Tuesday, 6 May 2014

Is Entrepreneurship For You?

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Starting your own business can be an exciting and rewarding experience. It can offer numerous advantages such as being your own boss, setting your own schedule and making a living doing something you enjoy. But, becoming a successful entrepreneur requires thorough planning, creativity and hard work.
Consider whether you have the following characteristics and skills commonly associated with successful entrepreneurs:
  • Comfortable with taking risks: Being your own boss also means you’re the one making tough decisions. Entrepreneurship involves uncertainty. Do you avoid uncertainty in life at all costs? If yes, then entrepreneurship may not be the best fit for you. Do you enjoy the thrill of taking calculated risks? Then read on.
  • Independent: Entrepreneurs have to make a lot of decisions on their own. If you find you can trust your instincts — and you’re not afraid of rejection every now and then — you could be on your way to being an entrepreneur.
  • Persuasive: You may have the greatest idea in the world, but if you cannot persuade customers, employees and potential lenders or partners, you may find entrepreneurship to be challenging. If you enjoy public speaking, engage new people with ease and find you make compelling arguments grounded in facts, it’s likely you’re poised to make your idea succeed.
  • Able to negotiate: As a small business owner, you will need to negotiate everything from leases to contract terms to rates. Polished negotiation skills will help you save money and keep your business running smoothly.
  • Creative: Are you able to think of new ideas? Can you imagine new ways to solve problems? Entrepreneurs must be able to think creatively. If you have insights on how to take advantage of new opportunities, entrepreneurship may be a good fit. 
  • Supported by others: Before you start a business, it’s important to have a strong support system in place. You’ll be forced to make many important decisions, especially in the first months of opening your business. If you do not have a support network of people to help you, consider finding a business mentor. A business mentor is someone who is experienced, successful and willing to provide advice and guidance. 

How full-stack entrepreneurs should build their skill set


How full-stack entrepreneurs should build their skill set
Recent years have seen the rise of full-stack startups. Like Apple, these companies build an end-to-end offering, owning much of the hardware, software, design, distribution, sales, customer service, and supply chain. Examples include Uber, Tesla, and Nest.
I’ve been thinking that some of the most successful entrepreneurs I know take a similar approach to their skill set.

Skill trees

I think of the entrepreneurial skill set as a video game skill tree. The tree has several categories, each with a series of skills that you can gain at increasing levels. For example, warriors typically focus on gaining strength, dexterity, and use of weapons. Wizards typically focus on intelligence, spellcasting, and use of magical items.
Mass Effect skill tree
Above: Mass Effect skill tree

The entrepreneurial skill tree is terrifyingly large. Below is a simple version. It’s not intended to be complete, every skill could be segmented into sub-skills, and many general skills like communication could apply to each area. Any entrepreneur can evaluate their level in these skills.
Entrepreneur's skill tree
Above: Entrepreneur’s skill tree

Breadth or depth?

Should we as founders try to be jacks of all trades or specialized experts?
My opinion is that founders should aim to gain familiarity in many areas and expertise in just a few, also known as a T-shaped skill set. My rationale:
  1. Early in a startup, founders wear many hats. It’s not atypical for us to lead multiple areas like product, marketing, and fundraising or engineering and design.
  2. Expertise is expensive and not necessary in many areas early on. Better to launch a minimal viable product, iterate, and hire needed expertise as you scale.
  3. Synergies emerge when you have interdisciplinary skills, even if at a lower level. If you can code and know product management, for example, you likely have a decent sense of both the value and difficulty of features. This accelerates your pace of development with less headcount.

Be deliberate in your skill tree

My sense is that many of us do not plan our skill tree. We jump from area to area based on curiosity and urgency. The problem is that most of these skills can’t be learned in a few all-nighters. They take at least months and often years of deliberate practice. A patchwork of skills makes us less able to perform when needed.
It doesn’t take much time to evaluate your skills and decide where your interests and aptitudes lie. I am especially a fan of learning how to code and how to manage people. Software is eating the world so the future belongs to those who can build it.  Management is a lost art among startups but founder CEOs are a lot more likely to scale if they invest in the hard but soft skill of directing people.
Each startup also has its own skill tree of needs based on the customer, market, product, and risks. For example, Breakthrough requires expertise in health care sales, internet security, and building marketplaces. Founders should build their teams and skills around their startup’s needs.
Here’s the Omnigraffle file of the skill tree above if you want to extend it or complete it for yourself. I wish you luck in leveling up!


