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Go It Alone!
The Secret to Building a Successful Business on Your Own
By Bruce Judson HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.
Copyright © 2005 Bruce Judson
All right reserved. ISBN: 0060731141
Chapter One
Overview: The New Go-It-Alone Business
The Emergence of the Go-It-Alone Entrepreneur
A fundamentally new class of entrepreneur is emerging: the go-it-alone entrepreneur. Businesses run by these entrepreneurs are characterized by three defining criteria:
- The business is started with a minimal investment, and the founder or founders retain full ownership and control of the enterprise.
- The business is run entirely by a small number of people, generally from one to six.
- The founder does not set out to create a small business. He or she is working from the premise that the business has unlimited revenue potential.
To the founder or founders, a go-it-alone enterprise is small only in the numbers of workers it employs. It's designed to generate substantial financial returns and to play a sizable role in the business world.
The implications of these defining criteria are significant. When a business starts with a minimal investment, the enterprise must focus on generating cash from the outset. This, in turn, suggests that the business is able to swiftly develop a paying customer base. Unlike many start-ups, go-it-alone businesses don't have a gestation period where dedicated, full-time employees spend months developing plans and products.
Additionally, go-it-alone business is not simply a fancy term for a free agent or a freelancer. These businesses provide their founders with far more stability than freelance work and more personal rewards than franchising. These entrepreneurs are building a substantial asset. They have control of their own destiny. In difficult economic times, free agents and freelancers are typically in the extraordinarily frustrating position of waiting for the phone to ring. In contrast, go-it-alone entrepreneurs always a have focus for their energies and an asset that will provide them with an income stream.
Moreover, freelancers, free agents, and many small-business owners typically work on an hourly or daily rate, or they charge by the job. In all of these cases, they depend entirely on what they can produce as individuals, and their earnings are tied to the clock. They have not established a business system that allows them to magnify or leverage their skills. As a consequence, their earnings are inherently limited. Go-it-alone businesses don't suffer from this income constraint.
It's equally important to recognize that go-it-alone businesses can be started by almost anyone working in almost any sector of the economy:
- Go-it-alone businesses are created by all types of people. They are not limited to young people with nothing to lose, masters of the Internet, or sophisticated former corporate executives. They include women, former corporate employees of all kinds, seniors starting newly independent careers, people of all nationalities, stay-at-home parents who are rejoining the workforce, and individuals of all types and all ages who are pursuing their passion, realizing greater financial rewards, and achieving far greater control of their lives.
- Go-it-alone enterprises create a wide range of products and services for businesses and consumers, as demonstrated by the examples and case studies in this book.
Successful go-it-alone businesses are not haphazard undertakings. If a go-it-alone business were a house, we would say that it was built on a well-constructed foundation, using a blueprint that involves several core engineering ideas. The ideas that form this foundation are discussed next.
The Idea of Personal Leverage
Give me a lever and a place to stand and I will move the world.
-- Archimedes
Achieving leverage and the amplification of your skills is the keystone to becoming a successful go-it-alone entrepreneur. A Roman arch cannot exist without its keystone. Similarly, an entrepreneur can turn his or her unique skills into a keystone that holds together a variety of outsourced services. Thus, a substantial go-it-alone business depends on the effective application of leverage and extreme outsourcing. The impact of one or a few people's talents can now be magnified through the combination of these two factors to an extent that was inconceivable even a few short years ago.
One simple example of the kind of leverage that exists today is generally evident in any Internet-based retailing effort:
- In the past, some of the functions required of any potential store proprietor included renting physical space, designing and furnishing the store, staffing the store during all hours of operations, and attracting walk-in traffic to the store through local advertising and other means. All of these activities took time, a substantial upfront cash investment, and multiple employees--leading to a substantial start-up cost and substantial operating expenses.
- In contrast, powerful, easy-to-use tools now make it possible for anyone with an idea for a store in the online world to get up and going at almost no cost -- in a matter of hours. The Yahoo! Store, for example, typically charges under $100 per month and provides a full e-commerce suite. In the virtual world, unlike the physical world, stores are generally leased on a month-to-month basis: No large financial commitment to a multiyear lease is required.
That is not to suggest that Internet retailing is always a good business or even that it is an easy business. In fact, it can be an intensely competitive and often difficult business. The point is that in the past, it was not possible for a single person without access to capital to even consider participating in the business arena. Until recently, you either had to risk a great deal of money and time -- if you could afford both -- to start your own retail business or had to remain an employee somewhere. Today, the cost and time involved in becoming your own boss has decreased dramatically ...
Continues...
Excerpted from Go It Alone! by Bruce Judson Copyright © 2005 by Bruce Judson.
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