(This article is one of twenty-five(25)
contained in Tayo Solagbade’s Ebook titled "25
Articles/True Stories On Self-Development, Entrepeneuring
& Web Marketing To Help You Succeed More Often")
The entrepreneurial adventure is NEVER
devoid of challenges, many of which as statistics show, cause
most business startups to fail. What will ensure success for
virtually ANYONE who starts a business will be their ability
to PERSEVERE in the face of marketplace rejection, and daunting
obstacles they will encounter.
This article spells out philosophies
you can adopt if you wish to achieve long term, sustainable
entrepreneurial success.
1. Cut-Off
ALL Sources Of Retreat: In his classic book, Think
and Grow Rich, Napoleon Hill uses the analogy of a General
who had his soldiers burn all their boats upon arrival on
the shore to face a much larger and formidable army, so they
all knew they had to win the battle or die trying. This kindled
a determination in the men to put forth their best efforts
- and against all odds, they won.
Hill stated that in order to succeed
in any endeavour, one must be prepared to burn one's bridges.
If you really want to achieve your ultimate entrepreneurial
goal, you need to ensure your circumstances are such that
no matter how hopeless the situation becomes, you leave yourself
no "escape" route leading back to the comfort of
your previous life. Putting yourself in this situation, that
threatens your very existence, while giving you no option
of escape(so that you have no choice but to confront your
reality, and find a way around it) is the only sure way of
keeping yourself fired up UNTIL you achieve the inevitable
reward of success.
2. Be Convinced
Enough To Risk Financial Ruin: The ability to be honest
with yourself is an important requirement here. Before you
launch out, ask yourself WHY you want to become an entrepreneur.
You need a reason that is compelling enough, a need that is
felt deeply enough, to keep you going, refusing to stop or
accept failure/defeat UNTIL you achieve your intended objective.
Without this, you may find it difficult continuing the journey
during the inevitable periods of pain, and adversity that
most entrepreneurs have to endure before arriving.
Robert L.
Shook in discussing lessons from the lives of great
entrepreneurs, pointed out that a startup needs to be strongly
convinced about his/her business concept. Your conviction
he said, would be so great that even when loved ones tell
you it cannot be done, you would be prepared to invest all
you own - and risk losing it all - to implement the idea.
Most importantly, you would never
give up regardless of how many times you failed.
3. Remember
That Your Struggles Develop Your Strengths: Napoleon
Hill explained that even though many of us see people who
tirelessly persist in their pursuit of cherished goals till
they succeed, few ever notice the role played behind the scenes
by certain "irresistible" forces which ultimately
come to the aid of such individuals.
It should also be noted that people
who have to struggle long and hard to achieve success, always
tend to use the lessons they learn from failures to subsequently
build on their successes, resulting in even greater achievements,
sustained over long periods. Arnold Schwarzennegger's words
are relevant to the foregoing:
Strength does not
come from winning. Your struggles develop your strengths.
When you go through hardships and decide not to surrender,
that is strength. - Arnold Schwarzennegger
4. Master
The Art Of Intelligent Mistake Making™: If you
are scared of making mistakes or failing, then forget about
becoming an entrepreneur. Entrepreneurs are people who HATE
failing. But they DO NOT fear failure.
The former implies they dislike having the experience of NOT
succeeding at something, and because of that they WILL go
after it again and again, UNTIL they succeed. On the other
hand, the latter statement(i.e. they DO
NOT fear failure) implies that ALL the failures they
experience prior to the eventual success would not discourage
them, because they have healthy levels of self-esteem. To
them, failure is only Temporary
Defeat, which can always be overturned to achieve success.
So, you must strive constantly
to extract the equivalent benefit from every adversity.
Get into the habit of working hard to extract a useful lesson
or benefit from every setback, disappointment or other negative
experiences you have in the pursuit of your goals. Focus on
analysing every experience of failure for the "equivalent
benefit" hidden in it, and then USE it in your next plan,
to increase your chances of success. As I put it in my ten
ways manual on Self-Development, "Don't
rationalise your negative experiences or failure, analyse
them!".
"I always tried
to turn every disaster into an opportunity" -
John D. Rockefeller
Success tends not
to go to the person who is error-free, because he also tends
to be risk averse. Rather, it goes to the person who recognises
that life is pretty much a percentage business. It isn't making
mistakes that's critical; it's correcting them and getting
on with the principal tasks." - Donald Rumsfeld,
US Public Official and Business Executive.