From Venture Beat

8 Reasons Why 'More Money' Must Become Your Mantra


8 Reasons Why 'More Money' Must Become Your Mantra

Whether you’re an entrepreneur running a startup or running a department in a large company, more money must become your mantra. Money is one of those taboo topics in society that we don't like to talk about. We’ll admire athletes and celebrities and envy them for the money they have, yet we get uncomfortable when the “m” word is brought up when it comes to us.
I work with people who are interested in being successful in their businesses and lives. When working with groups, it’s not long before I hear someone say, "money isn't everything," or "money won't make you happy." My answer is always the same, "I agree with you, more money isn't everything, and while it doesn't guarantee happiness, it won't make me unhappy either. I am still interested in getting more."
The idea of wanting “more money” is a bad thing only with those who don't have enough of it. When you want to expand, some unplanned emergency comes along or a giant competitor decides to squash your startup, politically correct sayings about money will not save you.

Here are some reasons why “more money” is a must for you, your family and your business:
1. The alternative sucks! The opposite of more money is not having enough money, or worse, being broke. I have first-hand experience with each case. When you lack the reserves or credit, you’re unable to grow your business. Operating without enough money is like driving a car with the emergency brake engaged. You need more money!
2. You'll out-live your money. The old saying “life is short” may apply to some things, but when it comes to money, life is too long for most. People are more likely to outlive their money. Retirement is the single biggest money concern. Nobody wants to be a drain on anyone else. As life expectancies extend, your “more money” financial requirements must also extend.
3. Inflation is a thief. The cost of food, gas, education, insurance, housing and running a business are increasing. Inflation is an invisible thief and is called the "hidden tax" because you don't see it in the money you earn but the money you spend. Earning “more money” combats inflation.
4. Prove the naysayers wrong. One of the driving forces in my life has been proving the naysayers wrong. Yes I admit, it’s a bit immature, but there is nothing better than the sense of accomplishment in the face of those that counted you out.

5. No shortage of money. Machines make money and there is no shortage of how much those machines can make. To think that you can’t get your share is ridiculous when you consider that there is approximately $41 trillion dollars in global circulation. There is a greater shortage of people going for “more money” than there is money. Sounds like a simplification but my entire financial world changed when I realized there was no shortage except for the one in my mind.
6. Someone else will get it. Somebody is going to end up with your 'more' if you don't make a claim to it.  Why should it not be you? People complain about not having money but most people are not staking a claim to what is theirs. Money circulates from person to person and it wants to be active!
7. Money is freedom! I don't go to work to work and I don't go to make money. I go to work each day with the purpose to create freedom for my family and myself. Most wealthy people enjoy the freedom money provides them. Freedom provides you with the ability to try new things, make new investments and have more choices.
8. You deserve more money. When I understood that I deserved money as much as anyone else and that “more money” did not turn me into some evil, greedy person, I started earning more money. Commit to getting rid of all limiting beliefs and ideas that may be blocking you from having what you deserve, “more money.”
“More money” is my mantra and there’s nothing wrong with that. Comfort is the enemy of freedom. You will need more money to make dreams a reality.

From Entrepreneur

Are Entrepreneurs Born or Made?

