• WELCOME
  • SERVICES
  • SHOUT OUTS
  • CONTACT

Cedar Gandy

  • WELCOME
  • SERVICES
  • SHOUT OUTS
  • CONTACT

National Small Business Week : Mark Cuban's 12 Rules for Startups


“National Small Business Week is a chance to honor our nation’s 28 million small businesses and renew our commitment to fostering the entrepreneurial spirit that is central to the American experience,” says SBA Administrator Maria Contreras-Sweet, the head of the U.S. Small Business Administration.

As a graphic designer and small business owner, it's a week to celebrate while gaining the advise and wisdom from other business leaders! So I am headed to Austin, TX for a "Small Biz Salute" Networking Event at the Palm Door on Sixth. If you are in the Austin, TX area, take a break, come out, and network with Austin small business owners and entrepreneurs from 5:30-7:30pm. It's sponsored by The UPS Store and is free for the first 100 guests.

Shark Tank is one of my favorite shows, so I am sharing with you Mark Cuban's 12 Rules for Startups, (from entrepreneur.com) which are simple and straight forward (my kind of advise) or check out the video below.

1. Don't start a company unless it's an obsession and something you love.

2. If you have an exit strategy, it's not an obsession.

3. Hire people who you think will love working there.

4. Sales Cure All. Know how your company will make money and how you will actually make sales.

5. Know your core competencies and focus on being great at them. Pay up for people in your core competencies. Get the best. Outside the core competencies, hire people that fit your culture but aren't as expensive to pay.

6. An espresso machine? Are you kidding me? Coffee is for closers. Sodas are free. Lunch is a chance to get out of the office and talk. There are 24 hours in a day, and if people like their jobs, they will find ways to use as much of it as possible to do their jobs.

7. No offices. Open offices keep everyone in tune with what is going on and keep the energy up. If an employee is about privacy, show him or her how to use the lock on the bathroom. There is nothing private in a startup. This is also a good way to keep from hiring executives who cannot operate successfully in a startup. My biggest fear was always hiring someone who wanted to build an empire. If the person demands to fly first class or to bring over a personal secretary, run away. If an exec won't go on sales calls, run away. They are empire builders and will pollute your company.

8. As far as technology, go with what you know. That is always the most inexpensive way. If you know Apple, use it. If you know Vista, ask yourself why, then use it. It's a startup so there are just a few employees. Let people use what they know.

9. Keep the organization flat. If you have managers reporting to managers in a startup, you will fail. Once you get beyond startup, if you have managers reporting to managers, you will create politics.

10. Never buy swag. A sure sign of failure for a startup is when someone sends me logo-embroidered polo shirts. If your people are at shows and in public, it's okay to buy for your own employees, but if you really think people are going to wear your branded polo when they're out and about, you are mistaken and have no idea how to spend your money.

11. Never hire a PR firm. A public relations firm will call or email people in the publications you already read, on the shows you already watch and at the websites you already surf. Those people publish their emails. Whenever you consume any information related to your field, get the email of the person publishing it and send them a message introducing yourself and the company. Their job is to find new stuff. They will welcome hearing from the founder instead of some PR flack. Once you establish communication with that person, make yourself available to answer their questions about the industry and be a source for them. If you are smart, they will use you.Related: Is Any Publicity Good Publicity?

12. Make the job fun for employees. Keep a pulse on the stress levels and accomplishments of your people and reward them. My first company, MicroSolutions, when we had a record sales month, or someone did something special, I would walk around handing out $100 bills to salespeople. At Broadcast.com and MicroSolutions, we had a company shot. The Kamikaze. We would take people to a bar every now and then and buy one or ten for everyone. At MicroSolutions, more often than not we had vendors cover the tab. Vendors always love a good party.

tags: #DreamSmallBiz, #SmallBizSalute, #SBW2015, entrepreneur.com, Graphic Design, Waco, Collaboration, Texas, Visual Branding, Starting a business, Graphic Designer
Wednesday 05.06.15
Posted by Haley Gandy
 

13 Old-School Tips for New Wave Entrepreneurs


Check out this great article for simple, but challenging tips to keep moving forward as a "start-up", "entrepreneur", "small biz owner".  

