Tuesday, May 19, 2020

9 new ideas that may sway on-the-fence entrepreneurs

9 new ideas that may sway on-the-fence entrepreneurs Are you considering entrepreneurship? Its all the rage right now because the bar at the start line has never been lower. Here are nine new ideas about entrepreneurship that will make you feel like you can do it, too. Right now: 1. You dont need a venture capitalist, you are the venture capitalist. Today, you can make something people want without spending money. Technology is simple enough to use that you dont need to pay for high-end software to get a business off the ground. If you can figure out how to pay for food and lodging (hello, mom and dad) then you can fund your own startup. 2. For a killer marketing plan make a list of your friends. Businesses these days are built on word of mouth, says Scott Fox, author of Internet Riches. You know 200 people. Send them an email telling them about your business. If its great, word of mouth will generate a customer base. If your business isnt great, youll know right away. This can be true offline as well. Daniela Corte started with an even smaller base than 200. She gave five friends custom-fitted pants. I wanted this pair of pants to be their favorite pair, she says. And it worked. After interviewing the friends about fit and texture preferences, Corte created pants that were buzz worthy, and she grew a multi-national business from those first five women raving about their pants. 3. Globalization is good for you. As long as your needs are well defined, hiring a programmer in India is a great way to save money. When Katherine Lee wanted to create a database of yarns for her business Sweaterbabe.com, she paid an Indian programmer $250 â€" a significantly lower price than US developers would have charged. But you have to know what youre doing when you outsource to India. If youre looking for someone to hold your hand and teach you about online design, forget it. But you can pay the online design maven her US rates and then send the design plan to the guy in India to execute. 4. You only need to master a small niche. Google makes searching so effective that customers with a very specific interest can find businesses with a very specific interest â€" at such a high rate that niche businesses are more viable than ever before (like mobile game development). This is the premise of Chris Andersons book, The Long Tail, which encourages entrepreneurs to focus on the small areas of the world that are neglected by big retailers because the market is not big enough. And Fox points out that everyone knows a lot about something, so the best place in the long tail to start experimenting is where you have a good deal of specialized knowledge â€" which is likely to be a niche. 5. You dont need a widget, you can sell yourself. The idea of an Internet startup is to grow an audience first, and then figure out how to make money. So a logical place to turn to is yourself, because if you can build an audience, then youre an expert in something. At the sprightly age of 24, Ramit Sethi writes the very popular personal finance blog iwillteachyoutoberich.com. He has parlayed this success into a public speaking career (seriously â€" Fortune 500 companies are paying him to come talk to employees about finance) and a book-writing career (stay tuned for his advice on how to recruit hotshots like him to your company). 6. You dont have to quit your day job. Jessa Crispin did not set out to start a business. She was just writing books reviews and posting them on her web site, Bookslut. The reviews were so popular that eventually she was able to quit her job and make Bookslut her fulltime job. But she built the business while working at another job. Of course, not everyone is a genius on the first try like Crispin. But Fox points out, The feedback loop is short. So you can try several different things to see what works. The trick is to recognize when your idea is going nowhere before youve sunk too much time into it. 7. Entrepreneurship is about choosing a lifestyle. Most entrepreneurs dont start a business to get rich, they start a business so they can live the life they want. Maybe they want to be creative, maybe they want to do what theyre passionate about, increasingly, they want to have flexibility to manage their own workday. When Corte had a baby she realized that her current business model with daily fittings was too time-intensive. So she moved her retail business to online in order to continue to be able to offer her clothes direct to consumers but to regain time for her daughter. 8. You dont need to wait to cash out. The 1980s brought us real estate flipping; the new millennium brings us web site flipping. Not only are people auctioning their companies on eBay for denominations formerly reserved for successful garage sales, but there are more than 70 Internet locations where people are buying and selling web sites 24 hours a day. Tom Kuegler, partner at New Concept Factory, runs an incubator that is starting eight Internet companies each quarter. He estimates that most of these companies hell unload at a low price and two out of twenty-four will grow into super companies. If this sounds pie-in-the-sky to you, consider that Kuegler is no neophyte. Hes been starting and selling Internet companies since 1994. 9. Entrepreneurship is a way of thinking, and you can change the world. This idea comes from eighteen-year-old Ben Casnocha, who founded Comcate, a leading software company for governments, when he was twelve years old. Yep. Thats right. Twelve years old. Casnocha says, Entrepreneurship has a lot to do with business but it is a way of thinking about things that everyone can do: Seeing individuals as empowered as agents of change; Trying to figure out the status quo, the normal thing, and then thinking about what we can do differently. If more people thought like entrepreneurs the world could be a better place.

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