Are Entrepreneurs Born or Made?
It's an age-old question: Are entrepreneurs a special breed, born into this world with a drive and need to succeed that most of humanity lacks, or can they can be created through education, experience and mentorship? We spoke to two academics who have strong opinions on the matter.
That question has taken on urgency recently. In the past five years, multiple studies have indicated that there may be an "entrepreneur gene"--or at least that people with certain genetic characteristics and personality traits are more likely to be successful entrepreneurs than others. In his 2010 book Born Entrepreneurs, Born Leaders, Scott Shane, professor of entrepreneurial studies at Cleveland's Case Western Reserve University, suggests that genes don't just influence whether a person will start a business; they may even determine how much money a person will earn. In other words, some people are born to be alpha wolves, and the rest will work in the mailroom.
It's a divisive thought--especially for Americans bred on the idea that with education and drive they can be anything they choose. Such ideas call to question entrepreneurial education as an institution and put forth the specter of business schools taking DNA cheek swabs along with application packets. While it's unlikely we'll see a Brave New World version of business education anytime soon, such concepts do put the idea of entrepreneurial education under the microscope. Does it work for everybody? If people are born entrepreneurs, do they need to read endless case studies, or would a few accounting and ethics classes be enough?
We asked two prominent and opinionated researchers to weigh in on the question. James V. Koch is a board of visitors professor of economics and president emeritus at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va. He's also co-author with James L. Fisher of the 2008 book Born, Not Made: The Entrepreneurial Personality, which argues that many entrepreneurs are simply wired that way, giving them a natural advantage in the business world. Julian Lange is a senior professor of entrepreneurship at Babson College in Wellesley, Mass. His research in the past five years indicates that exposure to the ideas and lessons of entrepreneurship can have lasting effects on students, even if they are not "natural" entrepreneurs.
We asked each of them to make their case.
James V. Koche of Old Dominion University

Entrepreneurs are Born

James V. Koch | Old Dominion University
James V. Koche of Old Dominion University

Entrepreneurs are Made

Julian Lange | Babson College

Entrepreneurs are Born

James V. Koche of Old Dominion University
Photo © Eric Schmidt

James V. Koch

Old Dominion University

What did you think about entrepreneurship education vs. natural ability before doing research for your book?
I think my view, being an academic, was that we can teach [entrepreneurship] and do it well. I was a bit surprised at the scientific literature that suggested heredity has a good deal to do with personality and behavior. When I began to look at the literature, virtually every reputable scientist sees it as interaction of heredity and environment.
Some personalities are much more favorable for entrepreneurship. It is an important thing, and it really constrains and influences outcomes. As a consequence, if you want to know who's most likely to be an entrepreneur, don't go to a business school and see who has taken entrepreneurship courses. The more important thing is to look at someone's personality and ability to bear risks. I would stress that I'm not saying genetics is the whole thing--I do think experience and knowledge and observation and environment count. But I'm not sure you can teach somebody to love to take risks. It seems hard-wired in the individual.
If entrepreneurship comes from an interaction of heredity and environment, how much of it do you think is truly genetic?
Let me use a metaphor. Short people don't make it often in the NBA, just like certain kinds of genetically hard-wired individuals don't make it as entrepreneurs, and others do. In reading the genetic literature, we found that up to 60 percent of critical personality characteristics are heritable. Significant portions of personality traits critical to entrepreneurs, like the willingness to take risks and the ability to tolerate ambiguity and uncertainty, are heritable.
I was particularly impressed by twin studies and what happens when you observe their behavior when they're raised together vs. being raised apart. It's pretty persuasive stuff. A good deal of entrepreneurial behavior is genetically determined.
Have you done your own research?
