1. Speed reading. These
days one needs to be able to read reports, white papers,
newspapers, magazines, business literature and even blogs. If you
are a reader that still sub-vocalizes each word, you just won’t be
able to keep up. I think the will to read and the ability to read
is paramount to your start up success.
2. A must-read list: No list can start without
Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand–next to the Bible, the
book that most business leaders of the last fifty years have said
influenced them the most. Reading this book will add to the fire in
your belly. Next, Solution Selling. Out the 2,328
books on selling, this book is by far the best. It breaks apart
each step of the sales cycle/process so almost anyone can
understand how to make more sales, the absolute KEY in any start
up. The second best sales book? Conceptual Selling.
The third book is Emotional IQ by Daniel Goldman. I
think creating a startup environment is as much to do with the
culture and getting people to do things than anything else. Goldman
helps the reader understand how critical managing your emotions can
be in this process.
3. Get comfortable asking for advice and help. Although
there are plenty of people who have created successful businesses
on their own, most need help. They bring the basic skills and
passion, but learning from others is absolutely paramount. If you
are someone who knows everything, good luck. Seriously, good luck.
There are many, many friendly resources that are willing to help
you get up and going. You just need to find them, and ask for their
help and advice. These folks LOVE and WANT to help you.
4. Present your startup idea to anyone who will listen.
And even to those who won’t. Startups do not reward security and
safety. If you are hesititant about exposing your idea to others,
you won’t be able to expose it to prospects, customers and
investors. Don’t expect constant support, either. Most people will
say something like, “yeah, that sounds good. You should do it.”
What you are looking for are those few who ask good questions or
who challenge your thinking process and research.
5. Get really, really good at concisely stating your business
idea. A lot of entreprenuers fail in this area. It is important
because you will need to communicate this to prospects, investors
and new employees. What I have kept in my mind constantly over the
years, is one internal question as I have started expounding on
some idea: Later tonight, GL, (what I call myself) what will he say
to Hilda about my idea? Or, as a great friend used to say over and
over again, “if it is fuzzy in the pulpit, it is really fuzzy in
the pews.”
6. Find a metaphor that works for your business idea. It
will just help you identify your business to others. Are you the
FEDEX of dog products? The Amazon of doll clothes? The Heath
brothers have written a very clever little book called Make
It Stick, which helps develop this theme more
completely.
7. It is about
leadership, not management. If you have not led people yet in
your career, it is certainly not a prerequisite for success: but
you should get this experience. Basically, it is all about getting
people to line up behind your ideas, embracing your vision as if it
were their own and getting people to do things. That might sound
manipulative…getting people to do things for you. It is just the
opposite of being manipulative, it is more about giving up things,
than controlling them. I believe there is ONE consistent trait of
good leaders, which I will discuss later in this list. You can
learn from the masters. This is where your ability to read will
make all the difference. What is OUT THERE, are books from
historical leaders that tell you exactly how to be a better leader.
One thing you can do now, is to become a leader…whether at home
with your kids, by coaching or by volunteering somewhere. I think
some of our best coaches got started by coaching kids’ teams, for
example. Getting the kid whose idea of a baseball game is a pile of
dirt and a stick know when to tag up on third base is true
leadership. Or, to watch the best leadership movie ever, rent the
old movie “Twelve O’Clock High.”
8. Love your prospects.
This is a different and more specific than the axiom of “Be
Passionate.” This was really brought home to me several years ago,
when I attended a new company investor presentation. After the very
professional presentation, the co-founder was asked in a small,
friendly group of people, if he had always believed in this
approach. (The company was in the self-help space.) He said, ‘No, I
don’t believe in it, but it looks like a wide open market.’ If you
are approaching the business from a purely economic standpoint, you
might be able to make it work. All I am saying is it makes it all
more fun and believable if you love the prospects and customers.
Warren Buffet owns Dairy Queen and I ‘d bet you a marshmellow
Blizzard that Warren loves DQ ice cream. One thing he would not say
is ” Americans should not eat ice cream.”
9. Know what you are good at. Chances are, you are very
good at one thing. You will be successful if you can get yourself
in position to use your one thing more often. It is not a problem
if you are not good in every facet of your business. It is more
important that you realize that others can do what you cannot.
10. Build your team. Everyone knows building a team is
critical. Here are some little things you might not know. Hiring a
big company experienced only person because of their industry skill
is very, very risky. It seems to me that every big company person
wants to be in a smaller company. Frankly, it is condescending.
What they don’t want is exposure to a one-deep work environment. I
would make sure they have worked for another company AFTER IBM or
General Mills. Next, try to meet the spouse. I am not a big
proponent of going out to play bridge or socializing if you don’t
want to, but I do think it is critical to assess whether the spouse
is going to be tough and supportive enough. Next, if they can
describe how doing their job will impact the customer, that is also
key. Further , don’t hire any assholes. I want loyalty to the
’cause’ no matter what. These few sentences do not do this topic
justice, but you get the idea.
90 more specific characteristics after the jump
11. What pain are you fixing? Every new business must fix
something for someone. It might be an inefficiency or a lack of a
necessary feature. In my first company, Scott Drill and I fixed
only one problem and it wasn’t even associated with the better
product that we had developed. The problem we fixed, or the
opportunity that we took advantage of, was that the killer dealer
network was being ignored by the acknowledged monopolist, Kroy.
