The US has experienced
3 consecutive quarters of 876,000 new business start-ups in 2018. Main-street
needs our State Legislatures to remove excessive fees charged by
municipalities. My own business start-up
experience was easier.
I was kidnapped by 6
Atlanta-based electronics manufacturing companies to start a Private Consulting
Practice in 1993. I had served on the American Electronics Association Board
with my kidnappers for 6 years. I had been running Personnel for
Electromagnetic Sciences Inc. for 7 years and had completed what I went there
to do. The project lists my 6 new customers gave me gave me a 2 year backlog.
These were projects to install an updated policy manual, regulatory compliance,
new compensation management system, job descriptions, recruiting engineers and
general business consulting.
I didn’t do a business
plan. I used the project lists my new customers provided. I didn’t rent office
space. I put my office in the basement of my home. I bought a new Gateway PC, an HP Printer,
Scanner, Fax, a used desk and chair and some file cabinets and tables. In 1993,
I used removable disks. I would go to customer locations for meetings, but
would do most of my work including analysis, document production and recruiting
from home. When the internet became available, I got another new computer.
Working from home gave me the flexibility to work quickly.
I didn’t do marketing
or sales calls. All of my customers came
from referrals. I added new customers in 1994. By 2017 my customer list
included 45 companies. Many were large companies like IBM, Rockwell, Boeing and
Scientific Atlanta. Many were smaller like Fire Arms Training Systems Inc. and
American Signal Company.
My Project
Capabilities included all general personnel functions, acquisitions, facility
and subsidiary start-ups, process assessments, lean management, cost reduction,
throughput expansion, automation and capital equipment needs.
My project
responsibilities became on-going in many of the smaller companies who
outsourced technical recruiting, regulatory compliance and a myriad of other
projects to me.
After the 2008 Meltdown,
I called all of my regular customers and told them to reduce my budget, because
we would not be hiring a lot of engineers. I suggested that I train internal
staff to learn to do what I had been doing for them.
I continued to support
these customers on an “as needed” basis from 2009 to 2017. I operated NTL
Consulting for 24 years with no employees. My billable hours ranged from 2000
per year to 3500 per year. I billed at $30 per hour to $40 per hour depending
on the assignment. I did my own taxes as a Sole Proprietor on Schedule C and
deducted my home office and operating expenses.
My plan was to become
a Personnel Director in manufacturing, learn how to do everything and retire as
a “consultant”. I had the opportunity to retire from corporate life at age 50
and operate my own company to age 74. Now I write this blog.
Some business
start-ups are simple. If you have the equipment, the know-how and a customer,
you have a business. You would be shocked at the local regulatory and start-up
cost of opening a family retail business. It’s much easier if you own the
building and the land first and don’t have to pay rent on commercial space.
Many new business
start-ups are more complicated and risky and require capital. If this capital
is supplied by a bank, they will require mind-bending over-the-top planning as
outlined in the following article:
50 Reasons Why Some
Businesses Fail While Others Succeed, by successharbor.com. Why
is it that so many businesses fail while so few succeed?
One thing for sure, a business almost always fails because of the entrepreneur. “It’s not the plan that is important, it’s the planning.” Dr. Graeme Edwards
Businesses fail for many reasons. The following list includes some of the most common reasons:
According to a study of about 3200 high growth internet startups done by Startup Genome, about 70% of the startups in their dataset scaled prematurely.
Your business plan should include the following:
Must Have Business Plan Components
If you don’t prepare a business plan, your initial enthusiasm will fade and you will fail.
Entrepreneurs can stay accountable several ways:
Here are some effective ways to turn your idea into action:
Here are a few ways to improve your cash flow:
In Conclusion - Few places are less forgiving than the business world. Eventually, everything adds up. If your customers prefer your competitors, your employees would rather work for someone else, your partners no longer believe in each other or the business, and the many mistakes you can make along the way. And that is why businesses fail. Yes, it is true that most businesses fail. It is also true that many of them succeed. Those that succeed are not the result of miracles. Entrepreneurs who lead businesses to success understand that it takes a carefully planned and executed strategy. A little luck also helps.