We went out and looked at a very large number of entrepreneurs to get a handle on their environments, characteristics and personalities. Then we had a control group of non-entrepreneurial businesspeople and another group that was not involved in business at all, like nuns and government workers. We saw significant differences among these groups.
What are the characteristics of entrepreneurs?
The first sentence of my book says, "Entrepreneurs are different." They have the ability to deal with uncertainty, to take risks and tolerate ambiguity. They usually have a personality that is mercurial, and they have highs that are really high and lows that are really low. There's good evidence that they have strong self-confidence but also tend to be overoptimistic. They rely extensively on their own intuition.
All these things aren't positive. A very large proportion of entrepreneurs fail. They tend not to be as devoted to consensus decision-making. They violate the status quo more often. Many don't accept defeat or losses gracefully. They are energetic, and a higher percentage tend to be loners and work long hours. All of these things appear in other segments of the population, but they appear more commonly among entrepreneurs. Research shows there's heritability in these traits, and some genetic determinants of these personality characteristics.
Is business school valuable for entrepreneurs?
Since I teach MBA students, I believe that knowing more about economics and accounting is always valuable to an entrepre-neur. But I don't know whether we can bring someone into the classroom and change their appetite for risk. Maybe in very small doses. But you're really running uphill to change someone's personality.
So is entrepreneurship education worthwhile?
I think [co-author] Jim Fisher and I would argue that a lot of entrepreneurship programs are superfluous and can't deliver what they say. Education can make people better accountants, economists and better at tax law, but it can't effectively change risk preferences, and it can't change genetics.
Has the research changed since your book came out?
The evidence has become stronger in the genetic realm. Now that more people are doing fundamental genetic research into personality traits, this lends more credibility and credence to what we're saying. Recent research clearly indicates that in some cases, environment triggers genetic tendencies, that certain situations trigger genes that would otherwise lie dormant. These are interesting findings that give our particular conclusion added weight.
Can we learn to trigger dormant entrepreneurship genes?
The truth is we don't know what triggers genes. Right now biologists and geneticists are working on things like how temperature affects the genes of fruit flies. We don't have any direct evidence on entrepreneurs. But basic biological evidence suggests that there are things that can trigger someone to be an entrepreneur. In the next 10, 20 or 30 years, people will really drill down into what makes some people actively become entrepreneurs and go off and take risks. All you have to do is look around. The types of people who become elementary-school teachers are not the same people who join the Marines and go to Afghanistan. Research over the next decades will isolate personality types and isolate the triggers that cause their genetics to come into play.
Some say education can be one of those triggers.
I regard as dubious claims that going into a college classroom is one of the things that triggers entrepreneur genes. Those who go into entrepreneurship programs are self-selected to begin with in terms of traits and genetics. It would be interesting to have a control group and see if there are things in that environment that alter their risk-taking behavior. I think these are exciting avenues of research.
Is there a place for people who are interested in entrepreneurship but don't have the right personality?
Yes, of course. Take myself: I am a consultant, advisor and investor, but not an individual who typically puts it all on the line. We need accountants, economists and marketing people. There are all kinds of roles to be filled in entrepreneurial enterprises, but someone has to lay it on the line, be the risk-taker and say, "I'm going to take this chance." People usually sort themselves out in society into occupations they choose based on personality. They tend to do things that make them most comfortable. The notion that I can add 6 inches to someone's height and that will make them an NBA player is bankrupt. So why do we think we can send someone to a business school and change their risk-taking preference?

