6 Mistakes Often Made By Entrepreneurs Due To Passion - 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: 6 Mistakes Often Made By Entrepreneurs Due To Passion (/showthread.php?tid=8835) |
6 Mistakes Often Made By Entrepreneurs Due To Passion - AnthonyKic - 02-10-2023 6 Mistakes Often Made By Entrepreneurs Due To Passion As an entrepreneur mentor and startup investor, I see with sadness the 50 to 90 percent that fail. If you ask them for a reason, most will insist that they couldn’t get funding, or they ran out of money too early. But I’m not convinced that it’s as simple as that. Many are just not facing the reality that their passion had a critical business flaw. As I was contemplating a classic book “Dead Companies Walking,” by Scott Fearon, who runs a hedge fund that profits from businesses headed toward bankruptcy, I realized that his insights on the common ways that mature companies often doom themselves apply equally well to startups. Every business, young or old, needs to avoid the following six mistakes that he outlines:
Of course, there are many other common reasons for startup failure, including inexperienced teams, inadequate marketing, no intellectual property, business model doesn’t work, or just giving up too early. Every startup is a step into the unknown, making it a higher risk of failure, so there is no room for complacency or assumption. In reality, failure is not a bad thing. In a healthy economy, capital markets and discriminating customers fuel growth and new ventures by handsomely rewarding well-executed ideas, and ruthlessly starving out even long-running ventures that refuse to adapt and innovate. A smart entrepreneur learns to embrace failure as a badge of learning that provides a competitive edge. The lesson here is that even the most promising startups and experienced teams can be misled by sticking with business models that worked in the past, and market opportunities that may no longer exist. While there should be no stigma for failure, there is no joy in being a dead business walking. The quicker you heed these messages, the sooner you will be able to enjoy and celebrate the entrepreneur lifestyle. Marty Zwilling |