On Friday
nights, most testosterone-driven high school guys head out to the football
field to either put on the pads or chase after the girls in the stands. I
went to turn a profit.
At 16
years old, I started my first business among the throngs of a community
gathered on muggy summer nights to cheer on the home team. Cheering means one
thing: yelling. And yelling means that people will have tired, sore, dry
throats.
For the
penny pinchers unwilling to spend concession stand prices for their carbonated
relief, the school had conveniently provided a pop machine in the stadium that
would deliver an ice-cold can of heaven for 50 cents.
This pop
machine had a particular quirk that lent itself fantastically to my young
entrepreneurial spirit: it stubbornly required exact change.
A lot has
changed since 1998, but one thing hasn’t: nobody carries exact change. I set up
shop beside that beautiful, glowing, humming machine and offered people exactly
what they needed: exact change.
For a
small fee to compensate my kindness and service, I’d sell them two quarters.
Because they needed to soak their thirst, they’d gladly give me one dollar and
I’d kindly give them two quarters, easily turning a $10 profit each home game.
It wasn’t
much of a payday, granted, but I learned five invaluable lessons from that pop
machine that helped me build the two successful businesses that I’m running
today.
Lesson #1: Be Necessary
If I’d
sold can-koozies at the game, I have a hunch that I would have had far less
success. Why? Because people needed a cold drink, not a holder for one. In my
experience, I’ve learned that there are two types of business ideas: 1) “It
would be nice if” ideas, and 2) ideas that make necessary things better.
Here are
three questions to ask yourself to figure out if you have an “it would be nice
if” idea or one that makes necessary things better:
- Does this help someone do a necessary action more easily? Does it make someone’s job, responsibility, or task less of a pain in the neck?
- Does this idea save someone money? What about time? Will the idea provide a way for people to do something more efficiently?
- Is this idea a game changer? Does the idea change the way that people behave, operate, or think? Will this idea revolutionize an industry? How?
If you
can’t answer yes to at least one of these three questions, you have an “it
would be nice if” idea on your hands. Proceed with caution.
Lesson #2: Do Something You Know Something About
Over the
years, I’ve had hundreds of seemingly great ideas for a moneymaking business.
Some of those ideas have since been discovered and turned into great profit by
someone else. I should be bitter, right? I’m not. Here’s why:
I wasn’t
the right man to lead the companies that would be birthed from those
ideas.
Over the
last two years, I have raised over $1 million in investment capital for my
technology start-up. All that nerve-conquering, sweat, presenting, and hustle
served to teach me an invaluable lesson: the leader’s story (read: your
story) matters.
Your
background, experience, and education must align with the business that you are
creating. Your business must be a part of you. I was able to raise the
necessary capital for my start-up because I spent seven years preparing myself.
Before building a digital marketing software product, I built a digital
marketing agency. That means that I prepared myself to be the one person
capable of executing my new business model.
Everyone
has ideas. Successful people aren’t measured by the amount of ideas they have,
but by their ability to execute a chosen few.
Lesson #3: Resolve Is Your Biggest Asset
Despite
anything that you’ve heard or seen on TV, starting your own business isn’t very
glamorous. It’s a grind that involves obsessive dedication and an unrelenting
amount of effort and resolve.
It took
five years for my digital marketing agency to fit into the “successful” label.
I wanted to quit every single year before that. There were too many hurdles,
too many unknowns, too many obstacles for the company to thrive. Many late
nights, I laid awake justifying walking away from it all.
I can’t
tell you how glad I am that I stuck it out. Here’s the lesson: Your resolve is
the real “X” factor for your business.
Every
start-up will encounter obstacles that will threaten to shut it down. Every
beginning business will face seemingly insurmountable odds. Getting your idea
off the ground will require your weekdays, weeknights, and weekends. There’s no
getting around any of that.
To be
successful, you must be resolved.
If you’re
launching out to start your own business, you must be able to answer one
question without a hint of hesitation: are you prepared to fight? Will you be
willing to stick to the plan even if it seems that it’s failing? Are you
willing to make the sacrifices today that might pan out in 5 or 10
years?
Building
a successful business from the ground up requires the resolve of Leonidas and
the patience of Mother Teresa.
Lesson #4: Doing Something Awesome Requires an
Awesome Amount of Side Hustle
When I started
my first business (which failed), I had enough cash in the bank to support
myself for six months. Young, and without the wisdom of the side-hustle approach, I promptly quit my
full-time job and dove into the shallow end of the pool head first.
Two years
later, I was renting a bedroom in a friend’s house for $200 a month, driving a
downgraded car, eating off dollar menus, and living on a salary that brought in
less than $1,000 a month.
I could
have saved years of my life if I started growing my business while staying
employed somewhere else. If you’re toeing the line and thinking of starting a
new business, consider keeping your current job. You’ll keep your income and
benefits, which will help you to make more level-headed decisions about your
start-up and its future.
There
should be one important caveat here: If you’re side hustling, don’t cheat hours
on the clock. Your priority is your current job, and a man with integrity takes
that responsibility seriously. Respect the person who took a risk to hire you,
keep producing at your desk, and be a valuable contributor to your current
company.
Once you
get your start-up off the ground, you’ll expect the same from your employees.
Lesson #5: Ideas Are Cheap, Execution Isn’t
I once
had a friend approach me about a business idea that he was ready to set into
motion. He wanted to build a company that would rent high-quality
packing/moving crates in order to keep people from buying (and, more
importantly, throwing away) boxes when they had to move. Letting him work
through his business model and pricing structure, I noticed an unfortunate
flaw: to make any real money off the company, he’d need to have several
thousand boxes in circulation. Per week.
It’s
unbelievable how the excitement of an idea can cloud our senses of judgment. It happened to me. And it
happened to my friend above, who, despite my caution, dove into the shallow end
of the pool head first and quickly realized there was no water.
No matter
how great the idea, the numbers must add up if you’re going to be successful.
Work through your overhead costs and schematics. Factor in your salary and the
costs of your production. Know up front how many sales you’ll need to
consistently make (and maintain) in order to turn a profit. You’re starting a
business, after all, not a hobby.
The old
adage holds true: You must do the math.
One Final Word
There’s
one final lesson that the soda machine taught me during those humid summer
nights: most people are addicted to convenience. That’s what helped me get away
with charging a dollar for two quarters. Sure, I was saving them money because
my product was cheaper than the concession stand, but I was also saving them
time.
A lot of
people will talk about starting a business and day-dream about being their own
boss. Very few people will actually take the leap and invest the time. And a
ridiculously small amount will actually see their dreams come to life.
That’s
because building your own business isn’t convenient.
You’ll be
misunderstood and frustrated along the way. While your friends are busy
buying nice cars and going away on fancy vacations, you’ll be pinching pennies to
pay the bills and staying up late to answer emails. There are times that you’ll
feel isolated and a bit foolish, and will be close to giving up and walking
away from it all. When you have these moments, remember this quote, which I
used to keep on my bathroom mirror and read to myself every morning:
“Every
adversity, every failure, every heartbreak, carries with it the seed of an
equal or greater benefit.” – Napoleon Hill, Think and Grow Rich
Plant
those seeds and hang in there. It’s worth every second.
Justin
Spring is the Co-founder of Adept, an internet marketing company
and BringShare.com, a SaaS application.
src: http://artofmanliness.com
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