Keep up won’t you – most websites that
promote ‘how to successfully start and run your own business’ are
sponsored by big companies and government bodies and written by people
that are in jobs and have never started their own business. The advice
is so yesterday. It is stuff from antiquity that belongs in a museum
like my hopeless, but suitably ancient for a museum, agent – Tony
Robinson OBE.
Most entrepreneurs I’ve met are looking for opportunities to make
money all the time. If they followed the advice on these start up
websites they wouldn’t just copy stuff and they’d be too late in getting
the product or service to market and the opportunity would have gone.
Look at Loubi (Christian Louboutin to you), if he hadn’t read an
article about a slashed out shoe with a red line, then thousands of rich
women around the world wouldn’t have fallen off his killer heels to,
legs in the air, show off his signature red soles.
Dear reader and fan, I want you to take a look at the mind of an
entrepreneur. Let’s take one successful one, Stefan Topfer, Editor of
this Small Business Blog and one unsuccessful one, the aforementioned
aberration, Tony Robinson OBE. They have two things in common; they’re
both badly dressed (fleeces – urgh) and they look for business
opportunities all the time.
The Recycling Opportunity
So, yesterday, Robinson rang Topfer and the conversation went like this:
Robinson: I’ve just seen on the BBC News site that a
scientist has proven that giant dinosaurs could have warmed the earth
with their flatulence.
Topfer: Ja – I mean, so?
Robinson: Well, where is the equivalent place today where hundreds of dinosaurs, produce masses of hot air?
Topfer: In your House of Commons and House of Lords?
Robinson: Precisely and why will this supply of huge volumes of hot air continue ad infinitum?
Topfer: Would that be because it is mainly a boys club eating
vast quantities of posh nosh provided by the City and the top 100 CEOs
and one or two media moguls.
Robinson: Yeah that and their humongous expense accounts that
they can spend on Big Macs and pasties. It makes you feel good to know
that we can now recycle all that dinosaur fuel for the benefit of the
people.
Topfer: Ja, I mean nein, I mean how?
Robinson: You’re fab at technology, do the math and turn
Parliament into a massive great hot air heater channelling warmth into
the council housing, parks, stations and shop doorways where those with
no dosh to pay for heating live.
I won’t carry on – as Topfer told Robinson never to speak to him
again. The point is that here are two dinosaurs discussing a business
opportunity that utilises a source of natural energy that has been
available for thousands of years. There’s nothing original here apart
from the possible opportunity.
Stuff to ignore
So ignore the stuff on websites that is ‘conventional business
guidance’. ‘How to come up with a great business idea?’, ‘How to pitch
your idea to investors?’, ‘Getting finance’ ‘There’s a business in
you’, ‘What needs to be in your business plan?’, ‘Get a mentor from a
Bank or Corporate’ and ‘How to sell’. the enterprise essentials are much
less complicated and far more common sense and natural than this
guidance.
Most successful entrepreneurs that I’ve interviewed haven’t done any
of the things that are regarded as ‘good business practice’. Most don’t
like borrowing money, especially from banks. Their business planning is
always in their head. Most of them are action rather than words people.
They often copy and improve other people’s ideas and activities like
crazy. The point is that time is money and opportunities come and go and
they can’t be wasting time on this theoretical business stuff.
Instead, my advice to a start up, from my award winning series of entrepreneur interviews (see my book ‘Stripping for Freedom’) is:
Look for what customers want and are buying that you’d relish providing too.
Then, preferably by bootstrapping, check that you can afford to produce it as a product or service.
Then test market your product or service with its ‘twist’, like
Louboutin’s red sole or, more likely, with an additional service that
the competition aren’t providing.
Then from what you have learned launch your new business always
remembering that you may need more products and services or even
businesses to make the earnings you need to make.
Let’s Twist Again
This ‘copying and improving with a twist’ is important to the success of many entrepreneurs.
For example, the unique ‘twist’ that Stefan Topfer achieves with
WinWeb is that he is absolutely passionate about beating the global
competition not just by great cloud software and infrastructure but with
exceptional customer service too. His customer service people are
mentors. He’ll sack people that ‘sell’ his products and services as he
believes in the customer buying what they choose that is absolutely
right for them.
The great news is that everyone starting a business on their own can
provide their own ‘twist’, a unique level of service, to support a
product or service that customers already understand, want and need.
Just get your offer out there as quickly as you can after testing it.
Sunday, 22 July 2012
Dinosaurs, Wind Farms & Let’s Twist Again
8:49 pm
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