Work hard but get a life


July 25, 2009, 5:24PM

Q: I've been out of work for a while and am thinking about starting or buying my own business. Other than preparing a good business plan and securing financing, what other major challenges will I face?


A: Entrepreneurs often face obstacles that can impede if not block progress on getting started in their new endeavors. These are often more personal than business-related.
Time mis-management is one of those issues that create problems for many who start new business ventures. Either you spend all of your time working, or you can't quite keep yourself on a schedule.
Many businesses fail early because the owner couldn't draw a good balance between work time vs. “the rest of life” time.
While you need to be prepared to spend a lot of time on your business, especially early on, you can't spend every waking minute on your business. You still need to have a life. Otherwise you'll burn out.
If you have organizational skills, you've just passed the next major hurdle. Being disorganized not only means wasting your time as you try to find or do something, you waste the time of others whose assistance you may be depending upon. Being unorganized also makes focus difficult, which leads to the next obstacle — focus or rather “lack of” focus.
A SCORE client of mine decided to resign from his company and focus on consulting. Seemed like a good idea. He knew his field and had a lot of hands-on experience. He also had a fully equipped home office and no kids or spouse around for distraction.
Unfortunately, the idea was better than the venture. He couldn't focus without the structure of an office environment. Instead of being at his desk every morning at a certain time, he'd find other things to do. Lunch hours often turned into taking the afternoon off. It was a “sort of” business — not a serious one.
Also, you need to be able to deal with the fear of failure. Failure and entrepreneurship go hand-in-hand. If you're not fully aware that your business could fail — or if you're terrified of failure — go work for someone else.
If you're not willing to take risks, you shouldn't be in business for yourself. Most successful entrepreneurs have had failures along the way — either companies that didn't succeed or ideas that failed. But that didn't stop them from starting again.

2 comments:

  1. Every next article surprises me more. We have the same opinion on various questions!

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  2. I always remember the words of one writer 'If something is worth doing, it's worth doing it well'. This is my life credo!

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