These dealers were upset, worried about their futures and angry
about Kroy’s new distribution methods which were in direct conflict
with them. When we presented our product to this pissed-off sales
network and pledged our constant focus, it was exactly what they
needed and wanted to hear. Our product was better, but if we had
not solved this real problem for the dealers, they would not have
supported us or sold our product. Every new company needs a pain to
fix. Varitronics was built on this concept.
12. Can you handle pressure? One thing you can depend
upon is the amount of pressure you will be under. Some might be
self-imposed, most will be from external sources. Sales people will
want something easier to sell, investors want faster progress,
others want more or less of this and that, and constantly. How you
handle these pressures will go a long way to determine your
success. Someone told me a long time ago, that my only job was “to
make the comfortable, uncomfortable, and the uncomfortable,
comfortable.” I think that pretty much sums up the new company
leader’s most critical assignment.
13. Get good at motivating yourself. During tough times,
can you do it? It is easy to motivate yourself when all is
well..much harder, when it is fourth down and time is running out.
Be self aware enough to understand this ability or capability in
yourself. Find something that seems to work constantly, a self
talking mechanism that allows you to keep on keeping on. I can
remember someone coming into my office one day, and asking if
’something were wrong, if we were in trouble?’ When I answered no,
and wondered why he had asked, he said, ‘Well, we have noticed how
serious you have been and not smiling, so we assumed something was
wrong.” Even the appearance of a motivated leader is crucial. So,
what specific tips can I give to help with this self motivation? I
have written about this subject before in these blogs, I think
there are many different techniques from reading quotes and
motivational stories to keeping it all in perspective. You are
different than me in this regard. I have a unique ability to be
just dumb enough to think that “this too will pass,” and act
accordingly. Notice that I said ACT. You should develop your own
triggers.
14. Detail vs. General. Successful entreprenurs know how
to move from one skill or attitude to the other. I have seen people
who seemed to know every detail about their business to those who
can’t be bothered with the nits and gnats. If you think you have to
know every detail to achieve success, you don’t. If you think you
can get by only by operating at the 40,000 foot level, you can’t do
that either. The trick, it seems to me, is an ability to wander
back and forth. And to pick your spots. If you tend to be detail
oriented to the extreme, be prepared to make every decision in this
detailed area. I know someone who has to approve literally every
transaction for pricing consistency. His team knows this and the
unspoken message is that no one else can be trusted with knowing
how important pricing can be in their business. He ends making
every decision…his people have been trained to act this way.
Alternatively, I know someone who is so removed from the day to day
operations, that he doesn’t even attend company events, like
Christmas parties, whatever. Both are successful. Both know the
traits they have and have built organizations that have adapted to
this reality. What they are, is consistent. In my own case, I don’t
like meetings. I am pretty sure this is fairly well known about me.
If, all of the sudden, I were to start calling meetings right and
left, people would wonder what happened to me. Or worse…they would
ask themselves the most dreaded thing that can be said of an
entrepreneur: “I wonder what book he just read to make him change
his behavior so much.”
15. Storytellers needed. Ever since Eve told Adam the
story about the apple and the serpent, we have paid attention to
storytellers. We listen better and learn more when we hear stories.
Develop this skill and win. There are certain duplicable skills in
great story telling. Here is a short video that tells it better
than I can.
Click here.
16. Be an active good listener. OK, so you are in charge;
soon you will begin to hear only those things that your people want
you to hear. People are awfully smart about what the boss needs or
wants to hear. Your job is to develop a bullshit meter, a sort of
internal device that will keep you steady and assured. From time to
time, it is alright to let others know that your BS detection
ability is operating. If you don’t, the BS just keeps getting
deeper and deeper. I had a boss once who, when he felt the BS was
flowing fast and furiously, would simply raise his arm and say,
“everyone, save your watches…it’s getting deep in here.” We all
laughed but we knew that he knew.
17. Don’t get all big headed. One of the character traits
of most entrepreneurs is a well developed self assuredness. Never
let this cockiness develop into a situation where you begin to
believe your own press releases. I have seen this happen all too
often. It has happened to me. In my own case, try as I can, I have
noticed that when I have had a positive story written about a
company. I generally get too much of the credit…I change somehow.
My head gets a little bigger, I am not quite as hungry. My solution
now is not to be involved in such PR efforts. In my own case, there
is a direct connection to my picture being in an article and my
big-headedness. Now, some people love this and have milked this
attention to the betterment of their business. I understand
that.
18. Pioneers get
the arrows in their back. I think it is far better to be second
with a differentiated product than having to educate and build a
market. Sure, both are possible. A early business hero of mine,
Mike Vance, told me (and 300 others) that you can create something
special by thinking up a new idea OR by re-arranging old things in
new ways. Steve Jobs didn’t invent MP-3 players, he made old ones
better. Here at Jobdig, we are not the first free weekly newspaper,
we are simply the best with our new ways of serving our customers
and jobseekers. There is success in looking at old offerings and
improving them.
19. Is work fun for you? Do you laugh a lot at work? Or,
are you serious…after all, this is a serious, not a comical
endeavor, after all. Part of the unspoken reason to starting up
your own company is NOT to be your own boss. Truth be known, it is
really so you can have more fun. If you can’t picture yourself
having fun, don’t bother.
20. TIVO-Ability. As well we all know, TIVO is that
device, the first DVR television attachment, that has allowed us to
record and fast forward through television programs. It helps us
avoid commercials, and even the ambient noise in our favorite TV
watching environment. You should have a similar ability to focus on
the future…even to see what it might bring you. You will be
required to help others TIVO their own work, so they can see how
their work will eventually contribute to the overall success.
