Critical mistakes that can sink your entrepreneurship efforts

A closer look at some of the more common pitfalls of entrepreneurship, and how you can overcome them.

You’ll see many successful entrepreneurs and business owners talk about their road to success in interviews, on their professional profiles, and in the media in general. Rarely will you find a business owner talking that openly about their previous failures, of which there might as well be several, not just one. They’ll talk about what helped them reach their heights and share their finest tips on how you can do the same. However, sometimes it’s wiser to learn from the mistakes of others than to only focus on their greatest triumphs. After all, most of these victories were built on their previous failures.

So, let’s take a closer look at some of the more common pitfalls of entrepreneurship, and how you can overcome them, or preferably, prevent them while you’re building your own entrepreneurial empire. Of course, they are certainly not the only ones you’ll encounter, so make sure you learn as much as you can about the risks your specific niche comes with, so as to brace yourself properly for its challenges.

Not securing your cash flow

Unlike the entire budget for funding your marketing campaigns, brand development, and overall business strategizing, cash flow is the “live” money you need to have for everyday operations. It’s the money you pay your suppliers and your manufacturers, the money your customers pay for your products or services, that allows your company to stay liquid. In your rush to impress your customers or build relationships with suppliers, you might fail to negotiate a deal that enables you a steady flow of cash for your daily operations.

Now, in addition to traditional ways to secure cash flow, you can also look into other options such as invoice factoring that enable you to receive a regular influx of cash, and give your customers a more flexible timeframe for their payments. This prevents disruptions in running your business and allows you to invest the money in the most relevant sectors of business development.

Failing to understand your business model

Much like with everything else in life, there is no such thing as a one-size-fits-all for your business endeavours. If you’ve spoken to another entrepreneur and discovered that their specific model works wonders for them, don’t be too quick to assume that the same one will be optimal for your professional goals. Understanding, for example, what a franchise business definition entails can mean the difference between choosing a profitable franchise with a strong support system or investing in a less optimal opportunity. In the same manner, knowing what it takes to become a startup owner can help you establish if this is a good match for your business idea.

The former model allows you to work under an established brand and use the help and support from the management every step of the way. The latter, on the other hand, comes with that innovative excitement of delivering a unique solution to your customers’ issues. A partnership, on the other hand, could be the best way forward for you, especially if you cannot finance a solo endeavour at this point in time. Do your homework before you settle for a model, and talk to entrepreneurs with similar experiences to get a first-hand glimpse of each one.

Not creating a market-specific product

Some entrepreneurs simply want to please everyone. The truth is, you cannot possibly do that and be able to make your brand stand out in this beehive of a business crowd. Differentiating your brand by settling on a specific set of services or products you can offer is still a pivotal step in making sure you aren’t a jack of all trades in your industry. This also raises doubts when it comes to your expertise and experience, and reduces the credibility of your brand for the long haul. If your goal is to solve a particular problem, make sure you declare your goals in every aspect of your business.

Too wide of a target audience is as harmful as sticking to a very small pool of interested people. You can always expand your services or products once you earn your market’s trust for your initial offers. Until that day comes, make sure that you know precisely who your target customers are, what they want, and how you can deliver an exceptional product or service to help them enjoy their lives more.

Not ensuring proper funding

Unlike cash flow, funding problems are ones that can prevent you from either starting your business altogether, or they can cut your entrepreneurial journey short once you run out of funds to finance your strategy and service. Do you need engineers and developers as members of your staff? Can you pay for your office space? What about marketing? Before you even start talking to your potential crew, you need to make sure that there’s enough financial backing to your idea.

Go to investors, banks, and friends and family if need be, but talk to them with a strategic approach, a forecast for your profit, and plenty of ideas and plans as to how to execute your strategies to succeed. Every solid innovation and even powerful franchises require that initial capital that will help you launch your business. Do your research to see what sort of investments will be necessary to fund your idea, and of course, remember to build a contingency funding plan just in case the first one falls through.

You are bound to make mistakes on your way to building a successful business. However, make sure to prevent some of these most common and most harmful errors of judgement that might drive the entire project to the ground.

Keith Coppersmith is a business and marketing expert who has experienced both the rise and fall of many businesses. As a regular contributor at BizzmarkBlog, he enjoys writing and providing insight of the marketing industry based on both practice and theory.

