Three Key Survival Skills for New Business Owners
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Three Key Survival Skills for New Business Owners
By Deborah Walker
The first year of a new business is the toughest. It's the
make-it-or-break-it year. The challenges a new business owner
faces on a daily basis require three key survival skills:
self-reliance, self-direction, and resilience. No matter how
brilliant the business idea, without these three skills
entrepreneurs risk failure.
Self-Reliance
It's a fact of life that every small business owner wears many
hats to fill all functions: operations, sales, marketing,
finance, human resources-even janitor and chief coffee-maker
when needed. Unlike life in corporate America, where each
employee has a specialized area of expertise, a new business
owner must excel in all of the disciplines required to keep a
small business running smoothly. The revenue drain of hiring
employees can spell disaster for struggling new businesses.
Self-reliance means more than wearing many hats. It also means
depending on self for motivation, discipline and decision making
and accountability. The true entrepreneur doesn't need a
cheering squad to keep going. The self-reliant business owner is
highly skilled at "picking himself up by the boot straps."
Without that all-important sense of self-reliance, critical
decisions will be delayed and opportunities will be missed.
If you find yourself lacking self-reliance, do a total skills
inventory to identify the gap that is holding your business back
from prospering to your expectations. Rate yourself on a scale
of one to four on each skill needed to run your business.
Identifying which skills you are deficient in is the first step
toward getting help to solve the problem.
Self-Direction
One of the toughest challenges for new business owners is
strategic planning: the ability to plan for multiple
contingencies to reduce risk of failure. The self-directed
entrepreneur analyzes market conditions to anticipate setbacks
and defines alternative revenue sources to avoid costly earnings
slumps.
Equally important, the self-directed business owner should be
efficient in executing daily, weekly and monthly activities
crucial to maintaining a continual sales pipeline and revenue
stream. A successful entrepreneur needs no supervisor to keep
him on track.
Unfortunately, not many people excel at both strategic planning
and day-to-day tactical efforts. If you are an entrepreneur who
gravitates to "the big picture," daily and weekly task lists
will help keep you on track toward your revenue goals. Invest in
tools to minimize your busy work so that important data like
customer contact information can be easily accessed, yet
maintained with minimal effort.
On the flip side, highly detail-oriented business owners without
a strategic plan suffer from lack of direction. Make time at
least quarterly to consider questions like: "What could I do
long-term to improve the efficiency of my operations?" or "What
could I be doing differently to attract the kind of customers I
prefer?"
Resiliency
While it is often true that persistence pays off, resiliency is
a more essential skill to new business owners. Resiliency is the
ability to change direction when needed. It is the 'bounce back"
effect that is truly necessary to avoid business failure.
In business, change is constant:
- Economic conditions can reduce consumer spending
- Shifts in consumer tastes make your product out-of-date
- Improvements in technology make your inventory obsolete
Any or all of these things can mean increased competition and
loss of market share for your business. You have to be prepared
to deal with them--before they happen.
Those who lack resiliency fall victim to self doubt that all too
often means the end of a promising new business. To increase
resiliency, practice the old-fashioned skill of "getting back on
the horse." When things don't work out as planned, do not stop
to anguish over the situation. Immediately consider the best
alternative actions to take. Take action as soon as possible.
Even a less-than-perfect action plan will get you moving in a
positive direction and avoid the stall of self doubt and despair.
A new business owner who builds up his or her self-reliance,
self-direction and resiliency will greatly increase the odds of
surviving that first year in business. And after the first year,
your survival skills will ensure that you are well on your way
to many more years of success.
About the author:
Deborah Walker is a Small Business Coach specializing in revenue growth strategies. Her career-long experience as small business owner provides insight to the do's and don't of starting and growing a new business. Visit Deborah at her site http://www.RevenueQueen.com
Deborah Walker is a Small Business Coach specializing in revenue growth strategies. Her career-long experience as small business owner provides insight to the do's and don't of starting and growing a new business. Visit Deborah at her site http://www.RevenueQueen.com










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