Words for thought. I’m taking a brief respite from serious writing to offer you some of my favorite lines about entrepreneurial thinking.
The true economic stimulus exists in the entrepreneurial spirit.
Customers buy success, entrepreneurs sell benefits.
There is a fine line between perseverance and obstinance. Entrepreneurs need to know when to adapt and change direction.
Tom Hanks once said there is no crying in baseball. Entrepreneurs know that there is no sleeping in startups.
The faster you drive a car that you don’t know how to drive, the more likely you are to crash.
Killing time murders opportunity.
Spreadsheet: a matrix showing how many days of the month you have to eat PB&J sandwiches
Spreadsheet (2) – what startups do before they bed down in their office
Messaround Round: Venture capital obtained by a company that really doesn’t need the money but wants it just to “make sure” of things (& then they promptly spend it on ill-advised items).
Dude Diligence: Investigating the one-owner, one-person business (or dudette diligence, in the feminine).
Small Business Disvelopment Corporation = a very poorly managed SBDC.
Non-intellectual Property (NP) = an invention that’s, let’s face it, not very good.
Entremanure: A client whose business plan stinks
Benchmarks: Sweat left at the gym while avoiding facing issues in your business.
Innervation: Tremors and sweating associated with starting a new company
Fornivator: Someone who screws up your program, as in, “The county commissioners really fornivated us in the new budget.”
An entrepreneur is one that leaves a 9-to-5 job with a steady paycheck, vacation and sick time with limited responsibilities in order to become an owner of a business, working 24 hours a day 7 days a week with uncertain income, no vacation and placing their life savings and family time at risk, all in the name of personal freedom.
A mentor is a person whose hindsight becomes your foresight.
Entrepreneurship is rarely a do it yourself sport.
There is no finish line in entrepreneurship.
Remember that you are unique, just like everyone else.
Learning happens when you have the courage to invalidate your hypothesis.
If you have the data then let’s look at the data. If all we have is opinions, then let’s go with mine.
Instincts are experiments. Data is proof.
Markets that don’t exist don’t care how smart you are.
Finally, wrapping up with a quote from Theodor Geisel, AKA Dr. Seuss:
“Congratulations!
Today is your day.
You’re off to Great Places!
You’re off and away!
You have brains in your head.
You have feet in your shoes
You can steer yourself
any direction you choose.
You’re on your own. And you know what you know.
And YOU are the guy who’ll decide where to go.”
Excellent. Enjoyed these very much. I liked best this one: “A mentor is a person whose hindsight becomes your foresight.”