bootstrapping by boye hartmann
DESCRIPTION
Blend of inspiring quotes and practical tips for beginner boot strappers by Boye Hartmann, Danish entrepreneur and business angel. Our favourite tip: "CREATE A LIST OF WHAT NEEDS TO GET DONE. GET THOSE THINGS DONE. REPEAT."TRANSCRIPT
BOOT STRAPPINGThe easy way
Bootstrapping Entrepreneurship:
Bootstrapping Entrepreneurship “Building a significant important business starting with a low amount of funds” Howard J. Leonhardt, November 2004
Entrepreneurship:
Entrepreneurship “The explorers of the modern era are the entrepreneurs; men and women with vision; with the courage to take risks, and faith enough to brave the unknown” Ronald Reagan 40th President of the United States of America
Entrepreneurship
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• Entrepreneurship “Most of our new jobs are created by entrepreneurs – independent business people pursuing their dreams. Small innovative companies that tap new markets, with products born out of their own ingenuity. Governments do not produce economic growth, people do.” Ronald Reagan
Entrepreneurship•
Entrepreneurship “Economic success is a good thing. In particular, it enables us to offer work to those who need it: business is good for oneself, for others and for society at large. If everyone lived a monastic life and begged, the economy would collapse and we would all die of starvation! (LAUGHS) I am convinced Buddha would say “So now, all go out to work!” (LAUGHS) The 14th Dalai Lama
Entrepreneurship•
Entrepreneurship For thousands of years on earth a man or woman born into an home of poverty was destined to remain in
poverty for life. Capitalism and entrepreneurship was the tool that brought opportunity for the average man or woman to achieve great heights. Opportunity to break the bondage of birth status. A system based on merit and exchange of good for good brought a greater good for people on earth than any other invention.
Basics of Bootstrapping
Basics of Bootstrapping Get operational quickly! This means find a customer fast! Sell that customer something that costs you less to acquire or produce. Mind set – bring more cash in than goes out. Be creative in utilizing resources to get business cash flow rolling.
Basics of Bootstrapping
Basics of Bootstrapping Look for quick – break-even, cash-generating projects. Look for cash in advance sales opportunities. Provide over-the-top incredible fantastic service to your first customers! Work from your home. Keep overhead low. Buy used equipment & office furniture. Do not hire any paid employees until profits allow you to pay them, if possible. Use low to no paid help at first.
Basics of Bootstrapping
Basics of Bootstrapping Keep the product and/or service concept simple! Focus on cash, not on profits, market share, or anything else. Cash is a by-product of providing great service and great value to customers, that costs you less to provide them than what they pay you. Niche markets are usually the best start-up opportunities. The margins are higher. Personal selling opportunities give small businesses a chance against large competitors.
Customer Focus is Essential!
Customer Focus is Essential! Focus on what your customer is receiving in value. Customer’s care nothing about how your office looks, your business plan, your accounting system, or the degrees your employees may hold. They care about one thing – value they receive for the money they pay you, compared to what they could get elsewhere. Treat customers as customers not sales targets. Spend as much of your day personally meeting with customers as possible. Get off of your computer and into your customer’s place. Opportunities for profits are discovered by identifying solutions to customer’s problems, which is best done through
“DIRECT CONTACT” with the customer!
Customer Focus
Customer Focus People buy with emotion and justify with fact!
Put emotion and enthusiasm into your sales pitch! Tell a compelling story. Focus your pitch on what the customer will receive in value, the benefits not the features of the product should be the emphasis. You have to provide the service your customer wants and expects. That comes first. Create “total customer responsiveness” with superior quality, superior service and fast reaction.
Supplier Relationships are Very Important!
Supplier Relationships are Very Important!
Personalize your relationships with your most important suppliers early. Gain their trust! Focus on building these relationships. Pay on time when you can. When you cannot, provide an early warning and a clear understandable explanation. Develop a payment plan. Live up to payment plan promises.
Keep Things Simple!
