8 Highly Effective Business Success Tips for Entrepreneurs
Being an entrepreneur means that you'll often blaze your own trail: No
career guides, counselors or maps will guide you from one step to the
next: You'll have to make it up as you go. I’ve been an entrepreneur my
whole adult life and it’s the only career I’ve ever known. In a way,
that makes me lucky: I’ve become not only comfortable with, but actually
good at, forging ahead into unchartered territory.
However, like everyone else, I’ve faced moments of doubt
and uncertainty and plenty of sleepless nights. As I look back at the
steps that led me from my first sale -- standing next to my grandfather
Joe at a folk festival when I was just a young kid -- to my
assorted entrepreneurial ventures today, some common themes emerge.
1. Keep the big vision in sight.
A
big vision will take you far. I put this tip first because when things
go wrong on the path to your success, and they will, keeping the big
vision in mind will enable you to steer your way back to a successful
course. It may not always be the course you imagined, but your big
vision becomes your north star, which in turn helps you navigate and
orient yourself through the darkness. I believe in this so much, I even
co-wrote a book on the subject with my brother. Your vision is your foundation, compass and celestial beacon, lighting the way forward.
2. Fuel your vision with perseverance.
What should go hand-in-hand with a big vision is the perseverance you’ll need to keep moving forward. If you’re a Game of Thrones
watcher, there was a great line in a recent episode when Stannis
Baratheon was being advised about the lack of wisdom in starting a
battle in the snow. He responded: “We march to victory or we march to
defeat, but we go forward, only forward.”
Sometimes,
when things get challenging on your path as an entrepreneur, you have to
commit yourself to moving forward, regardless of the discomfort and
fear surrounding the next steps. When you fuel your big vision with
perseverance and the spirit of “only forward,” you eventually meet your
success.
3. Make a plan, but be flexible.
You need a few
sets of plans, even if each is only a few pages. A business plan, with
an accompanying marketing outline, are important blueprints for
success. They help you map out the major landmarks of the road ahead,
define your success and break the journey into important metrics you can
track your progress against.
I’m not one for a giant, robust plan
nobody will access, but I do advocate a more modest go-to plan that can
act as your basic instruction manual and hold you accountable to
specific numbers. The reason I don’t support highly detailed plans is
that I believe you need the flexibility to alter the course as
necessary. Sometimes, large changes to the plan will be necessary.
4. Embrace your expertise.
If
you’re already innately good at something, or have a skillset, embrace
it. Don’t try to be all things for all aspects of your business. Hire
out or sign contracts with agencies for the things you can’t do, and
focus on your strengths as quickly and often as possible. Don’t be a
jack-of-all-trades and a master of none.
5. Don’t reinvent the wheel.
What
is already working in other people’s business models, in your industry,
in software applications and other business operations that you can
emulate instead of re-create? Don’t waste your time trying to set up
systems when you can simply purchase and install one, saving precious
time and spending little money. I always keep my burn rate in mind and
run as lean as possible. But sometimes the best decision is to take on
the expense of some good systems so you don’t have to waste time and
make mistakes building your own.
6. Don’t burn out.
This
isn’t just a stale piece of advice: Your health is literally the most
important thing in your life. When your body gives out, you’re done.
Your heart doesn’t care how good a business you have; your circulatory
system isn’t all that impressed with your money or accomplishments. .
. you get the point. Personally, I try to eat really good food, get good
sleep and take as much time as I can manage day by day to laugh with my
kids and see my wife.
You will burn out if you sacrifice your physical and mental health on the altar of your business. So, take care of yourself.
7. Leverage everything.
Life
hacks may seem like just viral fodder on the internet, but they
can teach an important mini-lesson in leverage. When you use leverage to
your advantage in every aspect of your life, you go further, faster.
Leverage outsourced help to streamline tasks and gain traffic time for
important phone calls. Leverage down time waiting anywhere (the doctor’s
office, your kid’s school, your mechanic’s waiting room, your
airline flight) to get stuff done.
8. Keep your sense of humor.
If
you can’t laugh at yourself, you’re missing out. I was almost asleep
the other night when I thought of a funny event that had happened
earlier that day, and I suddenly found myself erupting with laughter so
loud I woke the dog.
Laughing is a good cure to diffuse stress,
infuse some lightheartedness into life and get some perspective on the
fact that, hey, this is only life after all -- you don’t have to take it
so seriously.
So, try to laugh more and stress a little less. It
strengthens your emotional and mental well-being, keeps other people
from getting under your skin and keeps you cool and collected, plus a
lot more fun to be around.
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