Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Are you a Wantrepreneur?

This is a really great article about the stumbling -blocks that lie in the way of many business start-ups and entrepreneurs to have great success in their chosen business ventures.  The author, Erica Douglas, shares her insights at running and starting successful businesses.

 

 

 

There are a lot of people running around these days calling themselves “entrepreneurs”. However, I’ve discovered a few fool-proof ways to quickly see the differences between successful entrepreneurs and wantrepreneurs–or people who want to start a business, but who actually aren’t going to take action and create a real business.

Here are five traits I’ve noticed in startup founders and entrepreneurs that don’t exist in “wantrepreneurs”: 

1. A willingness to learn anything.

I hear this all the time: “If only I had a developer…” You’re never going to be successful if you externalize what’s wrong (I can’t hire a developer because I don’t have any money/no one will give me money, and therefore I can’t start or build my product.) It’s a poor attitude.

When I hear someone say this, my first question is: “Have you built a prototype?” Surprisingly, 90% of the time, the answer is no. Even great developers aren’t mind-readers. They need a “spec”–a detailed document of what you expect to accomplish with your product. If you need someone else to come up with that, you’re going to have to dig deeper and examine your own feelings about why you feel you’re not worthy to do that. As a founder, you have to be the one championing the direction of the product.

If you have a paper prototype, your next step is to hire someone to build it. Right? WRONG. Your next step is to build it. Sit down with a book or take a class on HTML and CSS, and build out a demo version of your product. Is it ugly? Doesn’t matter–if it’s useful to others, they’ll buy it, or at the very least, express interest in buying it.

At this point, you may get an uneasy look on your face. Isn’t it better to hire someone who knows what they’re doing? In the future, yes. Right now, though, you don’t even know how to tell whether someone knows what they’re doing or not. Plus, without a spec or prototype, you’re going to spend a whole lot of extra money and time having someone else do it wrong over and over again (because again, even the best developer can’t read your mind.)

Once you understand how building a website works, you can dip your toes into code. Read up on the differences between Python, Ruby on Rails, and PHP. Pick one to learn. Spend a week learning the basics. Then spend the next couple of months hacking on weekends. This will help you figure out whether that developer you’re about to pay a fortune to actually knows what he or she is doing.

The point of this exercise is three-fold. One, it gets you familiar with how to articulate your vision to a developer. Two, since you have more time than money, it shows everyone (including prospective developers) that you’re serious and committed to this project. And finally, if you can get something up there, even if it’s just a sketch with buttons that don’t work, you can start showing it to prospective customers and asking them to commit to paying for it. (Note that I didn’t say “Asking them how much they would pay for it.” I said “Asking them to commit to paying for it.” There’s a huge difference. Only one path will show you whether your idea will actually be successful.)

2. Going above and beyond to build something that people want.

One of the biggest issues I see business owners get stuck on is checking their ego at the door. A common symptom of this is when I hear someone quote Henry Ford saying: “If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said a faster horse.” In other words, you are the person who knows what everyone else wants, and once people see what you have to offer, they’ll immediately drop everything they’re doing now and do it your way instead.

Sometimes that’s a good quote–especially if you’ve been buried deep in your market for years, you have expert-level knowledge, and you have the prototype out and people are pulling out their credit cards and begging to buy your product even though your demo isn’t functional yet. If you have all that, though, you’re probably not the target of this article!

If you haven’t been in your market for years, and you have an idea for a product that requires the market–your potential customers–to think about things in a totally different way, that’s the most likely path to failure. Educating a market is incredibly expensive. You won’t be able to do it alone, especially with limited funds. (See New Coke.) Even if you really have invented a better mousetrap, if people are happy with their current mousetrap (or worse, don’t find value in paying to trap mice!), you’re going to have a tough path to success.

So what’s the better option? Finding out what’s in the market and what people hate about what’s out there. Then, instead of trying to “shock” them with something totally new, just incrementally improve on what’s out there.

You can make a million-dollar business by entering an incredibly competitive market and doing one thing better. With my last company, that was better customer support. Yep, that was it…the grand differentiator between my web hosting company and 20,000 others! It’s easy to over-think this stuff. Find one thing that sucks in your market, and start a company that fixes that gap.

3. Not knowing where your next dollar is coming from, but going forward anyway.

Startup founders and entrepreneurs are inherently scrappy folks. The people I hear who “pooh-pooh” consulting and “trading dollars for hours” are the ones most likely to fail on a project. If money gets tight, scrape together as much consulting work as you can and live as frugally as you can. Yeah, it’s not ideal to do consulting and try to run your own business, but you do what you have to do.