5. Think
So BIG, That Others Question Your Sanity™:
Many times, people who know us - friends, relatives, and spouses
- and who feel they know all there is to know about us have
the greatest difficulty believing we can do anything more
than they "think" we can, even when we say so. That's
why an entrepreneur needs to nurture and guard her self-esteem
jealously. It is also why you must be willing to think
VERY big, in a way that challenges others, and forces you
to commit yourself the more.
When you have a BIG goal, that is likely
to impact on a large number of people, when achieved, the
thought of making it happen for so many others is likely to
drive you to work harder(It does me!). Of course those who
think they "know" you will be quick to say you cannot
do it, but the thought of proving them wrong, and showing
that you CAN, will further boost your efforts.
6. Understand
That New/Unique Ideas Will Get You Money : Understand
that being able to come up with new unique variants of ideas/services
will increase your chances of making money as an entrepreneur.
Not having money to start with cannot stop you from earning
money. Your creative skills/thinking ability properly nurtured
and channeled effectively, will ultimately lead to financially
rewarding relationships with persons who value them.
"Because its
purpose is to create a customer, the business enterprise has
two - and only these two - basic functions: marketing and
innovation. Marketing and Innovation produce results. All
the others are costs" - Peter Drucker
Napoleon Hill reassures the reader
of Think and Grow Rich, that most rich persons he studied
had amassed their fortunes through receiving compensation
for personal services or ideas they provided to others for
a fee. I can still recall two particular instances when I
had absolutely no money on me. After sitting down and feeling
sorry for myself, I got into my car and drove from office
to office, making cold calls, with
my mind fixed on meeting someone who would be ready to pay
- immediately - for work I would do for him/her. Some
hours later(in both instances), I returned home with a cheque/cash
as advance payment for one of my custom
services!
7. Ask For
Help Without Acting Helpless™:
A true entrepreneur will not need "samaritans".
James Cook was quite right in making - what amounted to -
the foregoing assertion in his New York Times best selling
book titled "The Start-up
Entrepreneur". This is because a true entrepreneur
will be offering to ADD value to what a prospective client(or
investor) is doing for a profitable fee(or investment). The
relationship will be mutually beneficial, hence neither party
will be doing the other a favour!
Cook further admonishes that, being
unwilling to let others give him/her "handouts"(e.g.
money for free) will help the entrepreneur develop qualities
that will eventually enable him/her achieve sustainable success.
He warns against trying to get something for nothing, which
incurs "hidden penalties".
To raise
capital for instance, Cook suggests taking practical
steps like: Seeking out (and offering to sell a part of your
venture to) equity investors and/or strategic partners; mortgaging
your assets to raise money(I would add "if realistic
in your society" i.e. going by my personal experiences
in my part of the world); BUT strongly warns against
taking zero-interest government grants, loans etc(for
reasons earlier enumerated).
8. Know
Enough About ANYTHING That Can Help You: Be prepared
to acquire ANY and EVERY bit of skill/knowledge that will
help you achieve your goal. You are not likely to be able
to pay to have someone else do things for you every time,
especially when starting up. Even when you're not starting
up, it would be financially imprudent to incur recurrent expenses
on tasks you could easily learn to do yourself, via self-tutoring
for instance. Read my article titled "How
To Be A Jack Of Many Trades™, And Why It Can Make You
Succeed More Often"
9. Understand
That Having Inadequate Capital Can Teach YOU : The
discipline you learn(due to lack of adequate capital) in using
little money to get many things done, will ultimately help
you record impressive successes using a little MORE money
in a way that will increase your business' profitability.
Cyrus Hall
McCormick explained that a person who starts small
due to lack of adequate capital, will be forced to learn the
rudiments of his/her business so as to be able to ensure survival
on a low budget.
Harvey Firestone
expressed similar sentiments, adding that without THAT experience,
he would never have learnt to study closely how to promote
efficient operations in his organisation in the way he did,
to the extent that his company became as big as it eventually
did.
James Cook,
author of the bestseller, "The
Startup Entrepreneur" and a successful entrepreneur
in his own right, admonishes that lack of capital forces the
entrepreneur to toughen up mentally, and learn how to survive
on little, while at the same time discovering alternative
sources of capital.
Dan Kennedy,
in his book "Succeeding In
Business By Breaking All The Rules" was quite
categorical in saying that having enough capital to work with
can result in negative consequences similar to those that
would arise from being cursed. This is because it can deny
an entrepreneur of crucial learning obtainable from struggling
to survive frequent shortages of cash: Learning,
that when applied, would increase one's chances of success.
Bottom line is this: Inadequate
capital CANNOT kill your business or you, except
you let it. It will often turn out to be more of a blessing
in disguise.
