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Alok's Posts / Startup

Are you a Professional turning Entrepreneur? Watch out for these 7 stumbles!

Yeah! Got a nice half page in the Corporate Dossier – Economic Times today!

alokkejriwalchallengesofprofessionalsturningentrepreneurseconomictimescorporatedossier

My office manager recently told me that the tally of my visiting cards collection has touched a count of 9000. That means, in the span of 15 years of being a startup entrepreneur, I have met almost 600 people a year or about 3 new people a day (considering holidays)!

Amongst these 9000 people, many of them are blue-blooded “professionals” who have often tried to “start up” – only to fail and go back to their comfortable Ivory Towers (Large Companies). What are the common mistakes these wannabe entrepreneurs make when they try to startup, especially when they come from formal, established organisations?

These are 7 striking reasons I attempt to explain via popular phrases!

1. Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown

It’s convenient to have a boss. Perfect to hurl abuses, direct the blame, point fingers at and conveniently blame for all your miseries. But have you tried being your own boss?

Many professionals who have worked grumpily for years following instructions of balding men find it very difficult to ‘boss themselves’. A 46 year old silver fox told me, “Since I was 6, I was told what to do – from mother to teacher to boss. As a startup entrepreneur at 46, I cannot instruct myself and am going back to my Nazi boss.”

2. Missing the woods for the trees. Are you sure?

Many entrepreneurs who come from formal backgrounds miss the woods for trees. What do I mean? In startups, it’s the small things that make big things happen (the woods are the trees; not the other way around). For instance, while launching Hotmail, Sabeer Bhatia realised that there was no way the 7th free e-mail site in the world was going to succeed on its own. So he focused on that one innocuous line at the end of every e-mail sent out that said, “Get your own free e-mail at Hotmail”. That message spread like wildfire and made everyone sign up!

I call it a classic case of focusing on the trivia that delivers grandness.

Something big shots don’t get!

3. All that glisters is not gold

We are in the midst of an unprecedented startup boom and I have begun coming across a lot of professionals who want to abandon their top class careers and become ‘startup entrepreneurs’. When I ask them why, they refer to lofty valuations (all on paper) and fancy press stories of Mergers & Acquisitions. None of these guys have seen a downturn and not one will survive the crash of the 2000 dot com bust if it repeats itself. They just don’t have that survival stamina.

A startup business takes 10-20 years to become seriously successful. Angry Birds took 8 years just to get their first hit. Nothing comes easy – least of all, riches!

4. A fool and his money are soon parted

Last week I was speaking to the head of marketing of a well-known MNC, who was about to squander Rs. 75 lacs of his personal money as contribution towards a startup. When I asked him why he was putting his hard earned money at stratospheric premium into an unknown Company, he seemed bewildered to explain the logic to me.

Just because professionals have saved large sums of money doesn’t mean that they invest with the same largesse into small startups. It’s a well-known fact that in 2015, you need the least money and most brains to create a valuable startup and not the other way around.

Professionals don’t seem to get that logic!

5. Birds of a feather flock together

The Art of Starting Up is as much about execution as it is about meeting people, getting connected, and hanging out with as many diverse people as possible with whom you will be doing business. Older professionals from formal backgrounds, sometimes lack the motivation to go down to the fingernail grime of the business and mix with the ordinary.

In a conversation with an entrepreneur who started a grocery business, he revealed how he spent 2 years going to New Mumbai Grocery Mandi every day at 3.30 am to understand how the business of fruits and vegetables operated. When I asked him why the other startups who were bigger and better funded than him had failed, he said, “Sir, the bosses are too big to come to the market and understand why onion prices fluctuate by 2 rupees. Without that knowledge they cannot succeed”.

Professionals must be able to overcome their comfort zone of hanging out with people of their own circuit if they want to become serious entrepreneurs.

6. There is no such thing as a free lunch (oh really?)

Well there is, and that’s the secret of starting up! Most of the recent success stories in the digital startup world have been massive businesses that were set up to be given away for free to consumers before being leveraged to generate revenue.

The art of ‘letting go’ and waiting and waiting till the time is right to make money, is a discipline that very few can inculcate – the least of whom are professionals.

One dude I knew, invented online reputation management tools way before the world knew what ORM meant – except that he insisted on charging for it from day one, despite my passionate pleas to let it float free for a while. He said, “From the Fortune 500 Company I come from, if you don’t charge the consumer the first time, they never pay”. Bad luck. He closed down before he even started and then had to live with the pain of watching small-inexperienced startups eat his lunch up.

7. A penny saved is a penny earned

Nothing better than a Marwari background can teach you that! In each business I started, beginning with contests2win.com way back in 1998, I kept snooping around for that one ‘sugar daddy’ who could help me promote my business for free. For contests2win it was MTV, for Mobile2win it was Sony TV and for Games2win it was Viacom USA!

Most of the professionals I met along they way always thought I was a fool and recommended that I spend on “marketing and promotions” because that was the “only” way to get noticed. They always asked me to “budget” for this and that. When I told them I was too broke to have a budget, they laughed!

Starting up is probably the worst punishment you can inflict on yourself. But no one will tell you that, because that’s not being “professional” ☺

 

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6 Comments

  1. Thanks Alok, it is one of the very nice article. We love it..

  2. Excellent write up Alok !

    I also think following could be added

    1. Wrong motivation to startup : the number of people who want to turn entrepreneur now-a-days with startup boom has risen multi fold. what many miss out on is the real motivation to start . Quite a good number of people seem to be motivated by $$$ or limelight that now is easy to get. a few really have passion for solving a problem.

    This could also include starting up cause i am fed up with my job or boss etc.

    2. Underestimating the hardship of startups : coming out of cozy life of corporate with guaranteed income, weekend parties, having time at hand , guaranteed customers etc to do-it-all yourself with absolutely unpredictable situations can break many.

    3. Making fancy plans in detail with 5 year projections:

    Doing small things right than making big plans with exit sheets etc : I have seen a good number of people coming up with detailed excels on 5 years plan with exits etc , something that may be corporate culture needs. Startups need doing small things right and taking simple steps, learning on the way and improving.

    -Prashant

  3. Great Article Alok Sir!! 

  4. A too good read!! I know many who will be saved because of this one article!! 

  5. I can relate myself to no 4. I spent lot of my money on my startup HackPundit initially. Now i am very cautious in spending my hard earned money. 

    Nice descriptive article.

  6. Alok,

    Spot on as usual 🙂

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