21. Delayed gratification is necessary. Stretch your arms
out to your sides. One hand is pulling on a rope and the other hand
is holding the bell. Some people need the bell to ring at the same
time as the rope is being pulled. Others don’t. Often, there is a
significant time delay between pulling the rope and hearing the
bell ring in a new company. This is true whether you are investing
in sales training or a new product. It is surely true when you are
thinking up your own exit from the business. Things take time.
22. Sales in number one, two and three on the priority
list. You should plan on spending most of your time worrying
and working on your sales efforts. Nothing else much matters. A
sale happens when someone pays you for your service or product.
Don’t get too excited if the marketing focus group says everyone
will buy one. Get excited when someone pays for it.
23. To sell many, sell one. To build your company, you
have to sell multiples. You can’t just sell one. Anyone can sell
ONE. The trick is to sell a lot, right? Sure. But before you can
sell many, you have to sell that one single customer so that he is
excited and pleased to have your product or service. This is why
when you talk to venture capital investors, they are obnoxiously
insistent on waiting until someone buys something from your
company. Everything else is classroom.
24. Family support, are they with you full on? Some
family members love the idea of being associated with a successful
entrepreneur. No one questions that. But some family members will
not share your dedication and persistence, not to mention focus.
The last thing you would need is someone back home who questions
every move, every decision, every investment. This is not to say
that your family members have to be all stupidly supportive. It is
especially powerful if you get good advice, support and unwavering
belief in YOU.
25. Do you know what scalable means? This is a relatively
new business topic for an old business process. What this means is
that you should try to develop processes in the business that can
be easily duplicated and replicated. It is one thing to sell your
product to one person, quite another to figure out how this sale
was made so that you can make the next sale more efficiently.
Success often hinges on your ability to continue to do the correct
things faster and better that result in some tangible success.
26. Ready, aim, fire. Back when Beowulf was a lad, he
used his trusty old slingshot to attack his enemies, kill squirrels
and impress the maidens. Chances are he didn’t aim all that much.
What he did was just let ‘er fly. If the rock fell short, he
adjusted so the next time he got closer, and closer the next time.
Same thing in a new startup. The situation favors action over
planning. It really should be ready-fire-adjust. One of my favorite
cartoons is the one with the two buzzards sitting in the tree
waiting for the man to die from thirst…”Patience, hell,” says one
to the other, “I want to eat something.”
27. Can you sell dog food to the dogs? This is one of
those things that most startup people know and do instinctively.
They know, and so should you, that the first group you need to sell
on your idea, are the people inside the company. Too often, we tend
to forget that every employee needs to believe. You can never miss
an opportunity to re-sell them.
28. Your sales people don’t work for you. The sooner you
realize that all good sales people work, truly, for your customers
and not for you, you will understand more about sales people than
90% of all non sales people.
29. Sales trumps all. Sales will mask a lot of internal
problems. Or, said another way….sales mean you can live to fight
another day, and buys you time to fix and solve internal
problems…which are sure to come.
30. Just stay in business. Too many new companies flame
out, just like the after-burner on some supersonic jet. The pilot
kicks in the after-burner for an added jolt of power, but once it
happens, that’s it, no more power. If you can just continue your
new business, first year to the second year, then to the third
year…chances are great, you will make it. Do whatever it takes to
make it to that third year. Don’t flame out.
31. People sign up for vision, fun and principle. Getting
people to work for your new company will be difficult. You have
nothing to offer. You can’t offer great benefits, a
brag-at-the-parties company reputation, or even middle market
salaries. What you can offer is something no other company can
match….vision—meaning you are out to solve some big, hairy problem
that your prospects are facing each and every day. You can offer
fun; mostly because every day will be something new and
interesting. Lastly, you must offer adherence to principles. Treat
everyone fairly. Be transparent and be honest.
32. Can you ignore little things? I knew we were well on
our way to a good culture at Jobdig, when one of our reps brought
in his dog to work. He didn’t ask.
33. Is there an enemy? I would much rather have a company
to compete against, a competitive enemy, than not. It makes your
life so much simpler—all you have to do is make yours better,
faster, cheaper. Everyone knows when you have reached success. When
we started Varitronics, our basic mission was to put Kroy out of
business. In a few years, we forced them from their monopolist
perch to near bankruptcy. In short, we won. We started to flounder
after that mission was accomplished. We needed another one.
34. Incremental improvements almost always wins. Too
often we think we must improve in a dramatic fashion. All it really
takes is consistent, small, incremental improvements in your new,
developing business. Try to do something better each day.
35. Are you OK with being in charge? At the end of the
day, in your new developing company, you are IT. It makes no
difference how complete your team or even how good it is, or how
well you are doing. You are in charge, everyone looks to you. You
need to figure out THE key success factor in your business and get
all consumed by it. In Varitronics, our key success factor early in
the business was getting our dealer network signed up. I thought it
was so important, that I hit the road for weeks at a time, meeting
and telling our story to potential dealers. Your consuming focus
might be to get financing. This top line focus is your
responsibility.
36. Be ready for luck. Nothing irritates me than someone
saying how lucky we have been in our new companies, implying pure
happenstance. It really isn’t about being lucky, but it does
involve being receptive to those moments where the stars line up to
your benefit. When the Twins played in the 87 World Series, we were
fortunate enough to get a bunch of tickets for our employees. I had
a big sign made up, congratulating the Twins from us. I asked some
of our warehouse guys to get to the game early to get this big
sign-poster up along the right field foul pole. They did. The next
day our phone rang off the hook because our dealers were thrilled
our sign was on TV as the announcers went to commercial break. I
guess we were lucky.