Ask yourself this: Do you believe in your startup idea so much that you’d be willing to sell your car and drive a beater for the next year in order to fund yourself for another month? If the answer is no, you need to decide: How committed are you to running your own business?

If you decide you enjoy your lifestyle the way it is and you’re really not interested in the crazy life of an entrepreneur, there’s nothing wrong with that–and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. I have seen startup founders who sleep on their own couch and rent out all the bedrooms in their house on AirBNB so they don’t have to pay rent. I once sold my entire DVD collection (bought years earlier) just so I could buy myself a couple of meals. Sometimes that’s what it takes. Sometimes you can just get by with consulting for a while. But you need to be willing to make large sacrifices, and be okay with wild income swings and/or consulting to pay the bills, in order to start a company.

4. Being willing to launch and ship even when it’s not perfect.

This has been the hardest one for me. There’s always one more feature to build, or something that customers expect that you don’t have. Customers (or potential customers!) can even get emotional and/or upset that you don’t offer something they expect.

Part of the answer is about setting expectations. No, our product is not perfect. It’s software. It’s going to have bugs. We are a tiny team and we are doing the best we can. I can give you an ETA on that feature you need, but it’s likely going to be a week or two…or a month or more, if it’s something complex.

The other part of the answer is being willing to let go. So a customer signed up and then they hate your user interface. Or they need a feature you don’t have. This is a success story, not a failure. First of all, they signed up (even on a free trial), so they see value in your product. Secondly, now you know what customers need. See if you can extend their trial or give them a discount until you can get the feature built.

And if what they’re asking for is completely unrealistic and/or it would take your product in a direction you’re not interested in going, cut them loose. Your sanity is always worth more than the money. That’s a lesson that’s been extremely difficult, but ultimately, I feel a lot better about running a business by being able to say “Yes” when it’s deserved, and a blunt “No” when it’s just not realistic for us to build. “Do you do social media tracking?” “No.” “Any plans to offer that?” “Not at this time.” Ah, what a relief–having the freedom and courage to say “No”!

5. Clearly articulating your vision of the future…and getting people to believe it.

I notice in many “wantrepreneurs” a sort of allergy or aversion to anything that might be considered “selling.” Talk about your product and what it does? No thanks. Interviewing a potential employee? Let’s keep it focused on the numbers and benefits.

Ultimately, though, the best entrepreneurs and business owners are evangelists. They are passionate about their market. For instance, I run an analytics company. I will talk your ear off about the state of the web analytics market, how broken it is, and how my company is solving that problem. In fact, I told a friend the other day, in the middle of a breathless spiel of what we’re working on at Whoosh Traffic for 2013, “You got me going on my favorite subject.” I love talking about analytics. I’m passionate about it.

That’s what you have to do–to potential customers, current customers, your blog readers, your family (fortunately I have an amazing fiance who never seems to get tired of my obsessive rants about cohort analysis, conversion statistics, and client reporting!) If you have the presence to get other people excited, and sharing in your vision, you can do anything. Great employees will turn down other, more lucrative jobs to work with you. Customers will show up, because your passion will come through in your copywriting. And other blogs and news magazines will be more likely to feature you (see my Mixergy interview as a good example!)

Are You Cut Out to Be An Entrepreneur?

It’s a ridiculous roller coaster of emotions to start your own business. You’ll likely start out with one idea and iterate into a larger vision. You’ll have moments of total despair and frustration, where you wonder if you were crazy to even attempt this, and you’ll have insane highs where you feel like you’re on top of the world.

Being an entrepreneur is not for everyone. Is it for you? Only you can decide that. For me, the answer is clear: I wouldn’t have it any other way!

I encourage you to take action after you read this post. What are you going to do? Write out some startup ideas? Sketch out a prototype on paper? Learn HTML and CSS? Post your thoughts and goals in the comments!

Recommended Reading:

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Monday, December 24, 2012

Unto Us a Child is Born, Unto Us a Son is Given

http://christsauthenticchristianity.wordpress.com/2012/12/25/unto-us-a-child-...

Christchild

Coming back from the Christmas candlelight service at Pinson United Methodist, my mind is reflecting on the connection between Christ’s birth and His death.  It has been said that He was born to die, that the main purpose of His coming to Earth was fulfill his eternal purpose of redeeming mankind from their sin by His sacrifice on the cross.  He was the perfect and spotless Lamb of God.