           An experienced entrepreneur offers the freshman class lessons for building a startup.           ENTREPRENEUR.COM | RON BURR 

           An experienced entrepreneur offers the freshman class lessons for building a startup.
           ENTREPRENEUR.COM | RON BURR
 

The introduction of the cloud for hosting web applications has made it easier than ever to have a new idea, build a new technology and start a new company. Open a major news publication any day and it feels like you'll see a new app or platform announcement. However, as anyone who has ever bootstrapped a company can tell you, startups are never easy, no matter what generation you fall into. 

Related: Failure and Rejection in Startups: 3 Things to Remember

Certainly, looking forward, it's clear that millennials are entrenched as the next generation of leaders; the “new wave” entrepreneurs are here. They’re loud, disruptive and completely and utterly connected. Yet, while they’re paving a new path and the rules for how to build a startup from a laptop anywhere in the world, they're still realizing that it’s not all about "how many followers" you can get.
   Instead, the core elements to building a startup begin with an unwavering belief in your product and the courage to know when your ideas are total crap. The remaining core elements include things like networking and relationship-building when all you want to do is keep working on your product or go home to sleep.
   Having built and run several successful companies myself during the past 20 years, and maintained a strong commitment to mentorship, I can offer some "old school" advice for the incoming freshman class. They’re going to need it. It’s more competitive than ever out there.

1. Cash is king. 

Conserve it and, even if you’re investing in tomorrow to buy profitable customers today, don’t forget that cash today is what makes payroll tomorrow.

2. Don't believe your own BS.

While you must exude unwavering confidence, don’t forget to maintain that critical eye toward your product or services.

Related: 9 Affordable and Effective Ways to Protect Your Entrepreneurial Vision

3. Seek out and listen to good advisors.

This is key; don't ignore it.

4. Network.

Do this even if you hate it -- because relationships are key and businesses are never built in a vacuum.

5. Be ruthlessly honest with yourself and others.

Denial is your worst enemy; strive to find flaws in your ideas or processes and eliminate them. 

6. Believe in, and have a passion for, your business.

This will come through in everything you do. Following tip number 5 makes this even easier.

7. Ask yourself, "What pain am I solving for the customer?"

This gets to the heart of what you’re offering. Is yours a great business idea or just something you like?

8. Follow the "ABC" rule.

Always Be Closing. Like it or not, as an entrepreneur, you are a salesperson. If that's not your natural skill, read, practice and learn.

9. Complement your weaknesses (yes, you have some).

Hire the most talented people you can find. Don’t be afraid that they will outshine you. Even if they do, that's the best possible outcome for your business.

10. Share your equity generously with early team members.

When everyone has a meaningful stake in the outcome, they will have the same 24/7 commitment you do. You don’t have to be an "island" once you get to the top.

11. Remember that every reason to quit is just another roadblock on your path to success.

Tell this to yourself -- over and over -- when things look bleak.

12. Know that you will continuously change business processes as your company grows.

Instead of sticking to an old winning formula, be on the lookout for the first opportunity that tells you your old process may no longer be efficient. 

13. Keep in mind that customers are your best advocates. 

Even if everything feels chaotic in your business, and you don’t know which fire to put out first, remember that the number one priority is customer satisfaction. In the spirit of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, customers are your business’ “air, food, and water.”

Related: 5 Traits All Successful Startup Entrepreneurs Have

​

tags: Startups, Starting a business, Tech, entrepreneurs, entrepreneur.com
Friday 04.17.15
Posted by Haley Gandy
 

Copyright © 2014-2023 Cedar Gandy   |   All Rights Reserved