37. Dream globally, think locally. Sure, it is way fun to
think about serving customers in every state and foreign country.
You should think about your business in regional or international
terms. Just be aware that your best, earliest and most leveragable
sales and customers will come from your hometown.
38. Break your business down to a few key metrics. Far
too many business plans say something like…”By only achieving 5%
market share, we will be dominant in our industry.” Ok, maybe that
is true. Figure out a replicable, repeatable sales formula. Quick
simple example: Let’s say you send your customers a direct mail
letter selling your small item. For every 100 you mail out, your
costs including postage will be approximately $1 each. If you
assume a 2% response (you have to keep this very practical and
honest), two people will buy. So, you have invested $100 to get two
customers. How much is each customer worth to you? We use to have a
program we called “mail ten, call ten.” Every day, our reps would
mail ten new prospects and then call ten that had been mailed. It
always worked. Nowadays, modern company leaders have access to a
dashboard that is updated daily or even hourly. Know your metrics
and what effects them.
39. On average, your people are not average. This is a
simple fact. If you were to ask for a vote and ask your people if
they think they are performing below average, average or above
average, most would believe they are above average. Your job is to
be able to honestly assess their performance and to positively
bring them up to their own perceived level. But keep in mind, each
person is unique, special and has very different skills, and
talents. Use them wisely.
40. Assume
waste. And a built-in bias toward doing less work. This is not
being cynical, just realistic. You should understand that all of us
waste time at work. Even more, there are many of us who, because of
upbringing or whatever, have a tendency to avoid work. You can pay
a lot of people to not do the work. I think you have to be
very upfront with your employees and let them know you expect them
to work. If you are blessed with a natural style that allows you to
do this without pissing them totally off…more power to you.
41. Be friendly but not so much. This is touchy advice
and actually hard to pull off, especially with employees who are
more skilled and older than you. I believe it is one thing to be
nice, friendly even, and quite another to hang with them, and drink
beer all day on Saturday. Your call. Your perceived friendliness
will be an issue with someone not in the group. You want to be
over-the-top fair with everyone.
42. Are customers always right? No, they aren’t. In fact,
some are unreasonable and even not profitable for you as business.
Realize this fast. I am not saying you want to mistreat customers,
far from it. But if a bad customer is negatively impacting you,
your top performers and the business in general…fire them.
43. Get more than 50% of your people totally engaged in the
business. If you have less than 50 employees your goal should
be to get 50% of them…that is all you need!!!..to be passionate and
engaged in the business. By this I mean, if over half of your
people think about your business after they leave work and are
always thinking up new approaches, new solutions, then you are
winning and winning big. That is awesome because most companies
have an engagement factor of closer to 20%.
44. Suggestion boxes suck. I know there are a lot of
management gurus who recommend having suggestions boxes spread
around a business, to generate improvement ideas. If you need a box
to generate such response, some other communication process needs
fixing. If you ask for suggestions, you have to react to each and
every one. Some, odds are, won’t be do-able. So, now you have a
negative moment in your company. You have to tell the suggestor
that no, we are not getting a trampoline for those who need an
afternoon break. (An actual suggestion for me, once)
45. Formal performance reviews are de-motivating. One of
your biggest challenges in a start up environment is keeping the
motivation high. Remember what it is like–no prospect knows your
company (yet), the pay isn’t all that great, you are working your
people hard—all requires the utmost in motivational ability on your
part. I was in the Air Force and like all military and large
organizations, the AF had a very well thought out and detailed
performance review system. They had teams of people being trained
on it, how to give effective performance reviews and so on. It was
documented ten ways to Sunday. It still sucked and it was basically
a fast way to un-motivate people. I know HR people will have all
this justification for formal reviews. Maybe they are needed once
you get several hundred people. Til then, insist your managers
discuss performance on a daily or weekly basis with their people.
They have the right to know how they are doing. Why make them wait
for some artificial performance review deadline.
46. Find a lead dog. It is absolutely imperative that you
find and nuture a top performing sales person. If you don’t, high
level goals are nearly hard to achieve. Always keep your eyes out
for this sales leader. He will help you in many, many ways.
47. Put people in positions where they can be successful.
Get to know the individuals and allow for difference. Helping them
find success is now your job, not their mom and dad’s. You must
figure out what position or tools they need to do the job you are
demanding of them.
48. Know the
lyrics, understand the tune. Business schools are very good at
giving you the background and knowledge to deal with many business
issues. What they are not good at is helping you know what to do
when someone has an issue with drugs or alcohol. What do you do?
What is your responsibility? What about trust? How long do you stay
with a key guy who is not performing? What is the tune here? Can
you hear it?
49. Never talk down, talk up. Disrespect shows up in
small, insignificant ways. Your people can smell disrespect like
bad gouda. Listen harder and talk less. Use ‘and’ more than you use
‘but.’
50. Don’t
dominate meetings. This is incredibly easy to do; after all,
you probably know more about the topic than anyone else if only
because you have been thinking on it 24-7. If you dominate
discussions, just expect to be in this position time and time
again. Your job is to build a business, NOT your own self
worth.
51. Learn how to brainstorm.
Every startup does plenty of brainstorming and you should be not
only good at it yourself, but have an ability to make others good
at it as well. We all have heard the usual brainstorming ‘rules’:
1. Don’t allow criticism of ideas; 2. Quantity over quality; 3.
Encourage wild, even dumb ideas; and 4. Hitchhike on others’
ideas.