Entrepreneurs are Made

Julian Lange of Babson College
Photo © Michael Warren

Julian Lange

Babson College

What makes you think entrepreneurship can be taught?
I think much of the recent research shows that entrepreneurship can be taught. The thing that some people talking about genetics are getting at is that people have different proclivities toward entrepreneurship and different sets of skills or endowments intellectually. Maybe, simply put, you can't teach someone to be passionate about entrepreneurship. On the other hand, I've been teaching for 20 years, and in my experience people can definitely discover their passion for entrepreneurship in the classroom. And in terms of general skills, if they start out with interests or endowments that make them more likely to be entrepreneurs or less likely, you can enhance their ability to be entrepreneurs through teaching. In some ways we can say there is a certain element of entrepreneurs that are born, not made. But some entrepreneurs can be made better.
Is there any evidence that education can increase one's likelihood of becoming an entrepreneur?
There's a study I did along with professors William Bygrave and Edward Marram at Babson, along with two grad students, investigating whether entrepreneurial education has a lasting influence. It's one of several papers in the past few years looking at that question. What we found is that education does have a lasting influence over whether people became entrepreneurs.
We had a database put together of over 4,000 Babson alumni from between 1985 and 2009, two-thirds of whom had taken at least one of our core elective courses on entrepreneurship. What we found was that taking two or more entrepreneurship elective courses positively affected their intention to become and their becoming an entrepreneur. The effect was there at the time they graduated and long after that.
What about risk-taking? Isn't that a core entrepreneurial skill that can't be taught?
There's a continuum, from people who don't want to take risks to daredevils and everything in between. I've observed many entrepreneurs over time, and it's on a spectrum. I'm an entrepreneur myself; I was CEO of Software Arts, the startup that created VisiCalc, the first electronic spreadsheet, and I'm no daredevil. Sure, entrepreneurs are better if they're willing to take risks, but they also have to respect that risk.
Some people don't want any risk, and some are always looking for risk. Most entrepreneurs I know and observe are people in the middle. They're not willing to take risk for risk's sake, but they'll take it if it's necessary to start or advance or keep their business going.
If risk-taking isn't the key, what skills are important to entrepreneurs?
One of the things we teach in entrepreneurship and give exposure to is opportunity recognition. Some people may go through life and don't quite see the opportunities. Once they look at the world through a slightly different lens, they start to see what may have potential. Opportunities in general don't jump out and you say "Ahh!"--they have to be shaped, they have to be created, and once people understand that process, they will never look at the world the same way again. It doesn't mean they will act on the opportunity--that's a different part of the process. But if people are more sensitive to seeing opportunities, they are more likely to act on them.
There's one course I teach that's more of a survey of entrepreneurship. I always tell the students the objective is not to make them say "I want to be an entrepreneur!" at the end of the course. I want them to understand what it means. Sometimes people romanticize entrepreneurship and look at successful entrepreneurs and think it happened overnight. At the end of the course people say, "I enjoyed it, but I don't think I want to be an entrepreneur. I want to be something else." But periodically I'll get communications saying, "Remember me? I was someone who said I didn't want to be an entrepreneur. Check out the website my partners and I just started." I'm not sure if they would have been sensitized to the opportunity if they hadn't taken the course.
Education helps people to change at different points in their business and personal lives. It helps them become more receptive to entrepreneurship.
Is there any type of person or personality type that should avoid entrepreneurship?
I would put it in a more positive way. I have seen many different people become entrepreneurs with very different skill sets and at different points in their careers. I think it would be hard to make a bet that someone is not going to be an entrepreneur based on their skills and proclivities or at a particular point in their life. The exceptions prove the rule again and again. If we eliminate the extremes, we find a very wide continuum of people who become successful. No one person has all the skills necessary to handle everything him or herself. You get a team to cover your bases. Even if one person has everything going for them, there are only 24 hours a day in a seven-day week. You need other people to work with you and make up for additional skills you don't have.
In no way are we saying that certain people don't have the characteristics to be entrepreneurs. I've observed many, many combinations of characteristics that have been successful. Not everyone is cookie-cutter.
What do entrepreneurship programs offer students?
I think there are a lot of advantages of entrepreneurship programs. One of them is to develop skills they may already have to be more useful--technical skills or leadership skills. Also, being in an environment where other people are interested helps in networking, getting feedback and determining what is necessary at different stages of an idea. One course for MBA students I teach puts them together with successful entrepreneurs. That one-on-one experience can be very helpful to them.
Babson takes a very practical approach. We give students a wide experience in learning, then doing. We talk about entrepreneurship through thought and action, both of which are necessary.
What if it turns out entrepreneurship is primarily genetic? Would that change the way you teach?
What you want to do when you're a professor is to develop and present students with the best possible tools for becoming entrepreneurs. I'm interested in any and all evidence to do this. I think these studies are interesting, and there are characteristics that anecdotally you can observe that can be associated with successful entrepreneurs. But one of the issues I have has to do with association and correlation and causality. There may be characteristics that correspond to entrepreneurs, but it reminds me of what Thomas Edison said [about] "1 percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration." You have to work at it and shape it.
People have different skill sets and natural talents. Look at other analogies. People in sports or music might have great talent or physical strength, but the people who are the most outstanding might not be the people with the most physical strength. Often they are people who work hard, try to overcome deficiencies and put things together in a package that works for them. In no way am I saying people can't have characteristics that make entrepreneurship easier, but there's a combo there, and learning skills is an extremely important part of the process.

Culled From Entrepreneur

Entrepreneurs Who Turned Hobbies into Million-Dollar Businesses

Entrepreneurs Who Turned Hobbies into Million-Dollar Businesses
Terry Finley, founder of West Point Thoroughbreds where clients invest in one of the company's 55 horses.

Kim Lavine started making microwavable pillows as gifts for her kids’ teachers in 2001, assembling them at her kitchen table in Grand Haven, Mich., using a corn kernel filling. Around the same time, her husband lost his job, prompting her to consider turning her pastime into a source of income.
She went from selling pillows out of her truck to setting up mall kiosks and incorporating her company, Green Daisy, in 2002. Within two years, Lavine’s Wuvit pillow was in national chains, including Saks Fifth Avenue, Macy’s and Bed Bath & Beyond, and by 2006, it generated more than $1 million in sales.
Lavine then branched out into a pajama line, and after moving to a licensing model, a home décor line as well. In 2008, she put the retail business on hold and started a media company with plans to eventually relaunch the Green Daisy brand again. Lavine wrote about her success in Mommy Millionaire: How I Turned My Kitchen Table Idea into a Million Dollars and How You Can, Too! (St. Martins, 2007).
To determine whether your hobby can become a business, she says, first ask: "Do you have a great product and can you demonstrate and prove its marketability?" That may sound elemental, but Lavine says too many entrepreneurs fail to consider that question.

