The Common Mistakes First-Time Entrepreneurs Make [HUGE HELP]

11 replies
I rarely refer to sites outside WF, but this one I couldn't pass up. It is a goldmine of the experience had by many entrepreneurs...all about the things to avoid for failure.

What are the most common mistakes first-time entrepreneurs make? - Quora

You will get a lot out of their responses. I did.

You do need to have a Quora account to see their answers, I just noticed. Then I read through Quora's TOS and it's OK for me to share here as I have the link above back to the original page, so I will paste in the top two responses:

Michal Ugor, I work at boomlink.eu I blog at fortunepick.com Suggest Bio
Votes by Jason M. Lemkin (Co-Founder/CEO, EchoSign, NanoGram Devices), Dave McClure (Founding Partner, 500 Startups), Juho Vepsäläinen, Vivek Ponnaiyan, and 591 more.

1. Keeping your idea secret.
This is one of the most stupid misconceptions about startup ideas (If I tell it to someone they'll steal it and make millions of it) Reality is that every loser has a business idea with a potential but most are not capable to execute it. And people who are able to execute ideas have plenty of their own. Of course, it's the execution not the idea - facebook came after friendster and myspace and google came after plenty of search engines.

2. Trying to build a product for everyone.
He who tries to please everybody, pleases nobody.

3. Lack of focus.
All entrepreneurs are cursed with having too many ideas that are too tempting not to be executed. The point is to be able to put everything else aside and focus on one with best timing and most potential. Jack Dorsey mentioned somwhere that he had his Twitter idea almost a decade before he started it and put it in shelf - which is his way of clearing distractions.

4. Ignoring cash-flow.
As already mentioned in many answers confusing cash-flow or ignoring it is surest way to fail.

5. Quitting too early + not failing soon enough.
Quitting and failing are 2 different things. Failing soon is about not wasting time (or failing in love) with features once you have enough evidence they aren't going to make profit - you should seek that evidence all the time. Quitting on another hand is giving up to circumstances while knowing that what you are doing can work and will make you happy.

6. Wasting time on what competition does.
Someone once famously tweeted: "If you spend all your time looking at your competition your product will end up looking like competitions ass."

7. Picking the wrong co-founder and not having a shareholder's agreement in place.
Talking or wishing and doing are to separate things, when you are motivated and excited everyone feels like a winner. All people tend to overestimate themselves, however once it comes to action many back off or find reasons and excuses to go for the easy and safe route. Making sure you aren't giving equity to a "co-founder" before you get a proof is what shareholder's agreements are made for.

8. Issuing equity too early.
Many people you hire early on may only a half-hearted commitment and ambitions on their own. Once I was going to offer small part of equity to an advisor and I had a chat about it with one experienced partner in a law firm, he told me: "Why would you need an advisor who does it for equity? Get people who are excited about your product and want to help out because of that excitement and belief in it, then after a year or more you can talk about equity."
Same thing with stock options, the ideal time frame should be around 5 years, if you give it to someone after 1 year of working they can simply walk away and take a free ride while you're working your ass off increasing the value of their stake.

9. Too many features - overcomplicating.
Everybody knows why Apple was so successful. Here's a quote from Albert Einstein that sums it up nicely: Any darn fool can make something complex it takes a genius to make something simple.
It's the simplicity not complexity that sells (and makes it hard to build)

10. Not seeking or using customer feedback.
Well they may not tell you what you should build but they can surely tell what's wrong - as Bill Gates once famously said.

**

Peter Baskerville, Started 13 businesses with over 30 outlets in total and currently working on these in the educational space Skillmaker | Free online training courses... (more) Suggest Bio
Votes by Deidre Paknad (I've founded 2 companies, been CEO of 3 venture...), Don Ouchy, Shanky Surana, Adam Rifkin, and 505 more.

I have more, but here are 10 scars I continue to wear from the 13 different businesses I have started:
Failing to realize the importance of cashflow not just profit. You need to maintain a moving 10-13 weekly cashflow forecast to survive. Stay liquid with your cash and beware of tying it up because "cashflow is more important than your mother"

Failing to realize that the world was not starving waiting for you to open. i.e. "You still have to acquire your customer base, one way or another". Discounts, free trials, promotions are all needed to get a repeating and referring customer base.

Failing to realize that it is likely to take 18 mths to 3 years to break-even on your brilliant idea, let alone make profit. i.e. So you need more capital than just enough to cover infrastructure costs. You also need working capital to fund the losses during this period until your idea is financially sustainable.

Failing to realize that successful corporate approaches are inappropriate for small business startups. i.e. You are in a fight for survival not just playing your part in a management committee decision making activities. A startup is not just a small version of a corporate enterprise, it requires a completely different approach in development like business modelling not business plans, customer development not product development and entrepreneurial lean management not strategic/corporate management.