One thing for sure, a business almost always fails because of the entrepreneur. “It’s not the plan that is important, it’s the planning.” Dr. Graeme Edwards
Businesses fail for many reasons. The following list includes some of the most common reasons:
According to a study of about 3200 high growth internet startups done by Startup Genome, about 70% of the startups in their dataset scaled prematurely.
Your business plan should include the following:
Must Have Business Plan Components
If you don’t prepare a business plan, your initial enthusiasm will fade and you will fail.
Entrepreneurs can stay accountable several ways:
Here are some effective ways to turn your idea into action:
Here are a few ways to improve your cash flow:
In Conclusion - Few places are less forgiving than the business world. Eventually, everything adds up. If your customers prefer your competitors, your employees would rather work for someone else, your partners no longer believe in each other or the business, and the many mistakes you can make along the way. And that is why businesses fail. Yes, it is true that most businesses fail. It is also true that many of them succeed. Those that succeed are not the result of miracles. Entrepreneurs who lead businesses to success understand that it takes a carefully planned and executed strategy. A little luck also helps.
One
of the great mysteries of entrepreneurship is why businesses fail. Some people
start one successful business after another while others fail to succeed. Why some businesses fail while others
succeed?
The
worst part about a failing business is that the entrepreneur is unaware of it
happening until it is often too late. It makes sense because if the
entrepreneur really knew what he was doing wrong, he might have been able to
save the business. Some entrepreneurs live in a land of denial while others are
unaware of their mistakes
There
are over 28 million small businesses in the United States, according to
the SBA. - It’s an impressive number. The sad
reality is that only about 50% of them survive. What’s worse is that only about
one-third survive 10 years or more. The life of an entrepreneur is unforgiving. It is a constant
challenge. There are many moving parts. Any one of them could put you out of
business.
1 – Lack of
planning –
Businesses fail because of the lack of short-term and long-term planning. Your
plan should include where your business will be in the next few months to the
next few years. Include measurable goals and results. The right plan will include
specific to-do lists with
dates and deadlines. Failure to plan will damage your business.
2 – Leadership
failure – Businesses
fail because of poor leadership. The leadership must be able to make the right
decisions most of the time. From financial management to employee management,
leadership failures will trickle down to every aspect of your business. The
most successful entrepreneurs learn, study, and reach out to mentors to improve
their leadership skills. I recommend that you read this book on
leadership.
3 – No
differentiation – It
is not enough to have a great product. You also have to develop a unique value
proposition, without you will get lost among the competition. What sets your
business apart from the competition? What makes your business unique? It is
important that you understand what your competitors do better than you. If fail
to differentiate, you will fail to build a brand.
4 – Ignoring
customer needs – Every
business will tell you that the customer is #1, but only a small percentage
acts that way. Businesses that fail lose touch with their customers. Keep an
eye on the trending values of your customers. Find out if they still love your
products. Do they want new features? What are they saying? Are you listening? I
once talked to the CEO of a training company who told me that they don’t
respond to negative reviews because they are unimportant. What? Are you kidding
me?
5 – Inability
to learn from failure – We all know that failure is usually bad,
yet it is rare that businesses learn from failure. Realistically, businesses
that fail, fail for multiple reasons. Often entrepreneurs are oblivious about
their mistakes. Learning from failures is difficult.
6 – Poor
management – Examples
of poor management are an inability to listen, micro-managing – AKA lack of
trust, working without standard or systems, poor communication, and lack of
feedback.
7 – Lack of
capital – It
can lead to the inability to attract investors. Lack of capital is an alarming
sign. It shows that a business might not be able to pay its bills, loan, and
other financial commitments. Lack of capital makes it difficult to grow the
business and it may jeopardize day-to-day operations.