Read my article titled If
You Lack Capital, Intelligent Multipreneuring Can Increase
Your Chances Of Succeeding.
10. When There's Nothing
To Do, Work!™ : Sound
contradictory? Well, it's not. The truth is that there will
be downtimes during your entrepreneurial adventure. Those
will be times when you make no sales, have no clients or customers
asking for your business etc. And if you will ensure that
you emerge from those dark periods unscathed, you need to
understand how to control your state of mind. In fact, this
aspect is probably the one that most people are least prepared
for - hence the frequent cases of failed businesses.
The quotes
below offer time-tested wisdom, that you can use.
"Work, work,
always work is the only talisman" - Thomas Lipton
"To banish depression,
worry and fear, go to work" - Anon
"I have always
found, when I was worrying, that the best thing to do was
put my mind upon something, work hard and forget what was
troubling me." - Thomas Edison
During my early start-up days, some
of my most productive periods were the times when I was severely
cash strapped – or as Burt Dubin would put it –
“maxed to the hilt”. It was during such periods
that I delivered 8(eight), more or less FREE one-hour talks
in various parts of Lagos between May and July 2002. I went
round them even though I hardly could buy fuel into my car!
But guess what? Because I truly enjoyed what I was doing –
sharing with people – I thoroughly enjoyed myself, and
no one knew better! And, I got to polish my public speaking
skills plus got rave testimonials.
It was during those lean periods that
I wrote the entire 87 pages of my Ten-Week Email autoresponder
course titled Ten
Ways You Can Use Self-Development To Create The Future You
Want (based on self-development principles I have successfully
used to achieve goals I set for myself) - which today is now
available for purchase in print
as a self-help manual from Cafepress.com
and Lulu.com(
ebook also here).
Add to this a 70 – page manual
titled “Practical
Livestock Feed Formulation Handbook” – also
written during a rough patch I went through(drawing from my
background
as a graduate of Agricultural Extension Services, and a member
of a Farm Research Foundation), and you will agree that
tough times can indeed bring out the best in a person!
How did I do it you ask? Well, I knew
from reading Think and Grow Rich/other
books, that during periods of hardship, the best thing to
do is to bury oneself in work – instead of worrying.
So I went ahead and did just that! That way, I knew I would
at least have something new to show for it by the time things
improved.
No matter how bad things get,
just go to a quiet place, sit down and THINK.
Napoleon Hill's book title(Think
And Grow Rich) was not
an accident :You Have To
THINK! Add James Cook's
plea in the last pages of his own book - The
Startup Entrepreneur -
where he repeatedly implores the read to pick up a copy of
Napoleon Hill's book and read, before taking the decision
to quit.
Before you know it, you'll be
ready to go back out and give it another try. Take it from
me - This works! I have done it. It
CAN work for you too, if you do it. The discipline you learn
from maintaining such focus will subsequently set you apart
from the crowd when things are going well.
One more thing. Just in case
you don't already own them, I urge you to go out and get yourself
a copy of each of those two books mentioned above. They are
an entrepreneur's best friends. I have personally referred,
in my writings, to James Cook's book as "The
Missing Chapters In Napoleon Hill's Think And Grow Rich".
I believe you'll agree with me, when you read it!
11. Procrastinate When
It Comes To Spending™ : When
you’re starting-up, and even after you get up and running,
develop the bad habit of putting off spending - for as long
as reasonably possible - till you're convinced it is inevitable.
While starting up in particular,
I suggest you cut down on ALL your personal expenses by at
least 90%(I know this sounds a bit extreme, but based on hindsight,
I am convinced that the process of doing it will clear one's
thinking faster/better). As James Cook said, you will find
what you really need to spend to get through each day, is
much less than you think you do.
Gradually, over time, you will
discover the appropriate level to operate in terms of spending.
Let me reiterate. When you want
to do any heavy business–related spending, stay off
“doing it “ for at least another 24 – 48
hours, or as long as possible. Brood over it, challenge yourself
to think of any other way(s) you can get that “thing”
done without spending that much – or without spending
ANY money at all. Herman Holtz(now late) - widely regarded
as a "Consultant's Consultant", hammered on this
quite a bit in his book "The
Concise Guide To Becoming An Independent Consultant"(John
Wiley and Sons, Inc, 1999). If Holtz thought it was THAT important,
I think you should too :-).
Starting Up As An Ex-Employee?
Read This!
In the Entrepreneur's Survival
Reference Manual that I wrote back in 2003, I made the following
observation, based on my experiences as a person who left
paid employment to start a business:
If you plan to(or
have already) entered into entrepreneuring from a similar
background to mine, this is the first thing you have to watch
out for – your spending habits. With very few exceptions,
most people who go into business after having being in paid
employment - especially where the pay was relatively comfortable
- often lack the “discipline” needed to preserve
the “lifeblood” (i.e. cash) of their new businesses.
