10 Dumb Ways to Start a Business (and Waste a Ton of Money at the Same Time)
By Michael Masterson
"So many fail because they don't get started - they don't go. They don't overcome inertia. They don't begin." - W. Clement Stone
Entrepreneurship is based on selling. You test the market with a
product you think will sell well. If it does, you keep selling. If it
doesn’t, you try something else.
This approach lent its name to my most recent best-seller: Ready, Fire, Aim.
The main idea is that to start and grow a small business you must
develop a pragmatic, action-oriented mentality. Rather than spend too
much time and money refining theoretical ideas, you develop a prototype
quickly and then see if the market will buy it.
As I said in the book, for every business that fails because of poor
planning there are a dozen that never get off the ground because of too
much planning.
The Ready, Fire, Aim approach obviously doesn’t apply to
surgical procedures and rocket science. But it will be very useful for
90 percent of the new-business ideas you are likely to come up with.
Want to start a business selling diamond-studded collars for kitty cats? Fine. There are two ways to go about that:
But with the Ready, Fire, Aim approach, you devote 80
percent of your initial resources to discovering an efficient way to
sell the product. Once you have done that, you have found the key to
successfully market it. With that key in your pocket, you don’t have to
worry about all the other problems that will arise in the natural course
of business. You won’t have to worry, because you will be able to
create the one thing that can solve almost every business problem: cash
flow.
Here, in a nutshell, is what I mean by Ready, Fire, Aim:
Ready: Get your product idea ready. Make it good
enough to sell. Don’t worry about making it perfect. There will be time
enough for that later.
Fire: Start selling it. Sell it every way you can.
Test different offers. Test different ad copy. Test different media.
Keep testing until you discover something that works. This is your
Optimum Selling Strategy (OSS).
Aim: Expand your customer base by focusing on your
OSS. As your customer base grows, develop business procedures to
accommodate that growth. Hire the best people you can to manage your
business. Discover, through “back-end” marketing tests, other products
and services that your customers will buy. Use those discoveries to
refine and perfect a fast-selling line. As this back-end business
flushes cash into your company, invest a good deal of that cash into
front-end marketing.
That is the cycle of a successful start-up venture.
Ready, Fire, Aim doesn’t mean you are willing to be sloppy.
Nor does it mean you are willing to sell second-rate products to your
customers. On the contrary, Ready, Fire, Aim is the only truly practical way to find out what your market really wants from you.
And for a small business, Ready, Fire, Aim is the best way to get from good to great.
Think of it this way: When we say we have “a great new product idea,”
what do we really mean? When I say that, I mean I have a strong feeling
that the product will sell well – that it will be a big, commercial
success.
But the truth is, I have only a hunch about how well my idea will do.
Experience has taught me that my hunches are often right… but not
always. If I spend too much time and energy preparing a business based
on a hunch, what happens if the hunch doesn’t pan out?
What happens is that I’m left with nothing – no money or materials or
energy – to start over again. The essence of entrepreneurship is the
ability to try and fail and then try again. You can’t do that if you
blow your wad the first time you try.
So nowadays when I get the feeling that I have a great idea, I figure
out how I can test that idea as quickly and as cheaply as possible.
Once I know the idea has “legs,” then I can roll out a sales program.
And once a successful sales program is underway, I can refine and
improve the product. The truth is, I can never perfect a product in
isolation. I used to think I could, but, once again, experience has
taught me the arrogance of that kind of thinking.
To get from good to great, you need the help of superstar employees
and, most of all, feedback from your customers. The best customer
feedback comes not from surveys or focus groups but from marketing
results. Find out what your customers want by selling things to them.
This gets you back into the Ready, Fire, Aim loop.
If I had to pick one thing – one characteristic or quality of my work
that is most responsible for the success I’ve had launching businesses –
I’d have to say it was this Ready, Fire, Aim approach. It’s
something I believe in strongly. That’s why I wince when I read the
start-up advice of so many “experts” who advocate feel-good busywork
over selling.
I was hoping that when Ready, Fire, Aim
was published we’d see no more foolishness of this type in the business
press. But here’s just a short list of the misguided (and even
ridiculous) advice I’ve read since my book came out in January of this
year [2008]:
Again, here’s my advice for starting a business:
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This article appears courtesy of Early to Rise [Issue #2341, 04-28-08], the Internet's most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com/.
"So many fail because they don't get started - they don't go. They don't overcome inertia. They don't begin." - W. Clement Stone
- You can spend most of your time and money manufacturing a line of such collars – and only after that is done, start to think about how you can sell it.
- You can make a single collar and go down to the local flea market or your neighborhood pet shop and see if you can find a customer for it.
- Create an instant-impact message that describes the chief benefit of your business. Put it on business cards and brochures, which you should hand out at business functions and meetings.
- Find a great office space and fill it with furniture.
- Take a field trip to discover how your product or service will satisfy people’s desires.
- Protect your “great ideas” by registering your business name, logo, and slogan.
- Create a paper trail – tracking all meeting dates, attendees, and discussions.
- Consult a lawyer and obtain his or her advice on how to best protect your business and make sure you set up the right legal structure.
- Check with your municipal authority to make sure “they permit a venture like yours” to work out of the home.
- Buy business insurance and “talk to an accountant or attorney” to make sure you’re not missing anything.
- Get a toll-free phone number (to give the impression that your business is much bigger than it is).
- As soon as possible, get the product ready to test.
- Test it as aggressively and creatively as you can. Spend 80 percent of your initial resources discovering the most cost-effective way to make the first sale (your “Optimum Selling Strategy”).
- Refine and adjust your sales process as market conditions change. At the same time, gradually develop business procedures to service your customers and improve your products according to your customers’ buying preferences.
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This article appears courtesy of Early to Rise [Issue #2341, 04-28-08], the Internet's most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com/.
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