7 Principles For Success As An Owner Or Team Member - Printable Version +- Sup Startup (https://supstartup.com) +-- Forum: Startup Forum (https://supstartup.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Web Talk (https://supstartup.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=8) +--- Thread: 7 Principles For Success As An Owner Or Team Member (/showthread.php?tid=8674) |
7 Principles For Success As An Owner Or Team Member - AnthonyKic - 11-07-2022 7 Principles For Success As An Owner Or Team Member One of the realities of being an entrepreneur is that you have to keep learning and changing to survive. Everyone on the startup team knows there is no buffer, and no personal isolation from impact based on your job description that can save you. Thus everyone has to make sure they are focusing on what is important, and making leadership decisions to save the business. That is what business leadership is all about. Unfortunately, in mature companies, a larger and larger percentage of employees forget company survival and customers as the objectives, and focus only on their own personal gain. Risks to the business drift off their radar screen, resulting in poor business decisions, as well as less job satisfaction and declining professional success. In a classic book exploring these issues, “Lead to Succeed: The Only Leadership Book You Need,” Chris Roebuck, an expert on transformational leadership, highlighted the positive impact of entrepreneurial leadership. I have worked in both large companies as well as startups, and I have observed first-hand the principles that he highlights:
In fact, large organizations need entrepreneurial leadership and thinking just as much as startups. The challenge to build and maintain this perspective is the same everywhere. It has to start with leadership from the top, hiring people with the right skills, giving them the right training and tools, and motivating them with the right leadership objectives, compensation, and growth opportunities. I’m convinced that we are entering a new era of the entrepreneur. The cost of starting your own company is at an all-time low, and all the information and tools you need to lead are readily available on the Internet. More and more people are doing their own thing, freelancing, working from home, and starting their own companies. But this doesn’t mean that everyone should start their own company to be an entrepreneur. Entrepreneurial leadership and thinking like an entrepreneur have just as much value, both to you and to your company, in big organizations as well as small. You can lead to succeed wherever you are. Do it now. Marty Zwilling |