Ideas are Worth Nothing
So you decided to pursue your ideas after long hours of sitting down and pondering asking yourself is this the right time, is this the correct thing to do? Then a little voice in the back of your head (called fear) who should I tell it to, I'm scared they might take it and run with my precious ideas which is going to make me millions of dollars.
All first time entrepreneurs goes threw these delusions. We are all scared of people stealing our ideas but the truth is that ideas are worth nothing. It all comes down to your experience in the market. You're going after and the execution behind that idea. Your experience determines your success of how well you're going to execute it.
Ideas are worth nothing, its the level of execution behind your ability to execute with the right timing, the right people and the right amount of revenue, but please don't let this scare you, follow your gut, and pursuit it with passion, go out and tell people about your idea. You need to get concrete feedback from others.
If you find that its already in the market and other business's to compete with don't be disappointed. That's great, which means you have a market you can go after. Remember you need competition to motivate yourself to be better and be able to innovate in your market.
So please do be a favor go out, network with others and tell them about your ideas and draw as much feedback as possible.
Guest blog post by Keven Dones of Labortopia
Startup School 2009 with Mark Zuckerberg
Great video with amazing entrepreneurs... a must watch for anyone working on or in a startup.
(Sorry about the poor audio quality)
Are You Building A Sustainable Business? Increasing Your Clients’ Revenue Is The Quickest Way To Win More Clients
What is a sustainable business?
What I mean by this is not about the "green" side of business but about the value that you provide for your customers. A sustainable business in this context is defined as a business where users (clients) receive more value back than they put in to it. Sounds simple? Well it's surprising how many people ignore this simple rule of thumb.
Take for example a simple distributor to retailer relationship. The distributor goes to it's vendors and negotiates the lowest price possible because of it's large size. Also most large distributors have a distribution network which allow them to get a product to it's destination quickly and cheaply. For all this the distributor takes a small piece of the profit.
Is this a sustainable business? Yes indeed it is... for every $1 a retailer spends with a distributors they will be able to create let's say $1.50 of revenue. This way the more a retail purchases from the distributor they will then themselves see a greater return.
If you are able to do the same for your clients you will have one of the easiest sales possible. Walking into a potential client offering to create $1.50 of revenue for every $1.00 your paid will be the fastest way to win a new client.
Is your business sustainable?
Not all products and services can be this easily correlated from money spent to money received. Let's say for example your a consultant that designs web sites for small businesses. It is difficult to prove direct correlation between your new site design and an increase in that client's bottom line.
How can I make my business more sustainable?
Let's take the example from above... The most important part of showing your client where you can add value. One way to do this is by using analysis of the metrics around their lead generation. Performing an A/B Test of the site before and after the redesign you can prove to your client where you can add value. In this case I would recommend that you setup a test to specifically show your client the rate of conversions before and after of the site design.
Knowing that you will be giving your clients these metrics will have you thinking how to provide the most value possible thought your work. This is always good for both you and your clients.
This will help provide you with amazing endorsements for your business. It may come in the form of something for example of when a past client tells a friend "XYZ Design Company helped me increase the conversions on my site by 45%". Endorsements like this are guaranteed to get people's to pay attention.
Showing that you can provide real tangible value is by far the quickest way to increase your own bottom line.
What do you think about this? I would really like to hear your feedback in the comments section below.
Starting is easy, finishing is hard
This is a great poster from Wallblank that was inspired by Jason Calacanis. Jason said the following:
This is my best piece of advice for any entrepreneur... the first 80% is easy, the next 15% is hard and last five percent is painful.
Having an idea is simple but seeing it through to fruition is a massive challenge. This saying is a must to remember by all entrepreneurs.
"Starting is easy,
Finishing is hard."
Want to meet 52 amazing entrepreneurs this year?
Would you like to meet 52 amazing entrepreneurs this year? Would you like to meet 52 potential partners this year? Would you meet 52 potential customers this year? Are you networking once a week?
Would you like to meet 52 amazing entrepreneurs this year? Would you like to meet 52 potential partners this year? Would you meet 52 potential customers this year? Are you networking once a week?
