Do One Thing and Do It Better Than Anyone Else
Become the best darn
whatever-you-are that you can be.
Set aside your other good ideas. The rest will follow.
The other day, I received a business plan from a pair of entrepreneurs who are smart, talented, and passionate--exactly the formula you want to see. I reviewed the plan they sent me (well, OK, just the PowerPoint). And they had a great idea. Interesting enough to keep reading.
Set aside your other good ideas. The rest will follow.
The other day, I received a business plan from a pair of entrepreneurs who are smart, talented, and passionate--exactly the formula you want to see. I reviewed the plan they sent me (well, OK, just the PowerPoint). And they had a great idea. Interesting enough to keep reading.
But when I got to the fifth slide,
they had another idea. And then later, another idea. Three good ideas in one
plan. Sounds like a bargain, right? Wrong! Only a fraction of ideas actually
get pulled off.
What do you think happens when you
try to launch three ideas at once? Nothing. To implement even one good idea
takes a mountain of work--strategic planning, product development, marketing
pushes, financing, administration, human resources, and so much more. Taking
one idea to profits is hard. To be successful as an
entrepreneur, you have to realize the devil is in the details. Don't fall into
the trap of trying--like so many entrepreneurs--to do too much.
Instead, you want to be the
best at one thing your customers want or need. Focus on how that one
thing you do best can deliver value to your customers. Become
irreplaceable to your customers.
But that's not all. When you launch
a business, you want to make a case to yourself for what makes you the best at
what you plan to do. Each time I launched a new business, I took out a pencil
and sheet of paper and wrote down a list of the key strengths and advantages
that made me uniquely qualified to win in that particular space. Did I have
special skills? Deep experience? Industry relationships? Patentable technology?
If there's no set of assets that you possess that puts you ahead of everyone
else in the given marketplace, then maybe you should move on and find a
different idea that you are uniquely qualified to win at.
At ColorJar, my innovation
consultancy, I call this finding your "golden purpose." The reason
you and your company exist. The one thing you do so well that people recognize
you for it. Focus only on being the leader in that product and service, and all
else will follow.
Then, once people have trust and
confidence in you and your abilities, they will come to you for more. Amazon
sold only books when it started, but it was the best darn bookseller on the
planet. Once customers became comfortable with Amazon and loved buying books on
the site, they started asking Amazon for more. Today Amazon sells thousands of
products. But the company started by becoming the best at one thing.
Entrepreneurs today see successful
companies that sell many products or offer many services and forget that they
didn't start that way. These companies gained credibility by being the best at
one thing they were uniquely qualified to do. Google started out as a simple
search engine. Zappos was just an online shoe seller. Richard Branson launched
Virgin Records; only later did it become an airline, resort, mobile service,
and even a commercial space program. These companies proved themselves in the
minds of customers by winning their categories. They raised their hands high in
one specific area of expertise and owned it before they launched another idea
or two. That's what opened the door to the future.
So find a problem to solve, grab
your pencil, and list your assets. Discover your golden purpose. Set aside all
your other good ideas. And become the best darn whatever-you-are that you can
be. The rest will follow.
JEFF HOFFMAN http://www.inc.com/jeff-hoffman/do-one-thing-better-than-anyone-else.html
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