Keep Things Simple! Keep your accounting system simple. Keep your
advertisements simple and to the point. Keep your product or service
design model simple. Focus on overcoming one simple problem that your
customer’s have with their existing suppliers. Avoid unnecessary paperwork. Root out bureaucracy
Organizational Operations
Organizational Operations CREATE A LIST OF WHAT NEEDS TO GET DONE. GET THOSE THINGS DONE. REPEAT. Avoid silly bureaucratic procedures, demeaning regulations and dispiriting working conditions.
Building the Team
Building the Team Bootstrappers cannot afford expensive personnel. Hire people willing to accept a low base pay and stock options. Hire people willing to work 12+ hours a day to get
the business launched. Hire passionate people that have persistence and will not give up when the going gets tough. Hire entrepreneurial people that understand the basics of business survival – a company needs to bring more cash in than goes out to survive. Experience running a successful lemonade stand or a similar small business is more important than a Harvard PhD. Degree to the hiring bootstrapping
entrepreneur. Hire people with a healthy positive attitude!
Continuous Improvement
Improve customer service everyday utilizing feedback from the real world market.
Improve your products a little bit everyday. Improve your organization. Improve
your quality systems. Improve the image of your company. Improve speed to
market for new products. Improve communication – in and out. Improve net profits!
Managing Your Own Mind is ½ The Battle
Managing Your Own Mind is ½ The Battle Learn to take criticism. Learn to deal with rejection. Develop a thick skin. Critical attacks come with the territory of leadership and
initiative. Do not take things personally. Develop a sense of humor. Train your mind to avoid unnecessary suffering. Follow the principles of Positive Thinking. Seek out the best in people and
situations. Be an optimist! Never ever ever – give up. Enjoy what you are doing!
Richard Branson, Virgin Group
Always be jotting down notes. Work from a simple daily to do list. Manage and motivate by
example – be highly energetic! Strive to always hold more than 50% ownership. Hire based on enthusiasm and energy not experience. Marketing is important – very important.
Bill Gates Microsoft, Inc
Make sure you are the one’s making your products obsolete not someone else. Spend on R&D. Set priorities based on what customers are asking for and what they need. Business is very simple. Profit. Loss. Take the sales, subtract the costs, you better get this big positive number.
Steve Jobs, Apple, Inc. and Pixar
Get your product to market as fast as possible. With passionate people you have a company with a lot of arguments – which is good. Hire people based on their past results or willingness to work very very hard and to learn. Leaders should
often say “That isn’t good enough, you know we can do better”. Push people beyond their comfort zones.
Michael Dell, Dell Computer, Inc
Have high expectations. Customize products to precisely meet customer needs. Provide absolutely the best customer support in your industry! Build customer loyalty by providing high performance products with great service. Engage everyone in the company in a
serving customer’s mentality. Make everyone in the company a co-owner. Get them to think like owners, since they are owners.
Bill Hewlett, Hewlett & Packard
People are everything. At the beginning do what-ever it takes to get an order.
Getting an order means survival. Do what your customers want. Only hire the minimum amount of people that you really really need, not more. The customer comes first.
No customers = No profits = No business
to pay workers. Hire people that WORK HARD above all other considerations. Provide profit sharing to employees. Show hard working people that you care. Locate near a great university.
Walt Disney, founder of Walt Disney Co.
“In route by train back from New York Walt learned the news that the bank loan
necessary to keep his company alive had fallen through. In his nervous doodling he drew for the first time a little mouse. He tossed and turned trying to fall asleep worrying about how he was going to save his company and pay his workers. He convinced himself somehow that the little mouse he just drew was going to save the company. When he arrived back in Los Angeles - he pulled his team together and with a sense of energetic enthusiasm and optimism convinced his colleagues that “a mouse would save the day”. It worked.
Howard Schultz, Founder Starbucks
“How did it happen? I willed it to happen. I took my life in my hands, I learned from anyone I could, grabbed what opportunity I could, and molded my success step by step. Fear of failure drove me at first, but as I tackled each challenge, my anxiety was replaced with a growing sense of optimism. Once you
overcome seemingly unsurmountable obstacles, other hurdles seem less daunting. Most people can achieve beyond their dreams if they insist upon it.”
Entrepreneurship is about Doing Something Good for Society!
“Anyone who is indifferent to the well-being of other people and to the causes of their future happiness, can only be laying the ground for their own misfortune” The Dalai Lama