2 months by cncdivi
For those of you who desperately want to start your own business, I want to caution you about the worst possible thing you will be tempted to do:
You are going to want to quit your Day Job and go all in. Don’t do it!
Understood. Yes, I comprehend.
The classic image of the entrepreneur includes quitting the Day Job right away. An entrepreneur is someone who risks it all to pursue their passion. We get visions of sleeping on friend’s couches, working out of garages, and eating ramen to save money. Entrepreneurship is all about sacrificing comfort, safety nets, backup plans, and caution to give us that sharp edge and total dedication that’s so important when starting any business.
Right?
Wrong!
First, keep in mind that many successful people prepared for their eventual success part-time, without quitting their Day Jobs. Tom Clancy, for example, wrote his first best-selling novel, The Hunt for Red October, while running an Insurance business as his Day Job. Steve Wozniak carried on his Day Job at Hewlett-Packard for over a year after inventing and delivering the first Apple computer. Sara Blakely, the inventor of Spanx, sold fax machines door to door for seven years before her invention made it big enough for her to quit her Day Job and eventually become the youngest self-made billionaire in America.
In fact, organizational psychologist Adam Grant in his book, Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World, argues that successful entrepreneurs are not the extreme risk-takers of the popular press. There’s even been a recent study that proves the advantages of easing into your new venture. The study, published in the Academy of Management Journal, tracked a group of about 5,000 American entrepreneurs for 14 years. The Researchers found that those who kept their Day Job while starting their new venture were 33% less likely to fail than the ones who went all in.
I don’t know about you, but increasing my chances 33% sounds great to me!
Let me give you a radical thought to chew on before you quit that Day Job:
You don’t know enough about your new business to work at it full-time, and if you try, you’re going to squander the luxury of all that time and wind up with a lower likelihood of success on top of it.
Are you shocked? Do you disagree, perhaps violently? Bear with me a bit.
When I launched CNCCookbook, I did it totally part-time. I knew it was an experiment and not a livelihood at that stage. I had to develop a brand new software product (our G-Wizard Calculator) and I had to figure out how to sell it. Nothing about that was a sure thing, and I had been around the entrepreneurial block often enough to know that. Perhaps I was lucky in that respect, having seen all the many ways business can go wrong when you think you have it all figured out.
This was in stark contrast to my first startup, when I had nothing but confidence. I just knew I could build a better mousetrap, and that if I did, the world would beat a path to my door. I was all of 23 years old, and I had raised Venture Capital, which only served to make me even more foolishly confident in the invincibility of my business plan. That business turned out well, but not without a lot of failure, twists, and turns.
Perhaps most of all, I wasn’t used to the idea that most marketing-related things can be Tragically Knowable at relatively low-cost and low risk if you go about it properly and test them. That was a big part of the story in my last entrepreneurship article, “Brand New Business, No Customers, What to Do?“
When it comes to starting your business, know what you don’t know!
That business of things being Tragically Knowable is a big part of this, “Don’t Quit Your Day Job,” story too. It takes time to find and know your audience well enough to be successful. Unless you are very much the exception, you don’t know your audience as well as you think. In all likelihood you haven’t even found them yet. You may think you know your audience, but you don’t:
- If you think you know them because you’re a consumer of the kind of products you want to sell them, you have a start, but you don’t know your audience. You only know yourself, and therefore you only know about one kind of buyer. You will have no idea if the majority of the audience thinks the same way or whether there are many quite different ways of thinking about it. I will tell you from experience that the way I think about our G-Wizard Calculator, particularly when I first conceived it for my own use, is very much in the minority for my customers. I learned a lot of very important things in the early days.
- If you think you know your audience because you’ve read up and researched extensively what other companies are doing, again, you have a start, but you don’t know the audience. Not really. You’re going to discover, as I have, that you could literally copy a lot of what others are doing only to discover it doesn’t work very well for you. You may never find out why, but in essence, the customers for the other brands see something different there than they see when they look to your offerings, regardless of how slavishly you’ve tried to duplicate the other brands. Do you really think you could just copy the way Apple approaches everything and explode onto the market as the Apple of whatever widgets you want to sell? Sorry, no, it doesn’t work that way.
- If you think you know them because you’re working with a person who claims to know them, again, it’s a start, it might even be true, but in all likelihood it isn’t. If I had a penny for every VP of Sales or Marketing that got hired into some startup because they were coming from a much larger competitor and in theory knew the business, I’d be a very rich man indeed. But guess what? The vast majority of those cases don’t go particularly well. Often, they go very poorly in fact. Those big companies have gone through a journey that even they may not really understand. It’s one thing to carry on a brand without screwing it up at a big company, a brand someone else built from scratch. But it’s another thing entirely to build your own brand from zero.
I could go on like this, but you’re probably starting to get the picture. My goal here is not to depress you about your prospects; it is simply to tell you that the first part of your journey will be about learning. Embrace that. Prepare for it. Accept it, and you will be much more likely to succeed.
Having a Day Job will give you the time to iterate and perfect your idea. It will give you time to build a large enough mailing list so that when you’re ready to sell them something, there are enough of them to make it interesting. Just having the capital from your Day Job can make all the difference. Plus, if you discover that your original idea won’t work, having a Day Job gives you the luxury to pivot and save as much of the momentum you’ve created as possible.
Given that you’re prepared to iterate and keep your Day Job, means you’ll be able to test a lot of things. You’ll be checking into the Tragic Knowability of various ideas. You should try to do all those things I mentioned–be a consumer of the products you want to sell, research the heck out of the market, and meet and talk to people who should know and understand the market. All of that will be grist for your mill of understanding. But, you must put those learnings to the test before you accept them as Gospel and start to believe you know your market.
