Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Tips for surviving your first year as an entrepreneur

The first year of entrepreneurship is always the hardest.

You are scared silly. You’re a nervous wreck. You’re pulsing with adrenaline. You’re making life-changing decisions every other minute. You’re lonely.

Entrepreneurship is a form of self-punishment that few people dare to engage in, and in which few succeed.

Is it possible to emerge from the first-year gauntlet of entrepreneurship unscathed?

Sadly, you’ll emerge battered and bruised, so expect it. But at the same time, you can emerge victorious. Battle scarred, yes, but successful nonetheless.

Here are some life-changing lessons by a United States-based entrepreneur, Nei Patel, learned during his first year of entrepreneurship presented in a report by forbes.com.

Set short-term goals

Among the many great qualities of entrepreneurs is their ability to look at things long term. It’s called vision, and it’s a powerful thing.

You also need to crush your short-term objectives.

We recommend using the scrum methodology to help you manage your work. A more simple approach is to set seven-day goals. As quickly as possible, knock out all the short-term goals that lead you to your long-term vision.

Recruit cheerleaders

If you don’t have a group of people cheering you on, you are going to burn out. One of the only reasons that successful entrepreneurs recovered from a major burnout at an early age was because they absolutely loved their people. They knew that when they walked in that office in the morning, they were going to be energised and encouraged by the people on their team.

It’s so important.

If you are driving at this entrepreneurship thing on your own, you are going to hit rock bottom at some point. Find people — friends, family, teammates, colleagues, beer buddies, classmates, church friends, whoever — and ask them for encouragement.

You are going to need it.

Get organised

One common malady of the entrepreneur is the chaos syndrome. The business is hurtling along so fast, things are breaking, people are complaining, and you cannot find your dang login information for that software!

You need to get organised!

Here are three tips for getting organised as quickly as possible.

  • Spend time up front to learn and implement organised systems. It will save you thousands of hours in the long term.
  • Find a system and stick with it. There are plenty of productivity and organisation systems to choose from. Don’t obsess over which one to choose. Simply pick it and run.
  • Hire someone to help you with organisation. If organisation is not your strength, don’t worry. Hire someone who loves organisation (and does it well) to help you out.

Get help before you need it

One major rookie mistake is not hiring help before you need it.

At some point you must hire help. You may be the most capable DIY-er on the planet, but you can’t build a thriving business without some form of assistance.

You need to hire help before you need to hire help.

Here’s what I mean. If you can anticipate a future need for someone to do something, build something, design something, etc., hire that person as soon as possible.

You will be surprised by how long it takes to find the right person for your start-up. The process of posting jobs, recruiting candidates, and onboarding the new team member is costly and time-consuming.

The sooner you begin the process of hiring help, the faster and better you will be able to maintain your business’s momentum.

Make decisions fast

You don’t have the time or mental energy to waste on long, drawn-out decision making.

Make decisions — even big ones — as quickly as possible. You are going to make some dumb decisions. But a dumb decision is better than indecision.

Remember what George Patton said:

A good plan violently executed now is better than a perfect plan next week.

Generally speaking, quick decisions are right decisions. If your decision-making is swift and efficient, you will accelerate your path to growth.

Indecision will stall your business and drive you into the ground. If you make the occasional stupid decision, you’ll at least learn a lesson and keep trucking on.

Get the critics behind you.

If you listen to your naysayers, you will not be able to succeed.

There are going to be haters. Guaranteed.

These are people who, for some reason, don’t have a life and simply want to make someone else’s life as miserable as possible.

These people don’t matter.

If you listen to them, respond to them, deal with them, or otherwise allow yourself to be consumed by them, you are going to go down in flames.

Let the haters spend their time and energy hating you, but you have better things to do.

Pivot, pivot, pivot

Entrepreneurs like to talk about pivoting, so here ww go, using one of those entrepreneurial buzzwords.

What does it mean to pivot? To pivot is to “change direction quickly, but stay grounded in what they’ve learned.” Startups that pivot are startups that survive.

What kind of things need to pivot?

  • Your vision
  • Your business model
  • Your marketing
  • Your strategy
  • Your product
  • Your target customer

Your business is going to change drastically in its first year. Think about how quickly a baby changes during its first twelve months.

Apart from the dirty diapers, your business is kind of the same. Lots of crying. Lots of sleepless nights. And lots of changes!

You might not recognise your year-old business, and that’s because you’re pivoting fast and pivoting often.

Conclusion

Entrepreneurship is tough. There is no way around it.

Most entrepreneurs won’t make it. They will bail early.

However, if you have the right knowledge, stamina, and chutzpah, you will be different. You are going to nail this thing.

Make it through your first year using the tips we have outlined above, and it is a sure thing.

Source: The Punch

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