| So
is it worth the pain and suffering? Yes, most certainly. But only if you're prepared
to face reality instead of believing all the Success Silliness they're hyping.
Realism
Beats Optimism or Pessimism
You’re far more vulnerable when you start. The average failure rate for new
businesses (remember, there are about one million of these every year) is around
70 percent, in their first years. Don’t add to this risk, by trying to fly
before you can even walk. Realism
is everything. If you’re too much of a pessimist, you’ll never pluck up
courage to take the initial plunge or to run the risks you need to run. If you’re
too much of an optimist, your rosy assumptions will trip you up. To survive, you
must be a commonsense realist about the problems you will face. Start
slow, accelerate later. Most of the entrepreneurs at this meeting were talking
fast growth. That’s fine and dandy, once you have a stable, efficient, workable
business platform in place. But that can take years to build. Success
can be a fatal distraction. If all you’re dreaming of is how great the view
will be, once you’ve reached the top of the mountain, you’ll probably overlook
something vital in preparing for the climb and never make it to the top. Or maybe
fall off the mountain. There’s
no instant gratification. The media message to newcomers is: instant success is
yours for the grabbing. Forget about it. The real world doesn’t work that way.
At first, focus only on beating those starting 70 percent odds against you. Success,
if and when it comes, comes naturally, only after you have got through the survival
stage; that’s the hard part. Operate
within your means. Out in the trenches of small business, there are no angel investors,
venture capitalists, IPOs, and fat bank lines of business credit. You must survive
on whatever personal funds, loans and credit cards you can scrape together, and
on that alone, until your business starts producing its own cash flow. So
when can you breath easier? You’ll know you’re a survivor when your small
business starts bringing in enough regular monthly revenue to pay all the bills,
meet the payroll (including your own) and, if you’re lucky, even have a little
left over for building reserves. You’ll certainly not be rich but you’ll
finally have the key to future success: a small but self-sustaining business.
But what about the success stories?
Uh-oh, so you’ve been reading those up-beat, motivational, self-congratulatory
hero entrepreneur books again. Don’t. The most valuable lessons are to be learnt
from the folks who failed. They don’t usually get to write books, at least
not ones that get published. |