Networking events are a valuable entrepreneurial tool which is highly under utilized by too many entrepreneurs. It's amazing how many people spend 8 months building the next killer app completely in a bubble. Attending networking events will not only give you large amounts of feedback on what your building but also put you in touch with great people that you can potentially build a business relationship with in the future. Working in isolation can not give you this.
Use Twitter, Facebook, and Friendfeed to network? That's great but you need to know that nothing beats meeting people face to face. You can talk to people that you have known for years online but when you meet them in the person for the first time the connection will massively be strengthened.
Once your there make it your goal to connect with at least new person at each event. Do this each week for one year and you then have created 52 new connects. In realitly the number will even be much larger because each of the first 52 will help create many more connections. Start today and you will be amazed with the results.
How much entrepreneurial stamina do you have?
How much entrepreneurial stamina do you have?
How would I even know? For a first time entrepreneur there is a good chance you have no idea exactly how much entrepreneurial stamina you have. In fact until you've failed at building a company you will never really know. So what is entrepreneurial stamina?
I loosely define entrepreneurial stamina as the maximum length of time from one mile stone to the next that an entrepreneur is willing to put in without seeing a significant result or return. For example have you ever spoke to a first first time entrepreneur who is building a business from the ground up, using grass roots promotion, without much capital and is planning on spending the next 3 years before they get to profitability? Now don't get me wrong, this business may work. In fact it may very well be a very profitable business at some point.
The personal decision that every entrepreneur needs to make is - "Is this business the right fit for me?". Examples of the two extremes are the people are willing to spend 10 years to build a large winery before they can sell their first bottle of wine VS the type of person who will move on if there is no traction in the first week.
Chances are that if your reading this you fall somewhere in between these two types of people. The question is where exactly do you fall? How do you know where you are on this scale? This will require some seriously self reflection on your part.
The second part is that you need to figure out how long your new venture will take to get off the ground. You may want to be on the safe side... so what ever number you come up with double it. (this may be the dumbest formula ever but it's usually somewhat accurate) Now ask yourself if your willing to put those X amount of hours into this venture before you can expect a return. If the answer is No then that's fine. There are many great ideas out there but not every idea is right for every entrepreneur. If the answer is Yes then you are now one step closer to success.
Your co-founders are another important factor to consider. If there is a leader in the group that can push much longer than the rest of the team then this person will be required to motivate the team. Not everyone can do this but for the people who can it's an amazing strength.
Why do I say all this? Well most times a new business run by a first time entrepreneur simply "runs out of steam". Not that it fails but the founders eventually just stop working on it. Most of the time they just get bored and move on to the next project. Paul Graham does an excellent job describing this process in How Not to Die. Having a realistic view of how much time your willing to put in VS how much time is required will vastly improve your chances of success.
No one can or should go on forever, it's just important to know how far your personally willing to go.
Announcing the RateMyStartup.com site launch
As a fun project I've started a site called RateMyStartup.com.
I've built this site as something to help out early stage entrepreneurs get the word out about their company. Also RateMyStartup.com can be used to help founders get feedback on their business as early as possible. The hope is to create a community where entrepreneurs can go to get advice, guidance and feedback on their venture.
Most startups spend countless hours building a product but find out months later than they have been heading in a bad direction. The goal is that by having a community to share ideas with you will not fall into the same trap. Using this early feedback can help save unbelievable amounts to wasted time and lost productivity.
If your just getting started and would like to hear feedback then please submit your site to RateMyStartup.com. If you already have your business off the ground but would like to promote it in the startup community then please submit your site to RateMyStartup.com.
Ten Rules for Web Startups
Evan Williams had a great post titled, “ten rules for web startups” that every entreprenuer should read so I will reprint here:
#1: Be Narrow
Focus on the smallest possible problem you could solve that would potentially be useful. Most companies start out trying to do too many things, which makes life difficult and turns you into a me-too. Focusing on a small niche has so many advantages: With much less work, you can be the best at what you do. Small things, like a microscopic world, almost always turn out to be bigger than you think when you zoom in. You can much more easily position and market yourself when more focused. And when it comes to partnering, or being acquired, there's less chance for conflict. This is all so logical and, yet, there's a resistance to focusing. I think it comes from a fear of being trivial. Just remember: If you get to be #1 in your category, but your category is too small, then you can broaden your scope—and you can do so with leverage.