8 – Premature
scaling – Scaling
is a good thing if it is done at the right time. To put it simply, if you
scale your business prematurely, you will destroy it. For example, you could be
hiring too many people too quickly, or spend too much on marketing. Don’t scale your business unless you
are ready. Pets.com failed because it tried to grow
too fast. They opened nationwide warehouses too soon, and it broke them. Even
the great brand equity that they have built couldn’t save them. Within a few
months, their stock went from $11 to $0.19.
9 – Poor
location – Poor
location is a disadvantage that might be too much to overcome. If your business
relies on foot traffic, location is a strategic necessity. A poor location
might make your customer acquisition costs too high.
10 – Lack of
profit – Revenue
is not the same as profit. As an entrepreneur, you must keep your eyes on
profitability at all times. Profit allows for growth. According to Small
Business Trends, only 40% of small businesses are profitable, 30% break even,
and 30% are losing money.
11 –
Inadequate inventory management – Too little inventory will hurt your
sales. Too much inventory will hurt your profitability.
12 – Poor
financial management – Use
a professional accounting
software like Freshbooks.
Keep records of all financial records and always make decisions based on the
information you get from real data. Know where you stand all the time. If
numbers are not your thing, hire a financial professional to explain and train
you to understand, at least the basics.
13 – Lack
of focus – Without focus, your business will lose it the competitive edge.
It is impossible to have a broad strategy on a startup budget. What makes
startups succeed is their ability to quickly pivot, and the lack of focus leads
to the inability to make the necessary adjustments.
14 – Personal
use of business funds – Your business is not your personal bank account.
15 –
Overexpansion – It
is easy to make the mistake of expanding your business into too many verticals.
Before you enter new markets make sure you maximize your existing market.
16 –
Macroeconomic factors – Entrepreneurs can’t control macroeconomic factors. Common
macroeconomic factors are business cycles, recessions, wars, natural disasters,
government debt, inflation, and business cycles. Your business can still
succeed in bad times. Hyatt, Burger King, FedEx, Microsoft, CNN, MTV, Trader Joe’s, GE, HP are
only a few examples of wildly successful companies started during a tough
economy.
17 – No
succession plan – Future
leaders should be identified in advance. Without an effective succession plan,
your business is unprepared to fill openings in created by retirements,
unexpected departures, or death.
18 – Wrong
partner – It’s
no secret that it is easier to succeed in business with the right partners. The
wrong business partner will, at the very least hurt, or, at worst, destroy your
company.
If you are
serious about making it as entrepreneurs, focus on the following:
19 – Make a
plan – It
all begins with planning. The biggest mistake many entrepreneurs make as they
start their ventures is that they don’t sit down and write a business plan. The
goal is to keep it concise. Don’t treat it like a business school project.
Leave writing a 50,000-word business plan to academics. Let them waste their
time. You can do a great business plan in one or two pages. There are some
great books on business plans such as “The Secrets to Writing a Successful
Business Plan” and “Successful Business Plan“.
20 – Core
values – Your
core values are the fundamental beliefs
that drive your business.
They are your guiding principles that should remain constant. Even as your
company grows your core values should remain the same. Core values can also
serve as a moral compass. Some of the more common core values are integrity,
trust, excellence, respect, responsibility, and teamwork.
Don’t allow your core values to
become empty words, make them part of your culture.
21 – Mission
statement – A
brief statement that defines why your company exists. Your corporate reason for being. It
describes your target market and the services/products you offer. If you have
done it right, your mission statement, in just a few sentences, will
communicate the essence of your business to your business and to the world.
22 – Who are
your customers – If
you are going to succeed in
business you will
have a clear definition of your customer. It is not an abstract idea. It is
something that can be expressed in numbers. For example, if your target
customers are family law attorneys, you have to be able to put a number on it.
For example, there are 175,000 (fictional number) family law attorneys in the
USA and they are our customers.