Here are three other entrepreneurs who transformed their hobbies into multimillion-dollar companies.
How to Turn a Hobby into a Million-Dollar Business
Terry Finley, founder of West Point Thoroughbreds where clients invest in one of the company's 55 horses.
Photo by Tibor Szlavik.
Terry Finley
Hobby: Horse racing aficionado
Business: West Point Thoroughbreds
2011 Revenue: $6.5 million
When Terry Finley bought his first horse, Sunbelt, for $5,000 in 1991, he felt stuck in his job selling life insurance. Finley had been betting on horses for years, but had never made an investment like this. After Sunbelt won his first race that year, Finley started running small ads in racing papers and attracted an investor who paid $5,000 for partial ownership of Sunbelt. Within two months, he bought his second horse, Cal’s Zen Jr., and continued buying more horses on credit cards.
Soon after, he quit his job and founded West Point Thoroughbreds, a Saratoga Springs, N.Y.-based race horse syndication management company. From the outset, Finley talked with clients who ran their own companies and asked for suggestions about growing a business.
"We started trying to build a brand and a reputation," Finley says. Through this informal advice, he learned the importance of tracking metrics. In 2004, he hired a web designer to revamp his website.
Today, West Point Thoroughbreds owns 55 syndicated horses and has 550 investors who profit when their horses win a race, are bred or get sold. Revenue has grown from $2 million in 2005 to $6.5 million annually over the past three years.

How to Turn a Hobby into a Million-Dollar Business
Craig Jenkins-Sutton, owner Topiarius, an urban garden and floral design company.
Photo by Nick Gerber.
Craig Jenkins-Sutton
Hobby: Gardening
Business: Topiarius
2011 Revenue: $1.2 million
When Craig Jenkins-Sutton started designing gardens he had no formal landscaping training, just a lifelong green thumb. Growing up on a farm in central Minnesota, he always had a love for gardening.
He ended up working for a landscape service but knew he didn’t want to work for someone else. In 2003, he put a small ad in the Chicago Tribune, offering his garden design services. Within a week, he received 40 calls but only one turned into a customer. It was enough to get the business going. That year he founded garden design company, Topiarius, in Chicago.
Jenkins-Sutton learned how to market his business mainly by trial and error. "The tough part in landscaping is that it’s something a lot of people think they can do themselves," he says. "What value do we bring? Being able to demonstrate that is really important."
In 2010, he started putting door hanger ads at people’s homes and realized he was onto something. Ten thousand door hangers produced five to 10 customer calls, much better results than any other promotion he’d tried. As a result, his business doubled in 2010, and revenue rose last year by 80 percent to $1.2 million.

How to Turn a Hobby into a Million-Dollar Business
Megan Duckett, owner of Sew What?, which she started because her sewing gigs were bringing in more money than her full-time job.
Photo by Tom Underhill.
Megan Duckett
Hobby: Sewing
Businesses: Sew What? & Rent What?
2011 Revenue: $6.2 million
When Megan Duckett moved to Los Angeles from Australia 21 years ago, she was 19 years old and had big dreams of working in the entertainment industry. She took a job with an event planner and in her free time began sewing at her kitchen table, making bedding, drapes and costumes.
When the request to make the linings inside 10 decorative coffins for her employer's Halloween event came up, Duckett took on the challenge. "That was one of the turning point moments when I began to realize I have a skill set that other people didn’t have," she says. Duckett also knew that positioning herself as a specialist in designing props and entertainment décor would set her apart. Her next big project, designing 25 silk chandeliers for The Mirage in Las Vegas, came a year later.
By 1996, Duckett was earning more money sewing than the $45,000 salary from her full-time job at the event-planning company. She quit and rented an 800-square-foot warehouse, hired three seamstresses and generated $80,000 in revenue her first year.
In 2006, she began producing bags and other items bearing the company logo to make the Sew What? brand more recognizable. "[I realized] that people weren’t buying me; they wanted to buy a brand," she says. Four years ago, Duckett branched out by offering the option to rent drapes and other props rather than purchase them and by 2011 her Los Angeles-based company, produced sales of $5 million in addition to the $1.2 million her second business Rent What? generated. Today she manages 44 employees across both businesses.