You see, only a man could redeem mankind but the problem is that no man that has ever lived was perfect or blameless enough to do it.  God had to redeem us himself in the form of a man.  So, He came in the person of Jesus Christ, born of a Virgin, blameless and sinless, completely God and completely man all wrapped up in one person. 

His birth is inseparably connected to His death.  He had to be the perfect, sinless Lamb of God, not only to fulfill the Old testament sacrificial requirements, but he had to be born of a virgin so that he would not inherit the stain of original, Adamic sin that all mankind has.  He was wrapped in swaddling clothes foreshadowing the grave cloths that He would one day be wrapped in His tomb.  The wise men brought Him gifts of rare spices that were used to embalm the bodies of the Jewish dead.  He was lain in a manger, which is a feeding trough used for animals, foreshadowing that He would be the Bread of Life that we would eat during the Eurcharist.  There was no place for Him in the Inn, just as there is found no place for Him in many of our lives and hearts yet He chooses to reside in the humble stable just as hearts that humble themselves to Him find shelter.  Just like the Wise men that came from the East, if we seek Him, we will find Him.  

May the peace, love, and joy that our Heavenly Father sent down to an unworthy world rest in all of your hearts.  Embrace Him and open your heart to His grace.  He died for you and wants you to believe in His Son Jesus. 

He said, I am the Way the Truth and the Life and no man cometh to the Father but by me.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Homemadebacklinks

Homemadebacklinks is an inexpensive SEO company. The beauty of the company is that all of their backlinks are built by hand by real people. Check out their website, they really impressed me.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

7 Tips to Seize All of Your Competition's Backlinks and Rank Above Them in the Search Results in 30 days

Much has been written on the web about how to beat out the competition and rank up fast on the major search engines such as Google and Bing.  Most of what it out there borders on the shady and a lot of the information is just plain wrong.
You may ask yourself if webmasters and internet bloggers specializing in SEO are trying to deceive you or lead you astray so that you will have to hire them to do your SEO and not do it yourself since so much of what it available on the web is either blackhat (illegimate) or unwise.  I would suggest that since Google's codenamed Penguin and Panda updates to their search algorythms many SEO specialists who have gotten away with shaddy backlinks to their websites from spamsites have lost their ranking in the search and have scrambled to optimize their sites and save themselves from internet oblivion.
Listen carefully, SEO folks, I am going to share with you the secret to being completely immune to Google algorythm updates:  "just practice organic and legitimate backlink strategies and do not try to game or cheat the system.  Google will find you out and soon your sites will fall in the search like a brick."
Recently, Google posted a "disavow link tool" to enable a webmaster to get rid of bad or spammy links, you can watch their video here:   I am rather dubious about using this tool since in my humble opinion, I believe that it is just an attempt on Google's part to identify spam backlinks by getting webmasters to populate their database for them with all their spammy links for fear that Google will bust them for them.  I don't blame Google for this, I just think that they will use the information to discount backlinks that are submitted enough times and achieve a certain level of authority as established spam links.  Then, other webmasters will get nasty-grams from Google stating that they have spam links that they must disavow immediately or suffer delisting consequences.  I see it as Google's way to force people to use Adwords or not enjoy good ranking.  Far be it that a guy gets a high pagerank without paying Google for it.
If you are curious what are the main methods that I use for off-page SEO, then I will share a few of my strategies.  They are not rocket science or anything, just legitimate link building.  What a website wants in order to get a high web search rank are quality backlinks to high ranked sites and other authoritative websites that are in good standing.  Here is a list of some of my typical strategies:
1.  Embrace social media- in order to do this you will need many social media accounts and I have found that the very best way to consolidate all of them under one aggregated account using Posterous.com. Posterous will allow you to post once and after linking all of your socail media sites and accounts together, your message will go forth to all of them just by clicking Publish.
2. Find your niche- Every website has a category that it fits into which SEOs call its niche.  The easiest way to find other websites in your niche is by doing a Google search with your site's main key words.  The websites that come up on the first 3 pages of a Google search are your main competitors and are the guys that you can learn the most from in order to make your website competitive with them.
3. Forums and Blogs- Find all of the blogs and discussion forums that are in your website's niche by adding the word "blog" or "forum" to your site's keywords. For example, if your website sells baseball cards then you would search Google and other search engines for the words "baseball card forum, baseball card blog, sport card forum/blog, baseball forum/blog, etc"  These searches would give you all of the blogs and forums that deal with issues related to your website.  You should post to all of them and should save your login and passwords in a Word doc for later on when you might want to post to these blogs again.  Google rates most blogs pretty high and the backlinks you make there will count a lot toward your status with the search engines.  So, how do I get a backlink in the forums?  Well, you should read what is being discussed in the forum in question and try to join in the conversation.  Do NOT spam them with your website's link.  You will be quickly removed by the adminsitrator.  Make a few meaningful posts on each blog/forum and write a a paragraph or two and leave a link to your website.  I have had a lot of success just stating that I am building a website and really like theirs and would appreciate any pointers and suggestions that the admins and the visitors might have.  Be polite and friendly and people will respond and the admin will not delete your post along with your link.
4. Download the Alexa toolbar- It is a proven fact the the more you monitor your website's progress, the greater likelihood that you can make progress and raise your site's status and generate more traffic. The Alexa toolbar provides you will a wealth of information about your site and about every other website that you surf.  I believe that it is available for Firefox, Chrome, and IE. It will give you an idea of the pagerank of each site for Google and Bing as well as Alexa own site ranking metrics.  You can get an idea of how much traffic each site gets and what are the characteristics of good and high traffic sites.  Pay attention to the next tip, it is powerful.
5.  This is probably one of the most important strategies that I can share to really ramp up your site traffic and go up fast in the Google page rank.  You have to learn to acquire all of your competitor's backlinks.  How do I do this you might ask?  They are not going to share their secrets with me.  Well, you use the Alexa toolbar backlink tool to find the website's highest ranking and most powerful backlinks.  You can also use this link to access the Alexa backlink tool if you do not want the toolbar: http://www.alexa.com/site/linksin/google.com If you use the toolbar it is very easy and quick to find out a website's major backlinks and get their "juice." You should surf each of the sites listed as their backlinks and see if there is any way to post something to their website that will include your website's link.  Of course, as I stated earlier, do not spam them and try to post something that is of substance and something that is complimentary to them so that the site admin will not instantly delete your post along with its link.
6.  Publish Press Releases- There are several paid and free press release websites that are great to, not only create a high quality backlink, but also ge tthe word out about your business.  The free press release site that I prefer is:  http://www.freepressindex.com/
7.  Quality content- Needless to say, the main reason that anyone will visit your site and hopefully buy soemthign from you is because you have something to offer.  So, create quality text and photo content. Search engines do not deal well with Flash video and flash objects so avaid them in favor of writing high quality text and images that inform, entertain, and make the visitor want to return to your site or buy whatever good or service you are selling.
Therefore, get out there and build your website and make it something that you can be proud of and something that represents your business well.  Check out one of my recent websites that I build for a client a few months ago.  It took only two months to rank on the first page of Google for several keywords that are very competitive.  Check out the site:  http://hogpredators.com
Check back with me for more SEO strategies very soon.

