Saturday, September 4, 2021
Tuesday, August 31, 2021
What’s the key ingredient of a successful entrepreneur?
So, You want to be an entrepreneur!
Welcome to “Club Fear!”
It’s all about being a lifelong learner
No university can prepare you for the life of an Entrepreneur!
The Ingredient is Knowledge - how to get that knowledge - how to use that knowledge
Part of the entrepreneurs DNA 🧬 is to be a lifelong learner - and eventually he/she becomes a professor of the school of hard knocks !!
Knowledge is power - and you build knowledge through lifelong learning!
As Albert Einstein said – perhaps the most famed of all Nobel Prize winners – put it, "Once you stop learning, you start dying."
Henry Ford once said, "Anyone who stops learning is old, whether at 20 or 80. Anyone who keeps learning stays young."
Staying mentally sharp and focused on identifying new opportunities involves more than just dumb luck – it is a continual absorption of new information and knowledge!
Even an entrepreneurs failed venture is merely a learning experience for the next successful venture . (and let me tell you - there will be many failed ventures)
A Successful entrepreneur never stop learning, from as many sources as possible. And, of course, use those learnings to their advantage.
So what is an entrepreneur ?
"An entrepreneur is an individual who creates a new business, bearing most of the risks and enjoying most of the rewards. The entrepreneur is commonly seen as an innovator, a source of new ideas, goods, services, and business/or procedures".
Generating new ideas means learning about what already exists, where there are gaps in the market and what could be done to fill those gaps.
What do the need to learn
Think about the various areas of knowledge demanded of any founder to get a startup to market:
- The actual product or service
- Negotiations
- Sales
- Marketing
- Systems
- Branding
- Finance
- Project management
- People management
- Time management
- Customer service
- Technology
- And the list goes on
So - how do you learn?
Learn by reading
What do all successful entrepreneurs have in common? They read. Lots.
- Warren Buffett reportedly devotes around 80 per cent of each day to reading.
- Bill Gates strives to read one book a week.
- Mark Zuckerberg needs two weeks to read one book and share it in his online book club.
- Oprah Winfrey selects one of her favourite books every month for her book club.
- Sir Richard Branson might wow you with his impressive bookshelf – particularly given his well-known dyslexia.
Of the five entrepreneurs above, only Buffett and Winfrey have a college degree. The rest are dropouts.
Learning by doing
While knowledge is indeed power, it takes action to build profit. After all, actions create experience. And as Einstein famously said, "The only source of knowledge is experience."
Put simply, entrepreneurs keep learning by what they do. They put new-found knowledge into action. They use the experiences of others to trial and test their own new ideas before pursing the most favourable course.
Whether knowingly or not, entrepreneurs will keep reading, keep creating new experiences. And all the while learning.
Learning by collaborating
Sharing ideas
Collaborating
Leveraging off others
Knowing where the levers are
Join a BBG Forum
You Cannot do everything yourself - find people who can join you on the journey. Be a great leader
Because “ leadership is the ability to influence others - no more - no less” John Maxwell
Inspired by
Alan Manly - the CEO of Universal Business School Sydney and author of The Unlikely Entrepreneur.
Tuesday, July 6, 2021
How to be happy
- Live in the now
- Narrow the gap between expectation and reality
- Be kind - treat others the way you want to be treated
- Be in flow
- Find something bigger than yourself to believe in
Thursday, May 20, 2021
The Best Referral is from your Clients - speak to them - meet with them - listen to them
Great reminder from Ed Chan at Wize Accountants - talk to your clients
Accountants are busy - but most are looking for more of the right clients and are keen to grow.
One of the best sources of warm prospects are from your client base... and the best way to do that is to communicates for collaborate with them.
It’s more than completing their work and getting them to sign their BAS or tax return.
It’s about building a relationship with them
Getting referrals really starts with getting more face-to-face time with your clients and the best way to do this is to speak to them about their results and not just send the completed work for signature.
Be interested in their business - and think about how you can add value by potentially referring them to someone .
Call them for a tax planning meeting prior to finishing their work and take them on the journey instead of just completing their work and sending it to them in the post/email.
#10X #bbgforum #10Xforum #referron
Saturday, May 8, 2021
10 Strategies to Thrive and Survive in a Recession
- To avoid losses , cut costs quickly and deeply.... unless there is a planned strategy for growth
- Eliminate pay increases, but retain incentives (if affordable). It is not unheard of for leaders to request the entire company take some degree of pay cut (usually a higher percentage for higher paid employees) with reductions in their own pay leading the way.
- Accumulate “fruit on the sideboard” (a cash war chest)
- Renegotiate their vendor agreements
- Cash Flow Cash Flow Cash Flow
- Watch Accounts Receivable closely, account by account, and politely but crisply cut off customers who don’t pay or chronically late pay. Manage inventory and potentially delay paying creditors. Create a great relationship with your bank and shareholders
- Come up with creative new solutions and services, and go to market strategies and marketing campaigns which attract and address the three top concerns of decision-makers: cutting cost, reducing risk and driving Revenue.
- Spend on demand generation. Invest more, sooner, in marketing and selling in the face of a recession than do the lower performers.
- Leaders get out in front of employees, customers and prospects more frequently and visibly. Make a reason to visit the other businesses in your building
- Your family and health is most important