From Entrepreneur

Monday, 5 May 2014

Business lessons from rapper 50 Cent's playbook


50 Cent
50 Cent
 
Curtis Jackson III wears a lot of hats. He's a musician. He's an actor. He's the owner of G-Unit Clothing, owner and CEO of SMS Audio and founder of SK Energy.

But ask him what he considers to be his job and he doesn't list any of these. Instead, the serial entrepreneur sees himself as the CEO of the 50 Cent brand. In that alternate universe, Jackson, better known by his music nom de plum, says he sees all of his ventures—both past and present—as revolving around his alter ego.
"It's one brand," he said in an interview with CNBC.com. "When it's an artist, it's all connected to that person's lifestyle."

50 Cent has an impressive track record as a businessman. SMS Audio headphones are among the most successful in the category (competing, ironically, against the Beats line founded by his friend Dr. Dre.) In 2010 his film production company, Cheetah Vision, secured $200 million in funding. And his latest venture—a boxing promotion firm called SMS Promotions—has roped in Andre Dirrell, who won the middleweight bronze medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics, and junior middleweight James Kirkland.


In some ways, the 50 Cent brand is not unlike many of today's start-ups. While it's diversified, it all revolves around one central theme: The music tells the story, and the businesses support that story.

The lyrics in his business playbook are a bit different than those in his songs, though. Here are strategies he's used to "Get Rich or Die Tryin'.''

Lesson No. 1: The power of partnerships

"I envision SMS being to the audio space what Lucasfilm is to the film technology business." -50 Cent, rapper and business mogul
SMS draws a lot of strength from the street cred of 50 Cent, but in the past year, it has begun to use other big names, including music producer Timbaland and Knicks point guard Carmelo Anthony, to draw in customers.
This year the company is adding a somewhat unexpected third license to the brand: a line of Star Wars–themed headsets.
"I'm gonna go away from the trends of things," Jackson said. "The Star Wars collaboration was a surprise for people, but I envision SMS being to the audio space what Lucasfilm is to the film technology business."


The strength of deals like the one with Anthony or the one with Disney for Star Wars is that it exposes SMS to an audience that normally might not consider it, which could in turn make consumers more aware of Jackson's other business ventures. That keeps the brand growing and the money flowing.

Lesson No. 2: Defy brand expectations

When 50 Cent began working with corporations after hitting it big in the music industry, he said, other rap artists were aghast.
"With the music culture, you were a sellout to be a part of doing business with a major corporation," he said. "You were considered a crossover from hard-core hip-hop. Now technology has changed how people consume music. Because music companies aren't making as much as they were from CD sales, they're not providing the marketing dollars. Now you see the biggest artists in a car commercial with their new song."

He confounded people—from fans to his manager—with his investment in the product known today as vitaminwater. In 2007, though, that company was purchased by Coca-Cola for $4.1 billion. His share of the deal was estimated at $100 million.

"My manager, when I told him I wanted to sell water … was like, 'Water? Where?'" said Jackson. "If I'd have said I want to sell vodka, he would have got it, but I wanted water. [Water] is the top-selling beverage, and it's consumed where music is played."


The experience taught him that letting others—even advisors or a board—dictate what your company or band is can restrict growth. Producing more of the same or taking a similar path to your peers may be the safe route, but it's something that can prevent explosive growth.

Had he let his managers talk him out of the vitaminwater deal, it's possible that the 50 Cent brand would be restricted to the music world today. Instead, the money earned from that venture let him continue to grow his business ventures.



Predictability, he said, can be devastating to a company, as can complacency. That, in part, is why he generally avoids the rock-star lifestyle. With his numerous ventures, sleeping in often isn't an option.
"People who work for themselves work a lot harder," he said. "For me, I don't care what hour it is. If I can't sleep, I work. I wake up at between 5:30 and 6:00 a.m., because I know I have a project or have to get something done."

