New Ventures: May 2007 Archives

Keith Cunningham This past week I attended a presentation "Beating the Odds: Characteristics of a Successful Business" by business teacher and author Keith Cunningham.

Here are some of the most interesting things I heard Cunningham say about the "6 big mistakes that people make in business."

  1. An obsession with the product -- to the exclusion of good business judgment. Entrepreneurs fall in love with the idea for their product and develop blinders as a result. As Cunningham described it: "Mothers love their babies, and entrepreneurs love their ideas."

    The key point Cunningham made: a great product does not necessarily equal money. It's never what you do, it's how you do it that will determine your success. And how you do it is about management. It's not about the product.

  2. The need for speed. Speed creates short term perspectives. Cunningham described two categories of time: that which relates to a crisis and requires speed; and everything else. People often throw the wrong kind of time at a problem.

    "Most entrepreneurs think that if they try to get 9 women pregnant, they can have a baby in one month," Cunningham said. "It doesn't work that way. It requires time."

    The faster you go, the greater the impact if things go wrong. If you're going fast on a bicycle and you fall, you might skin your knee. If you're going fast in an F16 fighter jet and you crash, people die! Taking the analogy further: two things are needed if you want to go fast, and people don't often think of these: experience; and a lot of dials and instrumentation (like in the cockpit of an F16).

    "All my problems started as a good idea," Cunningham said. "At the core of all my problems lies instant gratifcation, which is about speed."

  3. Technical skills. The people who invent an Indy 500 race car don't drive it. The people who invent the space shuttle don't fly it. Being successful in business isn't dependent on technical competence.

    Cunningham argues that people with great technical skills acquired over 20 years often got one year of experience repeated each year for 20 years - and not 20 years of experience.

  4. Irrational exuberance. Also known as "optimism on steroids."

    Irrational exuberance manifests itself in these forms: an inability to listen ("I'm the guru."); ignoring obvious risks; strengths morphing into weaknesses (for example, self confident morphs into arrogant); and an intense need to be right.

  5. Failure to have a second idea. Because they love their first idea! Entrepreneurs all think they know enough, so they spend all their time defending their idea instead of learning from what they don't know.

  6. Run out of cash. Cunningham remarked: "Running out of cash is a little like saying, 'how did he die? Well he stopped breathing.' But that doesn't tell the whole story."

    Some of the underlying reasons businesses run out of cash: lack of planning, obsession with the product, no niche, no value-add, no business skills, the need for speed, no cushion.

    In Part 3 of this report, I'll cover the most interesting things I heard Cunningham say about the solutions to the 6 big mistakes that people make in business.

Related link: Part 1: "Beating the Odds: Characteristics of a Successful Business". Notes from presentation by Keith Cunningham

(Photo credit: keystothevault.com)

Keith Cunningham This past week I attended a presentation by business teacher and author Keith Cunningham.

In his presentation "Beating the Odds: Characteristics of a Successful Business", Cunningham drew on his over 30 years experience launching numerous ventures and raising hundreds of millions of dollars for his own ventures to offer lots of practical advice on business.

His straight talk about business reminded me of lessons I have learned over my own career, but that all of us seem to forget or not commonly apply.

Here are some of the most interesting things I heard from the first part of his presentation:

  • The mortality rate of new businesses is stunning: 50% of all businesses started today will not last beyond two years; and 80% of all businesses started today will not last beyond five years. Cunningham's conclusion: there are a lot of people who would like to start a business, but few of them know how.

  • In addition to knowing how to start a business it is important to understand why you are starting a business. Most people fail because they don't have big enough reasons why (to motivate them), or the wrong reasons why.

  • Some of the most common reasons people start new businesses are often misguided:

    - A new invention - but success is absolutely not just about the product
    - It seems glamorous - but the basics of business are not glamorous, in fact Cunningham describes business as "boring, boring, boring, ca-ching, ca-ching, ca-ching."
    - Have your own schedule - if you've ever started a business, you know that the opposite happens, you are in even less control of your schedule
    - Have more time - ridiculous, that's like deciding to have a baby to have more time, it doesn't work that way (read more from KC here)
    - Opportunity to be your own boss - if you take on investors, you will have a boss
    - Financial freedom - "makes no sense, we already all already have wealth right now." The problem is we compare up vs. the Bill Gates of the world and not down vs. most of the world where the average wage is $2 per day. If you make more than $30K per year, you're in the 1/10th of one percent of the most wealthy people on the planet. (Read more from KC here.)
    - Generate passive income - passive means "do nothing." You have to be present for your business; the most successful business people such as Bill Gates, Michael Dell, Warren Buffet are present for their business, in their business. (Read more from KC here.)

  • So what is it about? It is about the quality of life we want.

  • The # 1 reason people fail: we don't tell ourselves the truth about the problem. You can't change something if you don't tell yourself the truth about it. How do you know what the problem is? Cunningham suggests: the difference between what "is" and what "ought" = the problem.

    In Part 2 of this report, I'll cover the most interesting things I heard Cunningham say about the 6 big mistakes that people make in business.

    (Photo credit: keystothevault.com)

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      About this Archive

      This page is a archive of entries in the New Ventures category from May 2007.

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