Five most important lessons I've learned as an entrepreneur.
Guy Kawasaki on Innovation
Popular entrepreneur, venture capitalist, and blogger, Guy Kawasaki understands business.
Guy is a managing director of Garage Technology Ventures, columnist for
Entrepreneur Magazine, and author of eight books on innovative business.
Guy's Biography
Monday, August 18, 2008
This is my last posting for my friends at Sun Microsystems, and I'd
like to leave you with something that to remember me by: a list of the
five most important lessons I've learned as an entrepreneur.
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Focus on cash flow. I understand the difference between
cash flow and profitability, and I'm not recommending that you strive
for a lack of profitability. But cash is what keeps the doors open and
pays the bills. Paper profits on an accrual accounting basis is of no
more than secondary or tertiary importance for a startup. As my mother
used to say, "Sales fixes everything."
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Make a little progress every day. I used to believe in
the big-bang theory of marketing: a fantastic launch that created such
inertia that you flew to "infinity and beyond." No more. Now my theory
is that you make a little bit of progress every day--whether that's
making your product slightly better, increasing your skill in one small
way, or closing one more customer. The reason the press writes about
"overnight successes" is that they seldom happen--not because that's
how all businesses work.
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Try stuff. I also used to believe that it's better to be
smart than lucky because if you're smart you can out-think the
competition. I don't believe that anymore--this is not to say that you
should strive for a high level of stupidity. My point is that luck is a
big part of many successes, so (a) don't get too bummed out when you
see a bozo succeed; and (b) luck favors the people who try stuff, not
simply think and analyze. As the Chinese say, "One must wait for a long
time with your mouth open before a Peking duck flies in your mouth."
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Ignore schmexperts. Schmexperts are the totally bad
combination of schmucks who are experts--or experts who are schmucks.
When you first launch a product or service, they'll tell you it isn't
necessary, can't really work, or faces too much competition. If you
succeed, then they'll say they knew you would succeed. In other words,
they don't know jack shiitake. If you believe, try it. If you don't
believe, listen to the schmexperts and stay on the porch.
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Never ask anyone to do something that you wouldn't do.
This goes for customers ("fill out these twenty-five fields of personal
information to get an account for our website") to employees ("fly
coach to Mumbai, meet all day the day the arrive, and fly back that
night"). If you follow this principle, you'll almost always have a good
customer service reputation and happy employees.
I hold these truths to be self-evident and hope you can use them to kick butt and change the world.
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