This often results
in the early demise of the new business, and their subsequent
scampering back to the safety of paid employment. When asked
afterwards, they vehemently insist other factors made it impossible
to continue in business – when in truth, it was they
who were not prepared to modify their habits/lifestyles to
allow their new businesses come out of the woods!!
- Tayo Solagbade(25 Avoidable Mistakes No One Will Warn You
About In Starting Your Own Business) 
12. Pretend You're Already
Successful. The
success philosophies I subscribe to, teach that one needs
to ALWAYS Think And Act Like A Success In Order To Become
One.
Jim Donovan in his best-selling ebook(titled
"This Is Your Life,
Not A Dress Rehearsal") that I bought
from www.asamanthinketh.com
in 2001, described a technique called Fake
It Till You Make It. He explained
it by saying that without mis-representing him/herself, the
person who seeks success must act as if (and
BELIEVE) s/he has already become the successful
person s/he wants to be.
You would speak
in the present continuous tense about the
value you intend to deliver. For instance you would say "I
Help People Solve Their Business Financing Problems"
and NOT "I Hope
To Help People Solve Their Business Financing Problems".
Your apparent self-belief is what will convince persons sincerely
interested in having THAT kind of problem solved to engage
you.
The foregoing is why in everything
I do, I work hard to create an image for myself that reflects
where I want to be/how I want to be perceived.(My multi-site
website presence for instance is proof of this). Success
is a continuous process - you're always reviewing and re-focusing
to achieve a higher goal, modified vision etc. At every stage,
you MUST speak - with conviction - as if you are already where
you intend to be.
13.
Choose Work That You Would Enjoy Doing EVEN If You Did Not
Get Paid : An
entrepreneur who does not truly enjoy and get great fulfillment
from doing his chosen business every time s/he has the opportunity,
WILL fail when things get tough, and monetary rewards fail
to come as expected. S/he will be unable to persevere. The
logic is quite simple, but the application in the moments
of trial can be tremendously difficult.
If
you truly desire to succeed in your business,
make sure you choose one that you would gladly do twenty four
hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year and longer
if necessary - regardless
of whether or NOT you get paid!
Find that thing that you love doing THAT much, and nothing
- no setback, disappointment or delay - can EVER make you
quit. And since you can
only fail when you quit,
it therefore follows that you will NOT fail, but instead,
ultimately succeed.
As I said in my article titled Should
You Quit Your Job or Start Your Business Part-time?,
doing what you love WILL also eventually bring the ONE benefit(money!)
that many people always seem to want to get first. That's
why Marsha Sinetar said:
"Do
what you love, and the money will follow"
- Marsha Sinetar
14.
NEVER Act Based On What You Think Others Will Say! If
you do, you will very likely regret it, and it might cost
you your dream. People, especially those who lack the courage
to pursue their own dreams will - usually out of envy and
resentment - gossip about anyone they see doing so with single-minded
commitment. As an entrepreneur, you will have to get used
to being talked about by such persons(s), and focus on your
ultimate purpose.
Most entrepreneurs who succeeded
in the past had to endure similar undue attention, and survived
by simply refusing to be bothered. An inability to deal with
this problem can cause you to become discouraged, especially
during times when you experience failures, to the point that
you give up and quit. You simply cannot let ANYONE do that
to you! Remember that an
entrepreneur CANNOT fail except s/he decides to quit.
"Do what you
feel in your heart to be right, for you will be criticised
anyway. You will be damned if you do, and damned if you don't"
- Eleanor Roosevelt
“Either
do wrong or feel guilty, but don’t do both; it’s
too much work.”
– Rudolf Dreikurs (1897 – 1972)
Psychiatrist
Summary
This list is not exhaustive. It is
just a collection of philosophies I have personally found
very useful over the years as an entrepreneur. You may find
you do not agree with some of them. That would be okay :-).
Take what you need, and leave the rest for others to consider.
Add some that you discover along the way to what you take
from here. Then use YOUR resultant personalised guiding philosophy
to keep yourself going till you achieve your purpose.
Goodluck!
Related Articles:
1.
When I Quit My Job, They Called Me Mad - And I Felt So, So
Sorry for Them!
2. Should You Quit Your Job or Start Your Business Part-time?
3. Why I Do What
I Do The Way I Do It
4. Avoid
Taking Lessons On Entrepreneuring From The Wrong Person(s)
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