My first online business failed - here are my reflections as to why - Printable Version +- Sup Startup (https://supstartup.com) +-- Forum: Startup Forum (https://supstartup.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Entrepreneur (https://supstartup.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=13) +--- Thread: My first online business failed - here are my reflections as to why (/showthread.php?tid=3172) |
My first online business failed - here are my reflections as to why - AmandaRob - 12-02-2020 My first online business failed - here are my reflections as to why My first online business failed - here are my reflections as to why, and how those failures helped me build a multi-six figure profit business now This year, my business will probably end up at $400,000 net profit. It's a far cry from my first online business 5 years ago, where I went through a year of grinding without ever achieving product-market fit. I quit before even generating $1,000 in revenue. Yikes. In this post, I wanted to share the major things which I now know led to that failure. But on the flipside, I also want to share what changes I’ve made in my approach (both mental AND tactical) which has helped me scale to $50k profit months in my current business. So, thinking back to the first 6 months of my old business, here's what I did. I built a website. I built a ton of spreadsheets and documents on what I thought my offering would look like, my audience, my "business plan"... I went to networking events to share my "vision" I researched how to do SEO and all these other growth hacks. You know the one thing I didn't do? I didn't talk to clients or get sales. Total bummer. Ultimately, I ended up being on this crazy hamster wheel, wasting time, and not actually moving the needle. I avoided doing the hard, scary work that actually mattered - getting sales calls booked and closing clients. You know what I learned? In the beginning, all those tasks are pointless. There's only TWO things that matter. It should take precedence over everything. Number #1: Problem & Product ValidationI wasn't sure who my audience was. I wasn't sure if my audience actually had the problem I wanted to solve, or if they would want to pay to solve it. And I didn't know if the solution I built would actually solve that problem effectively. If you don't know the answers to these things, you have no business. Number #2: Customer AcquisitionThe things that I did never lead to actual prospects evaluating my services. I was pretty much hoping and praying people would find me. Thinking back, it's pretty stupid. How are they supposed to find me? I had no actual marketing or sales strategy pushing my message. Of course, noone knew I existed. To think people would just come to me just because my solution was good was a stupid thing to assume. Cool thing is, solving BOTH these obstacles requires simply ONE task. Booking customer calls. Booking customer calls allows you to actually have conversations with your future clients. These conversations enable you to validate your audience, ensure the problems you want to solve are legit and have market value, and enable you to show your solution to users for feedback. But if the feedback is bad, then perfect, and can make changes before spending too much time or money in product development. But if the feedback is GOOD, then perfect. Those are your first customers. You know they have the problems you can solve for. You know they are desperate to fix it. They are the easiest people to sell to. So with that out of the way, how do we book calls then? If I was to give advice to give my younger self, it would say these things to him:
Those lessons have served me well in my newest venture, and is definitely a big part of why I've been able to scale so quickly this time around. So this was my rant. Hopefully you found this helpful. If anyone has any thoughts please comment, or even just wants to stay connected on Reddit, send me a message. Cheers! [link] [comments] |