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Choose a
Passionate Business
By Rob Spiegel
How do you choose the right
business to start? By following trends and trying to anticipate what
consumers or business will want next? By looking for a hole in the market?
These strategies may help you find a potential business concept, but would
it be a business you would enjoy building 60 or 80 hours each week. Since
most start-ups require a weekly commitment of big hours, you better find
something you love to do.
There is a popular line to the
effect, "Do what you love and the money will follow." Like most
pithy statements, it gets tossed around as though it's a truth. It's very
American, and it may even be true if you are convinced it's true. Outside
the U.S., the statement would be viewed as laughably ludicrous. There is a
more European version, "Whatever do you, love it."
If there is any truth to our
exuberantly American statement, it's that when you love what you do, there
is a greater chance you will do your work with great enthusiasm, thus
increasing your likelihood for success. Launching an enterprise requires
intense effort. At the same time you're putting in long hours, you are
also learning new tasks, whether it's marketing or hiring and employee
management. One entrepreneurial friend noted that to succeed with your own
business, you need to get very good a lot of different jobs. Just try this
if you don't have a passion for you're work.
Most successful entrepreneurs
love what they do. They jump into their work and they encourage those
around them to bring zeal to the effort. They are like crusaders who are
out to convince the world that it will be a better place with their
product or service. Enthusiasm is contagious. Entrepreneurs need great
amounts of enthusiasm to generate loyalty from their employees and to
spark interest and foster confidence from their customers.
As well as sustaining a high
level of energy, drive optimism, the entrepreneur has to become an expert
in the subject matter of the business niche, whether it's fishing
vacations or aluminum. Most successful entrepreneurs exhibit a very deep
knowledge of their market. They know the history, the early players. They
know the conventional thinking in the market and they're aware of the new
ideas struggling to gain attention. A good entrepreneur keeps all of this
in perspective and has a good sense of what new trends will gain hold and
which will sputter as the sidelines.
These insights are critical when
your resources are limited. Usually the only reason a new company succeeds
is because the owner is able to perceive a need in the market that has
previously gone unfilled. That can include a higher quality version of an
existing product or service, a less expensive version, or a whole new
approach to solving an age-old problem. Or perhaps the entrepreneur is
doing nothing more than making it easier for his customers to buy the same
things they've always bought. Whatever it is, the entrepreneur spied
something that others didn't see, then acted on it.
Gaining an insight that can be
converted into a new business requires a deep understanding of what
customers need. Turning this insight into al company takes sustained
concentration and the ability to learn quickly. In order to create a
business, this initial insight has to be honed and adapted quickly to meet
the actual needs of the customers. What started as a good idea has to be
developed in accordance to how and when people buy. What begins as an idea
to sell chocolates becomes the business of selling gift packages.
The demands of developing a new
idea, refining that idea into a product, discovering a market for the
product and communicating to that market are easier if the entrepreneur is
a devoted fan of the product. You can't easily switch from selling auto
parts to selling fishing gear simply because you perceived a need in the
market. You switch from selling parts to selling fishing gear because you
love fishing, you know a great deal about fishing, and you love to be
around people who fish.
George Bernard Shaw said that
life was "Just one damned thing after another." That's the life
of an entrepreneur. If you love your niche and love interacting with
vendors and customers, coping with one damned-thing-after-another is
exhilarating, not exhausting. If you love with you business, the effort to
learn and grow will be pleasure, not pain.
Rob Spiegel is the author of Net
Strategy (Dearborn) and The Shoestring Entrepreneur's Guide to the Best
Home-Based Businesses (St. Martin's Press). You can reach Rob at spiegelrob@aol.com.
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