There are lots of levels of testing. Building and selling a product to the audience is the very last stage, because it is the most expensive and time-consuming. Put it off while you conduct cheaper and more nimble tests. Can you make posts in the online communities of your audience that are popular? Can you write articles that your audience is drawn to on a consistent basis? These are tests that are lightweight and easy to perform.
You will find that not having a gun to your head to produce concrete sales too soon is a very good thing. Removing that pressure will let you keep a clear head and focus on these critical learnings so you start your business off on the right foot.
If you’ve ever known really world-class sales people, one thing you will have observed is that they are good listeners. They let the customer do the talking. They speak just enough to get the customer started talking and to keep them talking about the subject so they can learn what they need to know to close the sale. That’s what you’re going to be doing with your audience.
Are you wondering how to go about all this?
Teaching how it works is exactly what I’ll be doing in my upcoming Customer Critical Mass online course. There is a systematic process you can follow that can be done in your spare time to get there.
Be sure to get signed up on the list so you are kept informed and you get the information bulletins that come while the course is in development. The other reason to be on the list, is the course will be limited enrollment. I am planning to provide considerable hands on personal help to the participants, and that will take time. I have to make sure I don’t sign up too many students so I can provide enough of that coaching to make the difference for you.
Click here to get signed up for the waiting list and to receive the informational bulletins:
One more thing I want to address here, just a bit, before closing. Many of you will be thinking,
It’s all fine and well to talk about not quitting my Day Job, but it keeps me busy–how in the heck will I find enough time to start a business while still working?
I get it, this is a very real concern. It’s very easy to feel overwhelmed and unable to add anything else to your plate while working hard at your Day Job. But, there are ways to get it done. There are tools you can use to free up the time and make sure you’re using it effectively. Towards that end, I am putting together a free mini-course on just exactly that–how entrepreneurs get things done.
We’ll help you find the time…
Because the reality is that when starting a business, there’s never enough time, even after you do quit your Day Job. You need these tools to be effective.
As I said, this will be a free mini-course called Work Smart and Get Things Done. All you have to do to be eligible for it, is to get on the email signup for the big course. So click the button above and get on there now. When the mini-course is available, I will let you know.
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Bob is responsible for the development and implementation of the popular G-Wizard CNC Software. Bob is also the founder of CNCCookbook, the largest CNC-related blog on the Internet.
I have to agree with you 100%. I have started machining monolithic bullets for myself and a few friends. Just a hobby. That turned into having paying customers that brings with it deadlines. At the moment I have my lathe run 70 hours a week. Add to that 40 hours at my day job, then time is becoming a concern. My “hobby” has almost doubled in production every year and I have ironed out a lot of small problems, developed new bullets, sorted out proper tooling and cutting conditions. I have spares for a breakdown and am putting steps in place for another lathe. Material suppliers are sorted and I have more customers than I can keep happy at the moment.
But!!!
If I have a breakdown, I am sitting without production for a while, thus no income.
Hunting bullets are very seasonal. Hunting bullets make up the bulk of my production. It can change from receiving 10 orders a day to one order in 10 days.
Days like today want me to leave my day job and go full in on the bullet making, but our hunting season is drawing closer. In a few months orders will be dribbling in again and the excessive income will become crumbs again.
Get to know your market, product impact and obstacles before you just leave your comfy job for bloodsweat and tears. Because working for yourself is bloodsweat and tears. And also very rewarding.
Thanks for the informative articles that you always post.
Starting any business part or full-time is sometimes difficult ???
Some businesses start by accident ?
Meaning people are do something they love and others want them to provide them with this service or make this product for them also.
These are great businesses to start because you enjoy what you do so the transition to a full time business is much easier ??
One of the biggest problems of starting a business is Not the customers is Not the product is Not the service (But Yourself)
People start businesses in a lot of cases for the wrong reasons they want more Freedom ?
they want to earn lots of Money ??
they want to work for themselves ???
Good reasons YES??????
The reality is these are all the the wrong reasons for starting a business.
These three reasons are why most people want to start a business.
As the saying goes if it was easy everyone would be doing it.
Some businesses are are just shear lucky they start a business and it grows at an alarming rate but this is only in a small number of cases.
Most important when starting any business.
Be Debt Free this is a big one???????????????????????????????
Be passionate about what you want to do and believe in yourself and be realistic.
“Let your gut be your guide” – sounds like another way of saying something you already thought you knew, but the harder part is in just being honest with yourself. No amount of BS will pay the bills for long and if/when you listen to those “internal voices” that are telling you that being considered as an innovative entrepreneur might sound exciting, it won’t pay the bills either. You are the one who has to understand where the money comes from and how quickly it goes out! Your task is to learn how to replace it again and again, so plan on a lifetime of homework – you cannot do too much in this regard, and then “become the customer” to see if what you’re selling has any chance of a market to begin with. Realize that when you’re starting out, you actually might know more about your product than others, but you still don’t know everything yet, so be prepared and plan for some painful learning experiences…learn from them quickly and try again with a new plan. Plan on doing this again tomorrow as well, because it’s very likely you will need to. And don’t give up if you believe in your product or plan – Eventually the facts will come to the surface – you will either have a business or you were just hoping you would. Either way, you learn the most from your own experiences so plan on being the “student” more than the “teacher!”
Great job covering information about starting and growing a small business from a dream. I have seen steady growth of my sales through the years and I adjust the way I produce products to be more efficient so I probably spend no more time in the shop as I did when I did 1/4 the sales. Work smart they say. I want the income from my small business to exceed my current employment before I decide to switch to full time.