Here are some more
rules, er, ideas that will help: 5. Have fun, laugh a lot; 6. Stay
on topic; 7. Realize that some people will not be comfortable
speaking out; 8. Acknowledge people’s ideas verbally and by their
name; 9. brainstorm alone, first; 10. Do not dominate the session
yourself, talk less; 11. it’s a real skill to facilitate a good
brainstorming session, learn by practicing; 12. not all
brainstorming sessions are called that, most just happen; 13. think
about the five senses constantly and how they impact the topic; 14.
be one of the first to present a really terrible, stupid idea, then
laugh about it; 15. Don’t give any rewards or bonuses for good
ideas–it will stifle future sessions.
52. Be accessible and
approachable. Things happen so fast in the startup, that you
must simply be there. This means in your office and where people
are working. If you have to get out of your office, do so.
53. Model the behavior you
require. If you demand certain things, do those things
yourself, better to a higher degree. This means getting to work on
time, and so forth. I thought this one was too obvious to include,
but alas….it is not…
54. Try not to use your own personal sales as the model for
your sales team. It is ok to sell, sure. But if you want to
build others up to sell, be aware that you will own your customers
forever, no one will want to jump in and serve the boss’s
customers. Plus be aware that you bring different skills to the
sales presentation than the rep can bring. You might be friendly
with decision maker or owner, for example, a luxury your
25-year-old might not enjoy.
55. Can you recognize the top five problems in most sales
departments? This is generalizing and your own organization may
have different issues, but here are five that I have seen over and
over again. 1. Lack of energy, excitement. For something to
be sold, someone had best be excited about it, and your people can
control themselves. Get them excited about your company, product.
2. Product training is not sales training. Today, most sales
training is really product training. If they are great at
describing your product’s features and benefits, but are not
closing deals, it is the training. 3. Too much talking, not
enough listening. Most good sales people are great listeners.
Do your sales people have lists of open ended questions to use? 4.
Alignment issues. It is like going to the doctor with a sore
throat and saying you have a sore throat and having him start
writing a prescription, “because you are the tenth person today who
has that symptom.” You still want to be examined, right? Same thing
with a prospect, just because your sales person has seen the
situation before, and believes your solution is best….he still
needs to develop the process with prospect. 5. Ask for the
order. By far the biggest one. Remember that there are four
things that can happen: a sale (good), no sale (good), advance the
sale (good), or continue the sale (bad).
56. Focus on the big picture but dont allow ANY type-os.
This is a very touchy area, because you should be able to see the
business from a 40,000 foot level, but if you are always up there,
small mistakes happen that will undermine your credibility and
professionalism. For example, I am particularly picky on any
materials in print about our company. My most common ‘catch’ is the
comma or period and quotation marks. They go “here.” Not “here”. I
know, I know…see you caught the above typos, too.
57. No matter your benefits budget, it is the gift-giving
thought that counts. One time after a particularly good year,
we announced a huge (for us) contribution into the company 401k
plan, hundreds of thousands of dollars. Polite response from the
crowd. But then, we gave each employee a watch with our logo on its
face. People said it was the best gift they had ever gotten from a
company. There are tons of books on this subject—Bob Nelson has
made a writing and speaking career out of this topic alone. His
book “1001 Ways to Reward Employees” is good, but you can think up
ten of your own ideas as you drive in to work tomorow.
58. Talk to your competitors, don’t run from them. This
may be a bit counter-intuitive and it might not work well in your
industry, granted. Talk to them at trade shows, conferences, even
on the phone…don’t talk strategy or tactics, talk about the
industry in general. You can learn a lot by talking to someone who
is confronting the same issues. One never knows what you might
learn. Here at JobDig, we compete against a daily newspaper out in
North Dakota, the Fargo Forum, in a very limited way. We
both sell help wanted advertisements to employers in the Fargo
area. The Fargo Forum owns a bunch of local newspapers and
we had an idea of how we could partner with these local papers.
Obviously, we knew we had to offer some unique benefits, we
understand that, shessh. Anyway, I called up the publisher and
after several attempts finally got him on the phone. Introduced
myself, yada yada yada. He told me they had no interest in meeting,
even to hear our ideas. Keep in mind, JobDig has taken over a
million dollars out of their pockets, easy…more actually. And I was
calling, volunteering to meet. Here is the takeaway, if your
competitor calls and wants to meet, for goodness’ sake, meet…if
nothing else, to size up your competitor.
59. Communicate with your stakeholders often. I don’t
care if your only stakeholders are family members, communicate with
them frequently and regularly. If you have investor type
stakeholders, this is a requirement. Far too often, we tend to
forget our supporters. Let them know how you are doing, the good
and the bad. They want to help you. There is nothing more fun than
helping someone get started in a new business. By not communicating
with them, you are robbing them of their biggest reason for
supporting you and others like you. It does not have to be a big
fancy shareholder letter, either. At JobDig, Toby writes a monthly
one-page, tongue-in-cheek, funny yet accurate newsletter that we
send out to our stakeholders. We get constant good feedback.
60. Join clubs….or not. I know some advise new business
owners to join the Chambers of Commerce and groups like Rotary and
Lions. I know this works for a lot of people. I happen not to be a
joiner…I know it would probably help me reach out, get to know more
people, etc, but it is not ME. The point here is that you have to
be true to yourself, no matter what the advice. If you cannot do it
and feel good or comfortable doing it, don’t. The world is full of
quiet, behind the scenes, unknown entrepreneurs building great
businesses.
