by Dr. Renae Sanders
Research has highlighted numerous reasons small businesses fail. Organizations like SCORE and CreditDonkey.com purport ten primary reasons for failure. They are:
- Lack of experience
- Insufficient cash
- Poor Location
- Poor inventory control
- Over-investment in fixed assets
- Poor credit
- Personal use of business funds
- Unexpected growth
- Competition
10.Low sales
Often lists like those above fail to demonstrate what activities lead to these types of lists. When such research is conducted the activities are bundled into categories. This article focuses on the journey for the career corporate turned Entrepreneur.
Corporate culture
The lingering economic downtown of 2008 sent massive numbers of former corporate types to start up new businesses. These new entrepreneurs were responding to the need to make ends meet or pursue latent dreams prioritized by unexpected layoffs. Far from the characterization of much politicized 47% (victimized, lazy, and mindless), these individuals pursued the American dream.
Corporate employees have the skill to deal with issues facing big companies and they have the big corporate funding to support those efforts along with the corporate resources to needed to execute. One of the first lessons of the new entrepreneur is “I’ve got to do it all”. From ordering paper clips, to writing plans, making sales, to shipping goods and marketing; the new entrepreneur is the nerve center of it all.
This awareness can be quite overwhelming, especially for those organizations lacking the financial resources to hire workers. Kicking the habits of the corporate culture to the ever changing world of entrepreneurship is major feat. Most corporations, even the nimble ones are slow, compared to the speed with which an entrepreneur changes direction, business model, product or service offering, or competitive position in an effort to survive those first three years and break the $250,000 barrier.
The mind of an entrepreneur is opportunistic. It takes effort and emotional fortitude to move faster, work longer, and push the envelope of personal inertia and see each person as an connection to be cultivated.
Another challenge many former corporate-raised-entrepreneurs armed with great ideas, retirement funds, and passion face includes under estimating how challenging it is switching from a regular payment schedule to an irregular cycle of some money, lots of money, or no money. The psychological adjustment can be quite debilitating from some. However, the lionhearted this change represents an awareness that you are indeed in control of your future. For the faint of heart, the dread of another 15th or 30th passing with no “hit” is analogous to a junky ‘jonesing’ vacillating between horror, debilitating fear, and sleepless nights. The fear often leads to a low confidence and perspective that leads to a self-fulfilling prophesy.
A good business idea is often spawned by observations made while in a current business or industry. However, many business owners newly released from the norms of corporate culture miss having individuals who handle the administrative activities of the company. Gone are the days when the administrative assistant orders ink, paper, paper clips, shipping supplies based a simple comment. Those orders, invoices, surveys, posts are all handled by a much smaller staff or the owner.
At the end of the day, take heart in knowing all is not lost. The paradigm shift can be liberating and lead to a prosperous life. Of course, there are many elements that lead to a success business, all which are more likely to occur with a positive perspective and internal systems that make managing your business activities turnkey rather than dependent on human hands.
Dr.Renae Sanders is the Managing Director at KRS Consulting, LLC, a management consulting firm specializing in organizational development and relationships. Believing people are the link between strategy and success, Dr. Sanders works with organizations, leaders, and managers to strengthen internal practices and relationships. Email info@krsconsult.com to book an engagement or meeting with Dr. Sanders.
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