DISQUS

Learn To Duck: Three Rules For Startup Success

  • Online Cricket Games · 1 year ago
    I'll like to add some pointers for start-ups.

    1. Create Your Unique Selling Propositions (At Least 3-5)
    - What makes your business unique. Why should people buy from you. How do you differentiate with your competitors.

    2. Positioning
    - How do you want people to see you. No.1, No.2 or just a Me Too Company?

    3. Who Are Your Customers
    - Clearly define your customer demographics.

    4. Where Are Your Customers
    Need to know where to get them.

    5. Who Has Got Your Customers
    Try to work with Alumnis, Trade Associations before you're big enough to work with the Credit Card companies with tons of database.
  • Parallel Import Cars · 1 year ago
    Nice tips as well. I like the point of Where Are Your Customers.
  • Back Pain · 12 months ago
    Good points on listening. Successful entrepreneurs should listen 90% of the time and only do 10% of the talking.
  • Singapore Hotel · 11 months ago
    Yes, sometimes it's more important to understand what your customer needs. Listening helps.
  • mikepk · 1 year ago
    Nice post, I think couching them as "three rules for startup success" is overstating it a bit, but they do represent some good general advice. As always, all startup advice is a lie. (google that phrase, there's a pretty good post by Tony Wright I particularly like) :)

    I would modify the second one a little though. You state "Dont take forever to make a decision, but dont make it too fast.", that's somewhat contradictory advice and it makes it seem like there's some magical criteria, a Goldilocks moment, to make a decision . My feeling is that you should make a decision as soon as possible, accept it's going to be an imperfect decision. Obviously you don't want to make random choices, but as soon as you have any reasonable rationale for a particular path you should go with it (especially if you have a gut feeling one way or another).

    I think this is what you were saying, but I feel like that one sentence kind of takes some of the wind out of the point. The sooner you make a decision, the sooner you'll actually get the data that you need to evaluate that decision. I agree that the problem most people have is that they think of decisions as "the end", hard forks, that once chosen will inexorably affect their destiny forever. That kind of moral weight can be paralyzing. The truth is, decision making is a process, one that does *not* end once you start down a path. There should be a continuous feedback loop evaluating, modifying and refining the choices that you make based on new information.


    On the plains of hesitation lie the blackened bones of countless millions who at the dawn of victory lay down to rest, and in resting died.

    - Adlai E. Stevenson
  • micah · 1 year ago
    Well, as I conclude, those three rules won't ensure your startups success, but rather putting yourself in the best position to allow your startup to succeed (basically not make you, the founder, the reason the startup failed)

    Regarding decision making. I do think there is a "right moment" in which a decision should be made. Make it too quick and it invites catastrophic failure, wait too long and it invites catastropic failure.

    When is that moment? For me, it has always been when I had enough information to understand most if not all of the consequences and I was willing to live with them all. And once that moment was reached, I don't hesitate to make the decision. I think the emphasis on quick decision making removes the ability to truly understand the decision being made. Plus, I assume all my decisions are imperfect by definition, and go with it.

    I am a big fan of Tony's blog. In fact, when I helped Guy Kawasaki build the startup section of alltop, I made sure it was there. Great content for sure!

    Guess the only quote I can use was a favorite from playing dominoes and spades at UCDavis - "study long; study wrong"

    :)
  • mikepk · 1 year ago
    I still think we're saying mostly the same thing, I just worry that by saying "not too fast and not too slow" and saying there is a definitive "right" time to make a decision you're shifting the anxiety of prospective founders to knowing *when* is the right time to make a decision. I guess we disagree in that I don't think there is a right time. My feeling is that it's a very fuzzy continuum. I'm not suggesting you make random choices with no thinking or information, but you have to accept that you're always going to have to act on imperfect data. I argue that the sooner you make the choice, the sooner you "start the experiment" and can start getting feedback that helps you evaluate the decision and adjust.

    I could be extra sensitive though, I worked in a big company for many years, and the most painful thing was the analysis-paralysis that used to set in. Research, committee's, design boards, and thrashing that all went into a seemingly endless process to make product decisions. I used to joke that in the time it took to make the decision between two options, we could have actually tried both and still taken less time.
  • micah · 1 year ago
    I used to work at universities as a fund raiser, and I left because it took 9 months to make basic decisions. At the same time, there are situations where I just made a decision and "went with it." Each way is not ideal, but there is a moment that I think great CEOs know its time to act.

    Its similar to playing sports. The great ones just know when to take it to the hoop.
  • Jeff Staddon · 1 year ago
    Excellent post. These concepts apply to almost any endevour in life. For me I think #3 is the hardest. It's easier to go off and do something safe and live with the myth of infallability than to try and have the myth wiped away. Thanks for the great thoughts.
  • micah · 1 year ago
    Its funny. I find #3 the easiest. Takes the fear out of trying.
  • Lucretia (GeekMommy) Pruitt · 1 year ago
    Good points. The sad part tho is that most people who really need to read it and hear what you're saying would probably never really hear it.
  • micah · 1 year ago
    you mean they will never listen? LOL. I am actually glad its that way. Makes it easier for the real startup guys (and gals) to succeed. We just keep on keeping on while all the idiots do retarded things and end up as afterthoughts and never wases.
  • Dalka · 1 year ago
    Nice list...

    how about a follow up on team dynamics and revenue models?
  • micah · 1 year ago
    Sure. Can you put it in the skribit widget on the right sidebar so I
    can remember?
  • Eric Friedman · 1 year ago
    Great list. Thanks for sharing.
  • gregory · 1 year ago
    re your first sentence .... the reason is that there is no such thing as an individual person, ideas come from the group mind, pass through karmic collections of seeming individuals, and make their way into manifestation for a brief time, to be replaced by something new ... this is the working with movement process you refer to ....

    none of it is personal, is the takeaway, and that is totally liberating to understand ....

    only then can you fly, and be of use to the world flow, not taking, not giving, simply allowing ...
  • Krista Paul · 1 year ago
    Fantastic post. I like #3 the best, although it's sometimes hard to admit to yourself that mistakes are not bad. I do however, agree that repeating them is the worst thing you could do. So Micah, what do you suck at? ;)
  • micah · 1 year ago
    Me? What do I suck? Right now its losing weight. I think the one thing
    I have the most trouble with is finishing thing. I tend to like the
    beginning of things, and the end of things are pretty fun, but the
    middle is not my bag. So often, when things start to get into the
    middle, I tend to bail out, which rarely leads to enjoying the end of
    things...
  • Anthony Kuhn · 1 year ago
    Micah:

    Good stuff for those of us who are learning about making little startups into bigger ones! The tip on listening (hearing?) really struck a chord with me. I've often thought that people who are of the entrepreneurial mind don't have all the answers, even if they think they do, and would be well served by taking in expertise/thoughts from people who might hold some bit of useful knowledge. Looking forward to more of your posts!
  • micah · 1 year ago
    Thanks Anthony. I think that the art of listening without judgement is
    a difficult one for people to embrace, but at the same time its the
    downfall of many a startup...
  • SEO · 10 months ago
    These are the three important stairs in one’s life.. Everyone should follow these three in order to get success and it’s absolutely right that we always learn through failures.. Until and unless there isn’t any failure in life we can’t recognize and realize the importance of “SUCCESS” in our lives..
  • Guest · 4 months ago
    Good but brief