61. Better to be OCD, than ADD. We have all worked for,
around or under bosses who had bad cases of ADD, Adult Deficit
Disorder. They can be so random that many cannot follow their train
of logic or directions. How about those Vikings? If you are to have
a disorder, it would be best to have OCD,
obsessive-compulsive disorder. In fact it may help you, word is. I
have not yet met a successful entrepreneur that wasn’t compulsive
about something. Have you? Have you? I mean, really, have you? The
worst boss, according to comedian Dennis Miller, is one who is both
ADD and OCD. He moves from project to project, whatever gets his
attention…but then he gets really focused on it, until the next
project comes along.
62. Shiny pennies. Invariably this happens to the new
startup guy. A new hire is made and then, all of the sudden, this
new ‘blood’ captures your interest, imagination and focus. I have
personally made this mistake more than once. It is a very easy trap
to fall into, believing that a new person on your team has all the
answers, badabing-badabing. Chances are he doesn’t, and in the time
it will take you to recognize this, you will have alienated your
existing team. Be excited about new people but make them prove
themselves. Dance with the one you brought to the party.
63. People who say they can raise money for your startup
usually can’t. I don’t care how smart, connected or rich their
friends, this almost always does not work. This is your job. Talk
to them, yes, but never stop raising money your own damn self.
64. When you are forming the business, do it the simplest way
possible. If you are raising money from outside investors, use
common stock, not preferred. Use an attorney to get the paperwork
done correctly. There are no shortcuts to this–a necessary, but
ass-saving requirement.
65. Explore every possible sales channel. One of your
jobs is to understand how your industry takes products to the
market. Basically, there are two methods–direct channels, meaning
you sell directly to the customer; or indirect, meaning your
customer is a dealer, distributor or agent who, in turn, sells your
product to his customer. You can sell via both channels but it is
more complicated and requires product differentiation, perhaps, and
a keen awareness of pricing issues. When we started Insignia, we
didn’t know which channel would work for our new sign maker for
retailers. We literally tried and tested several channels (dealers,
independent reps, private label accounts) before deciding to focus
on direct sales, over the telephone.
66. If you feel inadequate in a certain discipline, hire
up. None of us can be good in every single area of a business.
If you are not especially good at accounting, hire someone that is
very solid and strong in that area. No one will fault you if you
are not the best in that area, they will fault you if you try to BS
your way through these issues. Your job is all about building a
team to execute a well defined plan. After raising startup
money…that is it.
67. Be wary of consultants, headhunters and every other
outsider who wants to “advise” you. I have paid for this lesson
a LOT. At Insignia, I was seeking outside venture capital after
investing a lot, for me, in the product development. I knew better,
but when the potential new investor said they would only invest
after their market research firm did a complete study, I said yes.
The market research study cost us about $20,000 to complete and
yes, you guessed it, they recommended that the venture firm pass on
our opportunity. Shessh—like I had any choice at that point?…we HAD
to make it work.
68. Do not do any advertising or promotion that is image
related. Make your advertising pay its own way, with
measurable, no-shit results. It is not about image or some
advertising awards, it is about generating leads that turn into
sales.
69. Test and roll, test and roll. This is a slight
variation on the ready-fire-adjust theme but an important one.
Break down almost any offer or product launch to a smaller, focused
and measurable size. If you want to be the best asphalt paving
company in the metro area, try your new business in one small
suburb before you undertake a metro-wide ad campaign. Test a few
variables to make your offer the best possible.
70. Never hire a quitter back. People will leave your
company, chances are. No one is irreplaceable, it happens. But if
they resign, do not hire them back into the company. It is a very,
very tempting to do so…after all, you are a great person, and they
made a mistake (they will tell you) in resigning, what have you. If
you do, you have just signaled that your company has a safety net,
and more people will leave to test the employment waters. Let it be
known if they leave, that is ok, but they are not on the team now
or in the future. The ONLY exception would be for Peace Corps
volunteers or people who join the National Guard.
71. Assume goodwill; but audit, measure and lock the
doors. I really believe in the inherent goodness in most
people. This is true of your employees, customers and any other
stakeholder you might have in your new business. In other words,
don’t go out looking for trouble where none exists. At the same
time, realize that nothing gets improved until it gets measured.
Only then can you understand if you got the result you
needed…without concrete measurement devices, you are running a
hobby business. Lastly, lock the doors. I loved my kids, but I
still checked the liquor cabinet.
72. It takes 4 x the money and 4 x the time. Twenty years
ago, they used to say twice the money and twice the time to get
almost anything done in a new company. Now, for me at least, it is
closer to four times both. And, that is starting with a start date
and money amount that was developed with some experience. It is so
easy to underestimate both. Build your plans around this four times
rule, and you just might have enough of both left at the end.
73. If your customers have to change their behavior, prepare
for a struggle. People are extremely resistant to changing
their behavior. Can it be done? Sure. Keep asking yourself if there
is a way to make their current behavior simpler, faster and
cheaper—that is much,much better. I have a friend who started up a
home delivery grocery business. The business invested tens of
millions in systems, warehouse and customer acquisition strategies.
Even though it is still operating, enticing the grocery shopper
away from bricks and mortar to online has proven more expensive
than planned. And, their value proposition is very compelling too.
It is like the HR manager one of our reps talked to not long ago.
“The daily newspaper just doesn’t work for us at all, any more, ”
the HR manager said, “but we are still using them.” When our rep
asked why, she said, “well, my boss won’t approve any other
media.”