Failing to realize that real margins are not just buy for 1 and sell for 2 (100%) but rather buy for 1 and sell for 10. i.e. You need greater profit margins than you originally think to cover all the costs required to fund a sustainable business.

Failing to realize that you need to be very good at everything not just be an expert in one field. i.e. You need to be the generalist rather than the specialist.

Failing to realize that you need to build a secure 'beachhead' in the market before striking out for the main prize. i.e. do everything (compromise) to get traction in the market first - however small.

Failing to realize that you are more likely to succeed creating an adequate product with brilliant marketing and distribution ... rather than the other way round.

Failing to promote benefits over features. i.e. customers buy what's beneficial to them and are blind to the exotic, outstanding and competitor-beating features that may have become your obsession.

.... and finally, failing to be lucky when it counted most.

**


You can see hundreds of people voted up these responses! There are many other answers in the Quora thread and I encourage you to go read them even if it means you have to create an account there. It's worth it.
#common #entrepreneurs #firsttime #huge #list #make #mistakes
  • Profile picture of the author Garcysher
    Great post and there's excellent advice in there.

    I would add another...

    Not Validating the idea quick enough. I have personally fell into this trap in the past. I wasted months of my time and no small amount of money on a product which I did not validate properly. I think when you come up with an idea, the only thing you should focus on is seeing if anyone will BUY it...not just give feedback but actually BUY. I call it the land of the living dead...you do all this work thinking you are productive but in reality wasting time money and energy.
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    • Profile picture of the author kenmichaels
      Originally Posted by Garcysher View Post

      Great post and there's excellent advice in there.

      I would add another...

      Not Validating the idea quick enough.
      I have personally fell into this trap in the past. I wasted months of my time and no small amount of money on a product which I did not validate properly. I think when you come up with an idea, the only thing you should focus on is seeing if anyone will BUY it...not just give feedback but actually BUY. I call it the land of the living dead...you do all this work thinking you are productive but in reality wasting time money and energy.
      Throwing good money after bad ... will suck the life out of you
      so slowly you wont even notice until it is to late.

      Your absolutely correct. It is trap ... AND ... Newbies are not the only ones
      who get stuck in it.

      How do you go about selling something that does not exist?

      Me ... I do the 6-8 weeks for shipping. AND if it flops I hand write an
      apology and do a refund.
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      Selling Ain't for Sissies!
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      • Profile picture of the author Garcysher
        Originally Posted by kenmichaels View Post

        Throwing good money after bad ... will suck the life out of you
        so slowly you wont even notice until it is to late.

        Your absolutely correct. It is trap ... AND ... Newbies are not the only ones
        who get stuck in it.

        How do you go about selling something that does not exist?

        Me ... I do the 6-8 weeks for shipping. AND if it flops I hand write an
        apology and do a refund.
        There is always an investment of time and money to prepare something which can be sold. I know the faster I have got at taking something from idea to "minimum viable product" the more chance of success and also the more products I get out there.

        If you can sell before you create the product even better again.
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        • Profile picture of the author Ron Lafuddy
          "If you can sell before you create the product even better again."

          Should be carved in stone.

          Some very advanced thinking in this thread. Thanks, guys!
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      • Profile picture of the author socialentry
        Originally Posted by kenmichaels View Post

        Throwing good money after bad ... will suck the life out of you
        so slowly you wont even notice until it is to late.

        Your absolutely correct. It is trap ... AND ... Newbies are not the only ones
        who get stuck in it.

        How do you go about selling something that does not exist?

        Me ... I do the 6-8 weeks for shipping. AND if it flops I hand write an
        apology and do a refund.
        I was just wondering if you`re testing a new product where is the point where you will say it has flopped?
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        • Profile picture of the author Garcysher
          Originally Posted by socialentry View Post

          I was just wondering if you`re testing a new product where is the point where you will say it has flopped?
          no-one can tell you this point...you have to make your own judgement call

          PIVOT or PERSEVERE? that is the $million question
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  • Profile picture of the author NicheCreatorPro
    Here is another one: Turning over critical items that need to be done to someone else who you "thought" was capable of handling them, but in reality was not. Yes, it helps to have others do some of the work for you, but you must stay on top of it and not assume.
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    To Your Success -

    Marc V. Weiner
    http://helpkeepitlocal.com

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  • Great post! I'm glad "Keeping your idea a secret" is one of the mistakes listed. Sharing your ideas can actually help you brainstorm and perfect your idea. It's also a way of pre-marketing and testing the waters. Is there a need for my idea? Will people buy it? That way you can move on to the next idea sooner =)
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  • Profile picture of the author Matt Lee
    Good post Jason. I love the tidbit about not worrying about your competition and over complicating things. One of the best things I heard someone say to me recently to me is that "done is better than perfect" soooooooo true
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    "One of the Most Successful Offline WSO's Ever!
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