now where we don’t need investors, but when we first
started out, our business model relied heavily on investment rounds being
achieved. This put us in dire straits when the economy tanked a few years ago.
Investors were hard to find, boutiques were going bankrupt, banks were frozen,
and suppliers were in the danger zone as well. Determine what your initial
needs are and then take all of them off the table and figure out how the
business works on the alternatives you’ve selected.
8. Develop a
multi-channel strategy.
Pick the right megaphones. Take advantage of multiple online channels for
promoting your business, but pick the right ones. Get to know all of them:
Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+, Tumblr, Instagram, Pinterest,
Stumbleupon, etc. There are endless choices and new ones appearing every day.
Find a company similar to yours on each channel and study the moves they make.
There are thousands of megaphones out there–let your voice be heard, but spend
time in the right places as a lot of time wasting can occur here. As with
anything, measure your effectiveness. What does success look like for you on
these platforms?
9. Automate you and all
there is to do. Focus
on the important stuff. Take advantage of the small business productivity
applications available in the cloud–they’re some of the best things to happen
to solo entrepreneurs. They’ll help you automate basics such as accounting,
invoicing, file sharing, and tasks management. Plus, most of them have
pay-as-you-go programs that grow with your business and keep costs manageable.
Plus, the less time you spend on tasks, the more time you can devote to
learning how to develop your business. You know all of the things you have to
do. Find a comprehensive cloud solution that lets you get more of them done in
less time with fewer headaches, and as your business grows you can easily plug
in new team members. An all-in-one cloud solution helps you run lean, mean, and
organized.
10. Do the work . Be a business even when no one is
watching, because success and character are built when no one is watching. With
no one breathing over your shoulder checking in for status reports, distraction
is everywhere. Act like you go to work by setting your own hours and sticking
to them. Dedicate work times and let no one or nothing affect them. Know each
day what you are going to accomplish and actually accomplish it. Have a
dedicated workspace away from your “outside work hours” spaces. As an
entrepreneur, you are taking success into your own hands. Staying organized and
on-task is vital. Be careful to watch your effect on the business. Sometimes
the business owner is the biggest problem.
GBSH
Consult’s goal is to help companies systematically and efficiently enhance
their negotiation strategy and organizational and operational capabilities in
order to achieve or maintain the leading position in the rapidly changing
business environment. Follow us on twitter @gbshconsult.
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