Sunday, June 28, 2015

Three Basics an Entrepreneur must not Forget

There may be very many areas that an entrepreneur must excel at. In my assignments with Founders/ CEOs/ Professionals , across India & Overseas as an Entrepreneur & Business Coach, I have observed a distinct noticeable approach which makes them stand out, successful or puts them on the path to success. This approach or rather approaches are in three areas. These have been termed by me as basics. I believe that an entrepreneur must work and build these basics consciously in to his way of doing business.
1. Successful entrepreneurs understand that making money and profits are functions of business. They focus instead on identifying the purpose of business. Essentially they create a vision for their business organization.

The purpose of business is to create & keep a customer- Peter F Drucker

An entrepreneur in Hyderabad managing a successful services Business engaged me as his coach. After 12 months of coaching, having achieved his business and personal goals signed up again for coaching recently. He had shared that coaching has transformed his thinking and encouraged him to think differently. Energized and motivated to achieve, he signed up for the third time and in the first session on creating goals, he defined his vision as “Creating 100 entrepreneurs in 3 years”. This was remarkably different from the goals he had set out in previous assignments. Another client in a start-up mode ( manufacturing) co-created the purpose of his business with his founding members. The energy during the course of creating the purpose and the plan over next 5 years was contagious. The founding members could establish linkage of their aspirations and feelings manifested in the defined purpose. Such co-creation and shared understanding manifests itself in focus & commitment to achieving the “dream with a plan”.

Jack Welch said “Good Business leaders create a vision, articulate the vision, passionately own the vision & relentlessly drive it to completion.

Research has shown that people work with you and stay with you longer when they understand your purpose and fully buy into the vision. Imagine the motivation of the person who works with my client when he realizes that his principal / employer is interested in the success of others. It creates a sense of transformational trust among the stakeholders including shareholders, clients, and vendors in addition to employees. Purpose of business allows for relatively faster and quick decision making as each member of team now is completely bought in & it is observed commitment grows.

“What is the core purpose of my business?” Each Entrepreneur who grows and achieves success has clearly a defined purpose and if one has not achieved desired level and quality of success, perhaps need to ponder on whether the purpose was defined well, shared and lived.
Making money / profits is the function of business & not the purpose. Revenue & Profits would accrue when we engage in any value generating activity. It cannot be the purpose though. Walmart established their purpose in 60s to be “To bring down the cost of living for an average American”. Even today their journey and actions stay on course and the money & profits keep flowing in. 
2. Entrepreneurs need to answer a question “How much salary will you pay to a person who does the role I am doing in my business”. If the answer suggests an amount which is lower than what you earn and take home, there are very high chances that you are an employee in your own business. You have a “job in your business”.

Successful entrepreneurs by any standards are always working "on their business" and not in their business. Working on the business allows the entrepreneur to start building new businesses too.

Business guru Michael Gerber says that chief executives should spend 90% of their time on strategic issues versus 10% of their time on tactical issues.

There are some things that only the business owner can do. Other things can be done just as well (if not even better) by a manager or an administrative employee.
In my coaching assignments with Entrepreneurs, I have observed it consistently. Entrepreneurs take on too much operational responsibility and tend to spend hours doing activities which either do not generate value or do not contribute to growth of business. With a defined purpose of business & awareness on “working on the business” entrepreneurs have scaled their business, expanded the footprint and built new businesses / verticals. Any role which has Strategy & Operations as key responsibilities would be drawn towards operational issues as they are mostly of urgent & important nature . Entrepreneurs may therefore struggle to scale their business as most of time and priorities are just around sustaining current business.

A question to ask is “How much time I am spending in “Growing” the business as against time spent on managing the business need of today?

Some solutions applied by entrepreneurs include hiring someone to take on operational responsibility to training existing team to take on additional tasks. Working longer probably is not the first solution an entrepreneur must look at. Breaking down bigger tasks in to small steps would let you allow others to do most of it , while you may retain the key parts. Training the people, mentoring and coaching them would also help you Grow your business.

The goal of business owners who work on their businesses rather than working in their businesses is to make more money in less time with fewer headaches and more harmony in the family. Think about it: the primary purpose of your business is to serve your life; it should not be the purpose of your life to serve your business. Ask yourself this challenging question: are you working in your business or are you working on your business? 

3. Entrepreneurs need to develop a balance between wok & life. They are chasing things all the time. They are making things happen. Let us face it, there is always the issue of work life balance an entrepreneur is challenged with. The defined purpose of business and working on business is the key to achieve a work life balance for an entrepreneur. In one of my coaching session with a Founder of IT solutions company in Hyderabad on “time mastery”, I asked “what is value of one hour in rupee terms”. He thought, calculated and stated a magnanimous amount.

Then I asked him “What all do you do in a day which fetches a value substantially lower than the amount you mentioned”. He smiled and understood but what he said later was interesting. He shared that by stopping doing those activities, he could easily save 2 hours each day. This time could either be put to “working on business” or pursuing some interests like walking in mornings, reading and learning to play musical instruments.
This client did few simple things; Hired a secretary – This saved him tons of time as the secretary would screen and redirect unconnected calls to other employees, saved him time in managing logistics of travel.
Peter Drucker says “We all tell leaders to start doing new things or doing it differently but we never tell them to stop doing certain things”
The trick is to understand value creation out of our time and if it does not, it must be stopped or at best delegated. These things will help you save at least 1-2 hours each day, could be more. Imagine value of this time.
Your greatest resource is your time – Brain Tracy
Go out now & begin .........2015 truly & create a vision ,  revisit the purpose of business, evaluate time spent “working on business” and achieving a work life balance.

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Note : Professional Coaching standards does not allow coaches to share the details / names of client’s coached unless expressly approved by client themselves. Hence the author has not mentioned the same.