The biggest problem
founders and small business owners have is that they’re experts in their field
and novices in what it really takes to effectively run a business. That’s what
usually trips them up, sooner or later.
Don’t let that
happen to you. Admit that you don’t know what you don’t know about business,
starting with these 15 tips guaranteed to help keep you and your company out of
hot water. Some are straightforward, others are counterintuitive, but they’re
all true. And some day they’ll save your butt.
Always make sure there is and will be
enough cash in the bank.
Period. The most
common business-failure mode, hands down, is running out of cash. If you know
you’ve got a cash flow or liquidity problem coming up, fix it now.
You can’t fire bad employees fast
enough.
You just can’t.
Just make sure you know they’re the problem, not you (see next tip).
The problem is probably you.
When I was a young
manager, my company sent us all to a week of quality training where the most
important concept we learned was that 90 percent of all problems are
management problems. When things aren’t going well, the first place to look for
answers is in the mirror.
Take care of your stars.
This goes for every
company, big and small. The cost of losing a star employee is enormous, yet
business leaders rarely take the time to ensure their top performers are
properly motivated, challenged, and compensated.
Your people are not your kids, your
personal assistants, or your shrink.
If you use and
abuse them that way, you will come to regret it. Capiche?
Learn to say "yes" and
"no" a lot.
The two most
important words business owners and founders have at their disposal are “yes”
and “no.” Learn to say them a lot. And that means being decisive. The most
important reason to focus – to be clear on what your company does – is to be
clear on all the things it doesn’t do.
Listen to your customers.
It boggles my mind
how little most entrepreneurs value their customers when, not only are their
feedback and input among the most critical information they will ever learn,
but their repeat business is the easiest business to get.
Learn two words: meritocracy and
nepotism.
The first is how
you run an organization – by recognizing, rewarding, and compensating based
solely on ability and achievement. The second is how you don’t run an
organization – by playing favorites and being biased.
Know when and when not to be
transparent.
Transparency is as
detrimental at some times as it is beneficial at others. There are times
to share openly and times to zip it. You need to know when and with whom to do
one versus the other. It comes with experience.
Trust your gut.
This phrase is
often repeated but rarely understood. It means that your own instincts are an
extremely valuable decision-making tool. Too often we end up saying in
retrospect and with regret, “Damn, I knew that was a bad idea.” But the key is
to know how to access your instincts. Just sit, be quiet, and listen to
yourself.
Protect and defend your intellectual
property.
Most of you don’t
know the difference between a copyright, trademark, trade secret, and patent.
That’s not acceptable. If you don’t protect and defend your IP, you will lose
your only competitive advantage.
Learn to read and write effective
agreements.
You know the
expression “good fences make good neighbors?” It’s the same in business. The
more effective your agreements are, the better your business relationships will
be.
Run your business like a business.
Far too many
entrepreneurs run their business like an extension of their personal finances.
Bad idea. Very bad idea. Construct the right business entity and keep it
separate from your personal life.
Know your finances inside and out.
If you don’t know
your revenues, expenses, capital requirements, profits (gross and net), debt,
cash flow, and effective tax rate – among other things – you’re asking for
trouble. Big trouble.
You don’t know what you don’t know.
Humility is a
powerful trait for leaders, and that goes for new business owners, veteran CEOs
of Fortune 500 companies, and everyone in between. More times than not, you
will come to regret thinking you knew all the answers.
Behind every failed
company are dysfunctional, delusional, or incompetent business leaders. The
irony is, none of them had the slightest idea that was true at the time. Even
sadder, most of them still don’t. Don't end up like one of them.
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