#2: Be Different
Ideas are in the air. There are lots of people thinking about—and probably working on—the same thing you are. And one of them is Google. Deal with it. How? First of all, realize that no sufficiently interesting space will be limited to one player. In a sense, competition actually is good—especially to legitimize new markets. Second, see #1—the specialist will almost always kick the generalist's ass. Third, consider doing something that's not so cutting edge. Many highly successful companies—the aforementioned big G being one—have thrived by taking on areas that everyone thought were done and redoing them right. Also? Get a good, non-generic name. Easier said than done, granted. But the most common mistake in naming is trying to be too descriptive, which leads to lots of hard-to-distinguish names. How many blogging companies have "blog" in their name, RSS companies "feed," or podcasting companies "pod" or "cast"? Rarely are they the ones that stand out.
#3: Be Casual
We're moving into what I call the era of the "Casual Web" (and casual content creation). This is much bigger than the hobbyist web or the professional web. Why? Because people have lives. And now, people with lives also have broadband. If you want to hit the really big home runs, create services that fit in with—and, indeed, help—people's everyday lives without requiring lots of commitment or identity change.Flickr enables personal publishing among millions of folks who would never consider themselves personal publishers—they're just sharing pictures with friends and family, a casual activity. Casual games are huge. Skype enables casual conversations.
#4: Be Picky
Another perennial business rule, and it applies to everything you do: features, employees, investors, partners, press opportunities. Startups are often too eager to accept people or ideas into their world. You can almost always afford to wait if something doesn't feel just right, and false negatives are usually better than false positives. One of Google's biggest strengths—and sources of frustration for outsiders—was their willingness to say no to opportunities, easy money, potential employees, and deals.
#5: Be User-Centric
User experience is everything. It always has been, but it's still undervalued and under-invested in. If you don't know user-centered design, study it. Hire people who know it. Obsess over it. Live and breathe it. Get your whole company on board. Better to iterate a hundred times to get the right feature right than to add a hundred more. The point of Ajax is that it can make a site more responsive, not that it's sexy. Tags can make things easier to find and classify, but maybe not in your application. The point of an API is so developers can add value for users, not to impress the geeks. Don't get sidetracked by technologies or the blog-worthiness of your next feature. Always focus on the user and all will be well.
#6: Be Self-Centered
Great products almost always come from someone scratching their own itch. Create something you want to exist in the world. Be a user of your own product. Hire people who are users of your product. Make it better based on your own desires. (But don't trick yourself into thinking you are your user, when it comes to usability.) Another aspect of this is to not get seduced into doing deals with big companies at the expense or your users or at the expense of making your product better. When you're small and they're big, it's hard to say no, but see #4.
#7: Be Greedy
It's always good to have options. One of the best ways to do that is to have income. While it's true that traffic is now again actually worth something, the give-everything-away-and-make-it-up-on-volume strategy stamps an expiration date on your company's ass. In other words, design something to charge for into your product and start taking money within 6 months (and do it with PayPal). Done right, charging money can actually accelerate growth, not impede it, because then you have something to fuel marketing costs with. More importantly, having money coming in the door puts you in a much more powerful position when it comes to your next round of funding or acquisition talks. In fact, consider whether you need to have a free version at all. The TypePad approach—taking the high-end position in the market—makes for a great business model in the right market. Less support. Less scalability concerns. Less abuse. And much higher margins.
#8: Be Tiny
It's standard web startup wisdom by now that with the substantially lower costs to starting something on the web, the difficulty of IPOs, and the willingness of the big guys to shell out for small teams doing innovative stuff, the most likely end game if you're successful is acquisition. Acquisitions are much easier if they're small. And small acquisitions are possible if valuations are kept low from the get go. And keeping valuations low is possible because it doesn't cost much to start something anymore (especially if you keep the scope narrow). Besides the obvious techniques, one way to do this is to use turnkey services to lower your overhead—Administaff,ServerBeach, web apps, maybe even Elance.
