BOOK SPECIAL 10% Entrepreneur
— Author Interview with Patrick J. McGinnis
1. First
off, thank you for writing this book. It’s very timely for me and so much more
practical than many of the other entrepreneurial books out there. I enjoyed
reading about your transition to a 10% Entrepreneur, but what made you decide to
finally write this book? And why now?
Thanks!
I wrote
this book as a direct result of living through the 2008 financial crisis at a
private equity firm within a division of AIG. When AIG blew up, it was chaos.
That’s when I decided that I would never put all my hopes in one company again.
That’s also when I realized that pursuing entrepreneurship while holding down a
day job could serve as an insurance policy for people like myself. Thanks to
the falling cost of entrepreneurship, I spotted the beginning of trend that
will allow anyone to start something—the barriers to entry to entrepreneurship
have declined substantially. This is only going to continue, so I see the book
as putting a name to a movement that will continue to reshape how people build
their careers going forward.
Once I
started telling people about my 10%, lots of friends asked me how they could do
the same for themselves. This made me wonder if I should just write everything
down and share my experiences that way. Once I did, I wondered if perhaps this
could be the basis for a book. I found an agent through a friend and
then we shopped the book to publishers. Luckily, around that time, I was
credited by Boston Magazine with creating the term FOMO and that helped
separate me from the pack and get me noticed by Penguin Portfolio.
2. Of
the five 10% Entrepreneur types (angel, advisor, co-founder, aficionado, and
110%), which is the one you are most drawn to and why? Have you been all five?
If not, which one have you not been and why?
I’ve
been four of the five in the twenty plus projects I’ve done to date. I’ve been
most active as an angel and advisor, but I’ve also been a founder, and more
recently an aficionado (as an investor in the upcoming London stage production
of the Last King of Scotland). I started as an angel because I felt most
comfortable supporting entrepreneurs and I didn’t have an idea quite yet of
anything I’d want to start. Plus, I was seeing such great deal flow around me
that I felt conviction. That also opened the door to me becoming an advisor. I
gained experience working closely with entrepreneurs and they introduced me to
their friends, some of whom asked me to serve as an advisor. I have also
experimented as a founder on a venture that didn’t take off. The great thing is
that I lost almost nothing, but I learned a tremendous amount in the process. I
haven’t yet been a 110% Entrepreneur because I’m not yet a 100% Entrepreneur.
But someday I might just get there.
3. You
mention self-education towards the end of the book. What is your opinion on
formal education in general and in MBAs in particular? Do you believe they
could help one become a better 10% Entrepreneur?
Any
tangible skill or degree, whether it’s an MBA, a law degree, or a computer
science background, makes it easy to identify things that you can directly
bring to 10% Entrepreneur. So in that case, it can be very helpful. I also
think that that general management skills and the network that come with an MBA
can be helpful as you get started in any new venture, part-time or full-time.
That said, most of the people I profile in the book do not have MBAs, so it’s
certainly not a pre-requisite.
4. You
mention LinkedIn as a great way to grow your network. Are there any other sites
that you’ve used and/or would recommend? For example, sites like FounderDating
and CoFounders Lab.
Absolutely.
Although I haven’t used them, any tool that gives you increased insight, new
connections, and access to likeminded people is your friend. You can use them
on a schedule that works for you – the key is to then find ways to take these
connections and relationships back into the real world and make them work for
you.
5. You
provide tips on making the most of your time and mention how the side projects
should be complementary and not feel like work, but how do you maintain that
fine line and not do too much? How do you ensure you keep time for family,
friends, exercise, recharging, etc?
This is
a very personal calculation, but what I’ve seen is that 10% Entrepreneurs find
ways to integrate everything together—the places they go, their friends and
families, their passions, etc. The key is to make it sustainable, so you’ve got
to make sure that you check in with yourself and those around you and see how
it is affecting—both positively, but potentially negatively—the people around
you. With any new venture there will be challenges and difficult days, but if
you find your 10% causing stress rather than excitement and joy on a consistent
basis, it’s time to re-evaluate the situation. You might need to shake things
up or ask for help in order to regain balance.
6. What
is the one thing we should all do first to become 10% Entrepreneurs? And is
there one thing—whether action, skill, mindset, etc.—that is critical and the
difference between our success and failure in this transition?
Today,
the new barrier to entrepreneurship is mindset. The cost of starting new
ventures and the barriers to entry have fallen so much that you don’t need
millions in the bank and you don’t need to go full-time. So it’s mindset that
can hold you back. That’s what makes 10% Entrepreneurship so great. If things
don’t work out, you don’t have to feel bad or feel like a failure. In fact, you
learned something in the process. So you can consider it an experiment and not
a failure—and you can count your blessings that you didn’t go all in on this
one.
Posted
by: Karina Mikhli
http://www.actionablebooks.com/en-ca/blog/10-entrepreneur-author-interview-with-patrick-j-mcginnis/?utm_source=Actionable+Books+Weekly+Digest&utm_campaign=abf965577f-10-18-2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_3b05f78143-abf965577f-405621049
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