Behind the Scenes: How to Move From Corporate Exec to Entrepreneur
I
get it. You want to be an entrepreneur. Enough of the drab cubicle or
undersized office. Enough of the super-long meetings with the formal
agenda. Enough of the – ugh – corporate cafeteria. On to the
exposed brick walls, casual wear and foosball tables. Oh, and
eventually becoming a zillionaire.
I’ve
made the switch from corporate executive to entrepreneur. Before you
do it, it’s worth recognizing that it can be a very tough move, and
being an entrepreneur can be a very tough undertaking. In fact, I
tell anyone who asks that being an entrepreneur is tougher than
running Merrill Lynch. That’s not to say it’s not an unbelievable
experience... but it’s not for everyone. Here’s how to make the
switch.
First,
the practical. Do you have enough money to support yourself? As the
founder of a start-up, it’s not about how much cash
you can make, but how little you
can make and for how long. Firstly, that cash can help the business
to be successful; and, secondly, if you are going to be successful,
the value of that dollar working in the start-up is worth massively
more than in your bank account. So before you make the switch, do the
math and shore up the bank account.
Then
there’s the soul searching you need to do. Are you after the
idealized portrait of a start-up? Or do you really want to build
something and create something from nothing? Are you so passionate
about the idea that you’re ready to go all-in? This takes being
deeply honest with yourself about what motivates you and how you best
operate. Do you live for the feedback in the formal year-end review?
Forget it; the market is your review. Boss choosing work and setting
deadlines for you? Nope. Procrastinator? Not good. Like to spend half
the day at the water cooler complaining about your colleagues or
comparing notes on last night’s game? You’re doomed.
That’s
because you can make a number of wrong decisions or have a batch of
“I’m in a coasting mood” days at large companies. If you’re
not pulling as hard that day, someone else likely is. And if they’re
not, that 15% profit margin on those billions of dollars of revenues
absorbs some good number of mistakes. A cash burn-rate counted in
months means you can’t make many mistakes that take months to
correct.
And,
at smaller, hyper-growth companies, everything matters. Again, at a
large company, you never want Joe-the-talented-up-and-comer to quit.
Ever. But if he does, it’s going to be some time for the loss of
that one guy (out of 1,000 or 10,000 or more) to hurt the p&l. At
a smaller, growth company, everything matters... and everything
matters pretty quickly. I remember when I ran Bernstein: of our 18
research analysts, if one left, there was an immediate, direct and
negative impact on the p&l.
Thus,
it takes a certain mindset to be an entrepreneur. Someone who is a
self-starter, passionate about a business, optimistic (some even to
the point of marginal delusion), who can handle the heat and the
stress. Someone who can let go of corporate trappings and pageantry.
And,
to be successful, it helps to be someone who is ready to go “all
in.” That can mean drawing on what you’ve built, such as your
network. I’ve met any number of people who’ve told me that they
view calling on their networks for funding and introductions to
potential customers as “cheating.” (Yes, I’ve really heard
this... quite a bit, actually.) Well, strong networks have been shown
to be one of the key differentiators of success for entrepreneurs.
And getting to success can mean going all in emotionally and risking
failure and rejection. Because you will fail; it’s just a matter of
what you fail at and how quickly you recover. And you will be
rejected; it’s just a matter of getting past the rejections.
Not
quite there? Then, if possible, put a toe in the water before taking
the plunge. I spent time with entrepreneurs, advising them both
formally (as part of their advisory boards) and informally. They got
access to the expertise I had built and I got to “test drive” the
idea of working outside of corporate America.
Sallie
Krawcheck is the Chair of Ellevate
Network (formerly
85 Broads), the global professional women’s network.
No comments:
Post a Comment