74. No one will like change, except you. If you are
starting to be successful in your new business , be prepared to
cope with the newfound lack of flexibility in your team that will
drive you frickin’ nuts. You must always be on the
lookout for new ways of doing things, of new products to add, and
new customers. You might be the only one truly comfortable with
ambiguity. Recognize this fact, and tolerate this resistance. Think
of it not so much as a governor on your own creativity, but as
voices of reason and carefulness. You are all about growth. Butt
hey mean well. Just don’t let them start patting you on the head
like old Uncle Curly who has alzheimers.
75. No one cares as much about it as you do. Your new
company will consume you, and even most of your employees. Realize
that most other people will not have heard about, or even care that
you have a brand new widget. Your big dilemma about increasing
prices?…they won’t even recognize it or care. As one old curmudgeon
told me once, “we are nothing but pimples on the ass of progress.”
I got the message.
76. You can’t stop certain activities, even sales, once
inertia and momentum is working for you. Every year at
Varitronics, we would introduce a new product that we thought would
kill our last one. Most of the time, it never did, people just kept
selling and buying the older products. Once the train starts going
down the track, it is hard to announce a big change, don’t expect
immediate implementation. However, neverevernever announce a
product before you are completely ready and it is deliverable.
Sales people excel at selling products that they cannot deliver. It
is much easier to sell blue sky than something tangible.
77. Be gender and color, and political blind. More than a
legal requirement, it will make your business better. I extend that
to politics too. You simply cannot win taking one side or the
other. To me, this means no political meetings, bumper stickers on
cubicles and so forth. After all, I hate YOUR candidate, and all
pretenses of goodwill and logic fly out the window. Don’t subject
your workforce to your political leanings,…or your customers,
either.
78. Under-promise, over-deliver mentality. It is one
thing to have the over-the-top positive attitude, which every
stakeholder and employee will love, but quite the another thing to
make promises you cannot keep. Be positive. As Steve Jobs said,
“Great companies ship.”
79. Handle bad news internally. There is nothing worse
than seeing a business leader relate bad general news to people
inside his company. I am NOT saying be stupidly positive and not
realistic. What I am saying is that if your market is experiencing
some tough times, work extra hard at making your product line or
service offer better. If you participate in any pity-party that
might be going on in your company, you have lost. I don’t care what
the subject is, your job is to never-ever give up and never-ever
admit a negative. Your people need to believe that no matter what
the danger, you are going to lead them to the promised land.
80. Worry is the misuse of your imagination. Your job is
to find another way around the barn…if this way is blocked, you
need to find another way. It is not good enough to simply worry.
Anyone can ‘worry’–your job is take that negative emotion and solve
the problem.
81. No procrastination, in business matters. A startup
requires fast action and faster decisions. Larger companies can
allow problems to evolve, even mature before someone takes action.
Startups cannot. One simple way to determine if you are dealing
with a startup mentality: this person will not wait for a return
phone call, he will simply keep calling and leaving messages. This
may not be an endearing trait, but it is a consistent one of most
entrepreneurs.
82. An internal voice that keeps saying, “why not do it this
way?” Or some variation of the same question. It does not
matter if you are out eating or at a ballgame, the startup person
is always thinking of new ways of doing things. Tony Christianson
of Cherry Tree Ventures used to have a drawerful of business ideas,
actually concepts that needed ’starting.’ Most of the time, the
ideas come from impatience or unhappiness about a current product
or service.
83. Tested under fire and managed ok. David Pomije of
FuncoLand used to recommend that entrepreneurs go through
bankruptcy at least once. You don’t have to go out and avoid debts
by declaring bankruptcy, there are other ways. I have a good friend
who had his own investing company, and got several of his friends
into a questionable investment. When it exploded, instead of
avoiding his friends and rationalizing it away with a cavalier
“they had the offering documents like I did,” he knuckled down, and
paid them all back out of his own pocket. If he called me today and
said he needed a loan to start up a new business, I would send him
some money, no questions asked. Also, entrepreneurs who have been
members of higher level sports teams have experienced tough times,
of being behind, and have had to perform at higher levels than they
thought possible, have been tested enough.
84. Worry less about the big competitors and more about the
guy in the garage. The typical new entrepreneur is overly
concerned about what General Motors will do about his new
anti-litter device that attaches to the backseat. I actually
experienced this almost exactly. A guy had developed a molded
mini-trashcan of sorts that would attach cleverly inside a Lexus.
His question of me? How could he protect his idea from Toyota, the
parent company of Lexus. I am sure this must happen, I have not
seen it. Most of the time, the large company will completely
discount and disregard your offerings. When Scott and I started
Varitronics, Kroy Inc. really discounted our offering, even made
fun of us personally. This is more common than you would think—so
don’t worry about the big guys, worry more about the guy just like
you, with a slightly bigger garage.
85. Thinking
about barriers, not products so much. Every product can be
designed better: Fact. Just because you have the best product
today, does not mean you will have it tomorrow. Someone will make
it look better, work faster or cost less. If you are in software,
this might take just weeks. You can create a significant barrier to
others who want enter your niche or space, by thinking of every
part of the business process as something that can be improved. In
JobDig, for example, we can create our weekly newspapers, each
unique with dozens and dozens of graphically perfect display ads,
in a few hours. The problem we solved was how to scale the graphic
design function without having dozens of graphic designers on the
payroll waiting for Friday afternoon closings. This ability is a
significant barrier.