#9: Be Agile
You know that old saw about a plane flying from California to Hawaii being off course 99% of the time—but constantly correcting? The same is true of successful startups—except they may start out heading toward Alaska. Many dot-com bubble companies that died could have eventually been successful had they been able to adjust and change their plans instead of running as fast as they could until they burned out, based on their initial assumptions. Pyra was started to build a project-management app, not Blogger. Flickr's company was building a game. Ebay was going to sell auction software. Initial assumptions are almost always wrong. That's why the waterfall approach to building software is obsolete in favor agile techniques. The same philosophy should be applied to building a company.
#10: Be Balanced
What is a startup without bleary-eyed, junk-food-fueled, balls-to-the-wall days and sleepless, caffeine-fueled, relationship-stressing nights? Answer?: A lot more enjoyable place to work. Yes, high levels of commitment are crucial. And yes, crunch times come and sometimes require an inordinate, painful, apologies-to-the-SO amount of work. But it can't be all the time. Nature requires balance for health—as do the bodies and minds who work for you and, without which, your company will be worthless. There is no better way to maintain balance and lower your stress that I've found than David Allen's GTD process. Learn it. Live it. Make it a part of your company, and you'll have a secret weapon.
#11 (bonus!): Be Wary
Overgeneralized lists of business "rules" are not to be taken too literally. There are exceptions to everything.
Ideas Are Worthless Without Great Execution
It's amazing how many times you will meet an entrepreneur with the "great idea". You know who I am talking about... this idea will change the music industry, become bigger than Facebook or be the next amazing iPhone app. It is so brilliant and they are the first ones to ever think of it.
Sorry they can't tell you more about it... it's not ready yet.
We have all met this person but every time I do it is the same story each time. They honesty believe that this idea is new to the world and totally unique.
Let's set the record straight and I hope that next time you meet one of these inspiring entrepreneurs at a cocktail party, networking event, etc you'll do the same thing.
Ideas are worthless without great execution.
Any "great" idea that must be kept a secrete in order to protect it means that it has no value. No idea is totally unique, everything has been done before in some way. A brilliant new idea is just a new spin on an old way of thinking. If an idea is that easy to copy then 1 week after you launch both your competitors and clients will be building the same thing. Any idea can be copied but that is not the point. It is all about how well you execute on the idea.
It almost never turns out that when you come out with your product on day 1 there will be clients banging down the door. What will happen is that you're team will need to be out there to promote it. With the current landscape of technology it's assumed that you will have something great to sell so simply being great is no longer enough. You need to be out there talking to your potential users, getting your product in front of them and getting the very valuable feedback. This is where we separate the winners from the entrepreneurs who will just fade away.
Tell people about your idea, get the word out about what your building, get feedback... this will help you even while your building v1.0. The business your building is special, it must be, that is the only way you'll succeed.
Success is based on how well a team can execute on the idea... not the idea itself.
Until you have a client your business is just a hobby
A great quote for many first time entrepreneurs to listen to when first starting out is "Until you have a client your business is just a hobby". What this means is that when your first starting a new venture the 3 most important things are revenue, revenue and revenue.
Many people start with and get bogged down on things such as what color business cards to make, should they form a S Corp or LLC or what is the best way to reduce tax exposure at the end of the year. Don't get me wrong, all of these things are very important but not until your business is producing some significant revenue. Without that revenue it is basically a hobby that you have very nice business cards for.
Many first time entrepreneurs typical do know realize that they can only mentally go so far with an unprofitable business. Eventually if a business is not going anywhere it will run out of steam and fade away.
Revenue changes all of this... You will then have the cash you need to hire people such as an accountant, lawyer, designer, etc to figure this all out for you. Also this will give you the critical push you need to keep building your business.
The most common defensive I hear about this is "What about companies that went for a very long time without revenue such as Google, Yahoo and many others". The two objections here are that a lot of these companies were started by very senior entrepreneurs who have been through it before. Secondly many of these companies were hobbies/school projects to begin with and eventually morphed into companies when they started to become profitable.
I am not saying that this is the only way to do it... I am just saying that it just massively raises your odds of success.