The 7 real reasons why startups fail

The market research firm CB Insights recently did a post-mortem on 135 failed startups. The reasons cited, however, fall into seven categories, each consisting of a specific emotional or intellectual limitation.

The market research firm CB Insights recently did a post-mortem on 135 failed startups. As part of that effort, they asked the people involved in each startup why they thought it had failed.

The study surfaced twenty reasons, with most startups citing multiple reasons. The reasons cited, however, fall into seven categories, each consisting of a specific emotional or intellectual limitation:

1. Arrogance (85%)

Successful entrepreneurs are always overconfident and that’s a good thing. Without overconfidence, nobody would ever buck the odds to start their own business.

Overconfidence turns into arrogance, though, when you’re so sure of the wonderfulness of your ideas that you don’t bother to take the pulse of the market. Arrogance causes startups to fail through:

  • No Market Need: 47%
  • Product Mis-Timed: 13%
  • Need or Lack of Business Model: 17%
  • Not Using Network/Advisors: 8%

Fix: Temper your overconfidence with the humility to accept criticism without becoming defensive.

Related Post: The new startup mantra: “learn, try, fail, and repeat”

2. Shortsightedness (55%)

Startups can’t afford “paralysis by analysis” and it’s simple good sense to realize that can’t anticipate everything in an undertaking that inherently involves the unknown.

That being said, there’s truth in the corny old quote “failing to plan is planning to fail.” Shortsightedness causes startups to fail through:

  • Running Out of Cash: 29%
  • Pricing/Cost Issues: 18%
  • No Financing/Investor Interest: 8%

Fix: Maintain some reserves so that you don’t crash and burn the first time you hit a speed bump.

3. Hubris (47%)

All too many entrepreneurs believe that “if you build a better mousetrap the world will beat a path to your door.” That’s classic engineering hubris that results in treating sales and marketing as if they were of secondary importance.

Sadly, though, the history of business is full of excellent products have failed due to weak marketing or poorly-planned sales efforts. Hubris causes startups to fail through:

  • Getting Outcompeted: 19%
  • Poor Marketing: 14%
  • Ignoring Customers: 14%

Fix: Pay as much attention to hiring marketers and salespeople as you do to hiring your engineers.

Related Post: 6 ways to bounce back after experiencing a failure



4. Egotism (36%)

Startups require talented, experienced and energized employees who have specialized knowledge.

However, building a business is always a team effort and all it takes is one prima-donna for a team to fall flat on its collective face. Egotism causes startups to fail through:

  • Not the Right Team: 23%
  • Disharmony on Team/Investors: 13%

Fix: Read the newly-published book Team Genius, which contains team-building rules based upon actual scientific research.

5. Sloppiness (34%)

When big companies do a slipshod job, they can float on their brand reputation or throw money at the problem.

Entrepreneurs must be meticulous and make certain that nothing falls through the cracks. Remember: “genius is an infinite capacity for taking pains.” Sloppiness causes startups to fail through:

  • Poor Product: 17%
  • Bad Location: 9%
  • Legal Challenges: 8%

Fix: If you tend to be a “big picture” person, partner with somebody who’s detail-oriented.

Related Post: Failure – an inevitable part of success

6. Imbalance (30%)

Thousands of articles and books have been published about the lack of work/life balance creates stress and leads to bad decisions. And yet many startups try to operate in round-the-clock crunch mode. Imbalance causes startups to fail through:

  • Loss of Focus: 13%
  • Lack of Passion: 9%
  • Burning Out: 8%

Fix: Exercise or meditate every day, turn your phone off when you go to bed, eat right, etc. You know the drill; now just go ahead and do it.

7. Inflexibility (17%)

The most important advantage that a startup has over an established firm is freedom to be nimble.

However, there’s a natural human tendency to continue to pursue a course of action after it’s been proven unworkable. Inflexibility causes startups to fail through:

  • Pivot gone bad: 10%
  • Failure to Pivot: 7%

Fix: Plan from the start that you’ll need, at some point, to radically change direction. Welcome rather than resist the inevitable change when it comes.

Related Post: 7 Things I learned from my first startup failure

Image credit: Emptyengine