86. Get excited about little things. A lot of the
incremental improvements in a new company are fairly small and
seemingly insignificant. The entrepreneur needs to be able to get
satisfaction out of these daily little achievements. They
intuitively know that little things done well add up to a
successful bigger event, a launch of a new software release, for
example.
87. Can stay UP all day. This is harder than it sounds.
This is like performing on stage, with two shows daily. Your
apparent self confidence and attitude will work wonders on
associates, staff and stakeholders. They feed off this confidence
and attitude to help you create the business.
88. Sunshine pump. Let’s say you are having a bad day and
a friend calls you. He is obviously down about something, almost
depressed—one, can you hear it in his voice and two, by simply
talking to him over the phone, can you make his day brighter?
89. Business math in reverse. Good startup people can
walk through Costco, or a car dealership or listen to a highly paid
business consultant and figure out the metrics, or the math behind
the economics of the products or services being sold. They know
what a direct sales effort costs, and even know what the going rate
is for a poor, mediocre or stellar sales rep. They know the margins
required for indirect distribution and can calculate quickly what
each level in the distribution chain must pay or cost. This
back-of-the-envelope calculation is often the beginning stages of a
new company, because it exposes an opportunity.
90. A builder, not a maker, nor operator. Creating a new
business where none existed before is a very unique skill. I don’t
care if you built it by being the best inventor or maker, or even
if you happened to be the best manager of a certain function. If
you built it, even if you started from another discipline…you built
something new from scratch, from zero. Before you came along, there
was nothing. You may have made it or operated it…mostly you built
it. I know a young woman who is building her own cookie company.
She is literally the cookie maker and the operator of the tools,
mixing machines and so forth. But she is building a business.
91. Trust instincts, but drop bad ideas fast. The
subtitle of this blog perfectly describes this entrepreneur:
“frequently wrong, never in doubt.” That was intended to be
somewhat funny, but the people who work around me would probably
say it is so so so so true. Hey! If I don’t believe in my own ideas
strongly, how will we actually find the RIGHT one? I don’t care if
I am a universe of one, I trust myself more than some un-engaged
focus group. And so should you. And, I never guaranteed that I
would have only good ideas anyway.
92. Grounded in
experiences, developed in practice. Successful entrepreneurs
have all sorts of experiences. Bill Gates came from a rich family
and dropped out of Harvard. Michael Dell was a college student, Ray
Kroc was a middle-age, malted machine salesman. My friend TOM, who
the heck knows about him, he just seems to be everyone’s friend.
The point is, everyone has some experiences that help get you
prepared. I was in the Air Force ,and when I knew I wanted to
leave, I asked my friend Marge Setter what I needed to do in order
to be better prepared. She suggested I find a direct sales company
and join it. I did. I learned how to build a team of other business
owners selling products. I learned how to sell others on joining my
team as well as selling products. There is nothing quite like the
experience of buying products, storing them in your garage and
learning how to sell them. For those of you who have this
experience of HAVING to sell ’stuff’ by the end of the month in
order to pay rent, you will know exactly how it feels to make
payroll every two weeks. Same thing.
93. Screw
security. If you are all about safety, benefits protection,
fast cars and big cigars, you might not have the real, down-deep
confidence it might take. Actually, I am not sure it is confidence
or stupidity—what it is, is a belief that no matter what, at the
end of the day, you can figure it out, and make it all happen.
94. Understanding of the Law of
Requisite Variety. This is a law described by cybernetician
Ross Ashby which perfectly describes the creative entrepreneur.
Basically, the law says that in any system (company, department, a
meeting) all things being equal, the individual with the widest
range of responses (the most ideas) will control the system. To me
this means that the gift or trick is in promoting plenty of ideas,
fast and furiously. The process is quantity first, then quality.
Lots of people can sift and sort ideas, criticizing and developing.
Your job is to get the most ideas on the table, from you or
others.
95. High energy. This may be a work ethic mentality or a
caffeine-induced edginess. I cannot recall one entrepreneur who
appears sluggish or lethargic or slug-like. What’s even more
apparent is that they are NOT energy suckers, but energy
creators.
96. Quick studies. This can be very irritating to others,
but these people hear the first sentence and generally understand
the paragraph. They quickly get concepts, and are moving
immediately past the product feature discussion to how it will get
sold and supported..and improved upon. They get bored easily.
97. Don’t blame
others. Remember when mom told you about pointing at others,
that three fingers were actually pointing back at YOU? What this
meant to me, was that if something went wrong in a department or
company, chances are it was my fault, my error. Knowing this has
made me less likely to blame others, my challenge has been to do
what I can to eliminate my own mistakes. Firing people is
especially difficult because we know it was not their fault,
typically.
98. Engaging personality. Do
people like you? Here is a test: tell someone about your life so
far, where you grew up, went to school, and so forth. Does your
personal story engage them? Are they laughing, nodding their head,
actively listening? The point is–you can tell. If your story isn’t
engaging to them , you aren’t. It is not the story, it is you.
Learn to tell it better. This is the first thing you should learn
how to do.
99. Honesty. They are honest to a fault, if that could
possibly be true. They tell bad news often and believably, but to
the right audience. They are honest with themselves and certainly
others. They will often not tolerate dishonesty in any form. Don’t
lie to them.
100.
Humorous. I saved the best and most critical for last.
Startups are full of pressure, and the release mechanism is humor.
These people are quick witted, sometimes profane, and love to laugh
with people. They will say the most inappropriate things and at the
exact wrong moment. People are not sure if he’s crazy like a fox or
simply crazy.