15
Traits Of Entrepreneurs Who Fail
No
matter how great your passion and vision, a few bad habits can drive a
promising business into the ground.
Clay
Clark, CEO of small-business resource Thrive15, has consulted with
entrepreneurs for years, and after hundreds of clients and his own experiences,
he's noticed several recurring traits of business owners who fail.
"It's
usually two or three traits that cause us to blow up," Clark tells
Business Insider.
In
his book, "Thrive: How to Take Control of
Your Destiny and Move Beyond Surviving... Now!", he lists 15 of the
most common traits of entrepreneurs who end up failing. We've summarized
them below.
1. They make excuses.
Clark
says the most common excuse he hears from clients who failed to achieve a goal
is that they ran out of time. It makes him furious. As career guru Seth Godin points out, "I didn't have
time" actually means a task "wasn't a high priority, fun,
distracting, profitable, or urgent enough to make it to the top of the
list."
2. They blame others or outside forces.
"Entrepreneurs
who blame the economy, the way they were raised, the weather, the customer,
their employees, the acting president, the opposite political party — anything
other than themselves — for their situation will never be successful,"
Clark says.
3. They are dishonest.
Cheating
employees on their paychecks or lying to customers are obvious examples of
dangerous dishonesty, but Clark also points out that falsely praising employees
instead of giving candid criticism can be just as bad.
4. They are lazy.
"Show
me an entrepreneur who sleeps in, shows up late, doesn't read, and doesn't like
hard work, and I'll show you a failing entrepreneur," Clark writes.
5. They are convinced they know it all.
Self-confidence
is a necessary trait for someone setting out to start a business, but the ego needs
limits. Clark says that failing business owners are often too proud to admit
they don't know something about running their company.
6. They hesitate to make decisions.
It's
necessary to gather as much information as possible before making an important
decision, but spending too much time mulling it over slows everything down and
wastes money. Gen. George S. Patton once said: "A good plan
executed now is better than a perfect plan executed next week."
7. They have not defined a clear direction
for the company.
"No
one in their right mind wants to follow an entrepreneur who can't clearly
articulate where they are going, yet most of the entrepreneurs I meet cannot
clearly tell me their business goals for the current year," Clark says. To
attract the best employees, an entrepreneur needs to have a tangible vision for
the company.
8. They refuse to delegate.
Misguided
or egotistical entrepreneurs feel the need to micromanage every aspect of their
business, but no one is good at everything, and leaders should be focused on
their company's biggest, most important issues, not fine tuning their corporate
website's homepage.
9. They are involved in a niche that is not
scalable.
Clark
once owned and ran an entertainment company that provided service only on
nights and weekends. This meant that most of the time, his employees were not
working and his equipment sat in a warehouse. He says it's necessary to
envision how a company can grow as more resources and talent become available.
10. They are unable to handle confrontation.
"Employees
actually stole from me," Clark says, and though he was aware of their
embezzlement, he was afraid to confront them. When employees sense a weakness
in their leader, they will often exploit it, he says.
11. They are not organized.
Running
a business comes with a never-ending stream of responsibilities, and successful
entrepreneurs are constantly arranging their busy lives with a system that
works for them, be it a to-do list or app
.
12. They serve a niche that cannot possibly
be profitable.
Clark
remembers diving into a client's numbers and determining that she needed to
sell 1,300 of her products each week to be profitable, but her maximum
production capacity was 500 products per week. He says some business owners
fail to do the math and push on despite any chance at making money.
13. They provide a terrible service or
product.
Clark
once helped a client promote his business to the point where its offices began
getting calls constantly. But the business fell through because the
receptionist was not only poorly trained but sometimes missing from her desk,
and he kept his clients waiting for at least one hour for their appointments
even if they were on time.
14. They are bad marketers.
"If
you really do believe that your company offers your customers value by solving
their problems, then you should want to scream your solutions from the
mountaintops," Clark says. Use your company's growing size to establish personal relationships in person and on social
media, and don't ever be afraid of being
"too pushy."
15.
They ignore metrics.
It is necessary to break your
complex business plan into easy-to-follow checklists and management metrics
that can be checked on a daily and weekly business. "Whatever you focus on
expands," Clark says.
By Richard Feloni | Business Insider
1 comment:
Very Very Useful Article
Thank you for sharing it Sir
- Deepak Doddamani
www.deepakdoddamani.com
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