23 – What is
your product/service – It’s
key to have a clear definition of the services you offer. Without a clear
definition, you will be unable to effectively develop, market, and sell your
services.
24 – Involve
your customers in product development – Most businesses that fail create
products/services without involving their customers. If you are serious about success,
you will build your products with your customers. Businesses that fail build
products based on assumptions.
25 – How will
you sell and market your product/service – Marketing and selling your service could
be one of your biggest business challenges. A sales and marketing plan is a
must. Set measurable goals. Create systems to manage the process.
Proper
preparation doesn’t require a 100-page formal business plan. The keyword is “proper,”
not “planning.” If you do everything in your power to properly plan your
business, you increase your chances for success. Don’t confuse planning with
avoiding action or paralysis analysis. No amount of planning is a substitute
for action.
“No matter what one does, regardless of failure or success, the
experience is a form of success in itself.” Jack Ma, billionaire founder of
Alibaba
Your
first action item is to write your business plan. Completing your business plan
will give you an opportunity to process your idea in detail. One of the best
things you can do is to collect your thoughts before you make a real commitment
to starting your business. If you aren’t passionate about writing your business
plan, it’s unlikely that you’ll get passionate about your business either.
One
day you might think of a product that could revolutionize life on earth as we
know it. You might dream up something so great that no one ever thought of
before. The reality is that most successful businesses are without revolutionary ideas.
Instead, they modify or improve well-established products or services.
Mission
Statement
Company
Description
Product
Description
Market
Analysis
SWOT
Revenue
Projections
26 – In the
end, enthusiasm is not enough to succeed. It takes much more than that. You
need to research your market, your competition, the financial feasibility of
your concept, and more. As you fight through the battles of making your dream
come true, you need to be able to go back to read and re-read your business
plan. The concepts laid down in your business plan will help you to convince
your bank to give you the loan you need, or to determine the best marketing
strategy for your business. Don’t be emotional when you prepare your business
plan. Treat it as a business process with goals and deliverables. Once you
complete it, ask yourself, “Would I invest in this company?” Remember, you are
going to have to convince others to support your idea. Bankers, corporate
buyers, investors, partners, and the like will look at your business based on
facts. Their decision is not going to be based on emotion. When creating a
written business plan you give yourself a chance to think about your idea
thoroughly. As you put your ideas in writing, you tend to give them more
thought. You might think writing a business plan is boring, or a waste of time.
Truly, it should be one of the most exciting projects you could ask for. You
are writing your future.
27 – You are accountable – Many businesses fail because people
treat them like hobbies. From day one treat your business as a
business. Treat yourself as an employee. Set measurable goals and hold
yourself accountable. If you only plan to work in your business a couple of
hours a week, you can’t expect great results. Owning your own business requires
focus and commitment. Educate yourself about the wide range of options and
technologies. You can’t expect to get an ounce more out of your business than
what you’ve put into it. If you are only willing to put in a few hours a week,
expect to get a few hours a week of income. There are no shortcuts.
28 – Write
down your goals. Keep
your goals in front of you and keep coming back to them, at least once a month.
29 – Build an
advisory board.
30 – Join a
peer advisory group. You
will get feedback from fellow entrepreneurs. The best kind of peer advisory
group is where your business is the smallest business. You definitely don’t
want to be the largest or most successful business of your group. When you are
the smallest you will be pushed harder to catch up to the others in your group.
31 – Find a
coach. Try to
work with a coach who has already built a successful business.
33 – Forget
the idea, take action – You should never start a business based on a great idea. An
idea is just that: an idea. It’s worthless. It is not going to help you succeed
in business. Ideas won’t do; you need action to succeed. Wantrepreneurs are
full of ideas that never result in action. Entrepreneurs are action takers.
34 – Believe
that you can do it. I
don’t mean fooling yourself into anything, but the only way can you make it
happen if you believe that it will happen.