Lesson No. 3: Cling to the entrepreneurial lifestyle

As businesses grow, the lean, hungry attitude that drives most entrepreneurs often begins to fade. Jackson, though, said it's important to resist those changes. One good way to do that is to always be on the lookout for new ways to learn.


Selling crack on the streets of Queens, for example, may not seem a good foundation for a business leader, but Jackson says there were lessons he learned from the mistakes of his youth that are still helpful today.

"In the neighborhood, you have to troubleshoot," he said. "If you see an issue [developing], you have to resolve it. It's the same circumstances in business: If you see, say, something going on with your employees, you have to take care of it."


While Jackson didn't have a mentor in the traditional sense of the word, he said he did draw inspiration from Robert Green's book The 48 Laws of Power. The book, which is extremely popular with groups from hip-hop artists to criminals, discusses often-ruthless business techniques for those who want power or who simply want to arm themselves against it (tips include mastering the art of timing and keeping people in suspense).


The book, in short, taught him to not be afraid. And Jackson made a point to seek out the author after reading it.
"I had to meet him after I read the book," he said. "There were so many things that ran parallel to the environment, and a lot of people gravitated to it from the hip-hop culture. I wanted to see if he knew what he created. It turns out he's a real history buff. He has a passion for it. And I think that's what makes the difference: passion."

From CNBC

 

 

African Millionaire Returns World Entrepreneurship Award In Protest


Ashish J.Thakkar
Ashish J.Thakkar

Ashish J. Thakkar, a 32 year-old Ugandan-born multi-millionaire entrepreneur, said on Wednesday he is returning a high profile entrepreneurship award to the World Entrepreneurship Forum to protest what he called the organizers’ efforts to whitewash and discredit the achievements of President Paul Kagame of Rwanda.

Last November, Thakkar, who is the founder of the Mara Group, a Pan-African conglomerate with interests in technology, offshoring, property and agriculture and has operations in 19 countries, was given an award as the ‘World’s Best Young Entrepreneur’ by the World Entrepreneurship Forum, a French-based think-thank founded in 2008 by EMLYON Business School, KPMG France, and the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. The forum brings together leading entrepreneurs, thinkers and builders from 75 different countries to tackle some of the world’s most pressing issues with entrepreneurial solutions. Thakkar was awarded alongside other leading entrepreneurs like Virgin boss Richard Branson and Aramex founder Fadi Ghandour.

A few weeks later, Thakkar contacted the World Entrepreneurship Forum to nominate Rwandan President Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda for the ‘Policy Maker’ for the 2014 awards which is to hold in October in Lyon, France. Kagame’s favorable policies have seen Rwanda become one of the most friendly climes for businesses, and according to the World Bank’s 2014 Doing Business ranking, the country is the 2nd easiest place in Africa to run a business. Rwanda has had a remarkable economic turnaround and economic growth has surpassed 7% for almost half a decade.
“The unprecedented turnaround in the lives of ordinary Rwandans has not come about by accident, but through purposeful reforms and the inspired leadership of Kagame, who is one of Africa’s greatest leaders. This is why I had no hesitation in nominating HE President Kagame for the award,” Thakkar said, in a letter to the World Entrepreneurship Forum which was made available to this reporter.

Earlier this year, the Forum apparently decided to award President Kagame, and contacted the President’s office. But the award was subsequently redacted for political reasons, chief being the fact that the Rwandan President earlier in April during an interview with the weekly magazine Jeune Afrique, directly accused France of playing a direct role in Rwanda’s 1994 genocide, one of the deadliest massacres the world has experienced in recent history. A total of 800,000 minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus were slain in a four-month killing spree following the assassination of Rwanda‘s Hutu president Juvénal Habyarimana.
“My view is that whatever the prevailing political circumstances, the World Entrepreneurship Forum should not to be dissuaded from acknowledging the achievements of this remarkable leader. I have no option but to return the award to you,” Thakkar said in a letter to the Forum.

Thakkar does have a reason to foster good relations with the government of Rwanda. He and former Barclays Bank boss Bob Diamond recently acquired a controlling interest in the commercial banking subsidiary of the Development Bank of Rwanda (BRD), a bank owned by the Rwandan government.

From Forbes