Monday, October 22, 2012

Hogpredators.com Combats the Growing Feral Hog Problem in South Georgia

http://www.freepressindex.com/hogpredators-com-combats-growing-feral-hog-problem-376268.html

Hogpredators.com a local South Georgia business controls the hog infestation problem while at the same time providing hog hunters with guided hunts to right where the action is.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

New to Posterous.com -- My current techie projects

I am new to the latest blogging platform, Posterous.com where you can connect many of your social media accounts so that if you blog in one place then the postings go out to all of hte different venues.  As I may have mentioned recently, if you know me, I have been working on several web design projects. 

1. A local small business http://hogpredators.com that specializes in hog control and guided nightvision hog hunting expeditions in South Georgia.  I have been building thier web pages in the Joomla CMS as well as doing thier SEO, which is coming along nicely.  We are beginning to reach the higher pages on Google and a few other search engines for several keywords.

2.  I have just started on my own personal web project. http://stanleygarland.info which is going to be an instructional website devoted to learning Spanish.  Just like my pervious project with hogpredators, it will also use the Joomla CMS with an added Moodle component.  I have just started the very beginnings of this so things are not up yet.  But, I am very excited since when I am finished I will have a fully functional online school platform with slots for 25 students complete with units and everything. 

3.  I am still working for Ashford University and teaching online college classes.  I am about to start one devoted to Teaching Methods for English Language Learners.  So, as always, I am excited about what cool things that I can do for my students to help them access the knowledge better and in more creative ways.  I have typically provided them with audio lectures as well as written resources but i am toying with the idea of doing some brief videos for my upcoming class.

In conclusion, I really like the ability to post in one place that Posterous provides and I am sure to use it much in the future.  Please stay tuned for upcoming blog posts. 

S. Garland

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