35 – Reach out
to mentors. There
are many successful people within your own existing network, and you can also
make new connections. Connecting with mentors helps you hear what it takes to
be an entrepreneur.
36
– Minimize risk, but understand that it is unavoidable.
37 – Give it
due time. Ideas
are fast, but making them happen will take time. Even if all goes well, almost
everything you do in business will take longer than expected.
38 – Get
others to believe in you. Successful
entrepreneurs are great at selling their visions. You might have to convince
vendors, partners, landlords, investors, employees, or a list of more people.
39 – Prepare
to fail – Do
not fear failure. There is one thing for sure, you will fail before you
succeed. Expect failure but don’t fear it. Think of it as a normal part of your
business. It is necessary. It is good for your business. It teaches you. It
helps you make the right decision the next time. It is super important that you
don’t associate failure with quitting. Only those that take action fail and
only those that take action succeed.
40 – Pivot,
rinse and repeat – Successful
entrepreneurs are always adjusting. There are many reasons to adjust. Your
customers might ask for a new software feature. Or, the recession might have
put your best customers out of business. The price of raw materials might rise
one day. Your business and its environment are dynamic. If you are good, you
develop a keen eye for changes and make quick adjustments. Most businesses that
fail do so because they ignore the world changing around them.
41 – Focus on
your customer – You
customer keeps you in business and puts you out of business too. If you listen
to them, you can improve your products or services. If you ignore they fire
you. Customers don’t disappear, they go to your competitors. Reach out to your
customers. Ask them questions. Ask what they like or dislike. Welcome negative
feedback. Don’t be defensive about it. Negative feedback gives you a chance to
improve.
42 – Stay
profitable – Staying
profitable will solve many problems. The lack of profit could put you out of
business even if you have record sales. Forget sales. Forget your revenue.
Forget the total number of customers. Always be mindful of profitability.
43 – Manage
cash – Entrepreneurs
that fail often confuse cash flow with profit. The two are not synonymous. It
is possible for you to go bankrupt with record cash flowing into your business.
To succeed in business you don’t just need cash flow, you need positive cash
flow. With positive cash flow happens when the cash funneling into your
business is more than the amount of cash leaving your business. It is simple
yet often ignored. The companies that ignore this end up with negative cash
flow. This happens when the outflow of cash is more than your incoming cash.
You should never allow negative cash flow.
44 – Get paid
in advance, ask for deposits or full payment in advance.
45 – Be very
selective in offering credit to customers, avoid it if possible.
46 – Increase
your sales.
47 – Offer
incentives for early payment.
48 – Secure
loans for emergencies.
49 – Disasters
do happen – Even
though Warren Buffet has a hands-off approach to managing his portfolio of
companies. He does require the CEOs of each of his companies to have a one
sheet in case of an emergency. The sheet of paper contains information on key
aspects of the company. While the one sheet of paper might be overly simplified
the point is that you have to be prepared for the worst.
50 – If you
will succeed in business, you must figure out how to deal with the
unexpected. It’s
not that “what if it happens“, but “when it happens“. What if your best
salesperson quits tomorrow? How long before you will replace her? Do you have a
system in place, so when you hire a replacement she can sell?
Systems
are crucial to recovering from a disaster. Formal procedures are key. Identify
the key parts of your business and think about what it would take to recover
losing any of them. For example, if your company relies on your e-commerce
website, develop a system to recover your site even if your current site
crashes and your hosting company goes out of business within the
same day. You don’t have to be paranoid about it, but create systems of key
parts of your company.
Comments
I am not a big fan of
this level of detail in a business plan. A Strategic Plan requires that you
describe the current facts that define the state of the business and the
current market facts. This is necessary. But too much planning is a
distraction. You really need to fund your start-up with your own money. You
need to avoid business loans, office leases, excessive legal, accounting and
marketing services. You need to know how to do everything yourself and train
others as well.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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