Ready Entrepreneur


The Real Ultimate Podcast Directories List and Service – links to over 70 sites

After millennia of using the spoken word to transmit information and understanding from one person to another, millions of enthusiastic talkers have started a podcast to move their message to the next level.

Podcasting has transformed time by creating endless spaces where a listener can hear conversations they never had access to, get training they could not otherwise afford, document advice that can change their lives, extend their entertainment options, and provide revenue opportunities by attracting a niche audience.

But finding podcasts – discovering the shows you want – is a challenge for even the most committed listener. The podcast directories are not robust search engines, and have unique approaches to organizing and delivering podcast information.

To get the most out of podcasting as a podcaster, listener or potential guest, you need to understand how to navigate the podcast directories.

What is a Podcast Directory?

A podcast directory is the list of all podcasts that are available through a podcast platform like a website or an app. Popular directories like Apple Podcasts, Spotify or Amazon Music are also the platforms where podcast listeners search for shows.

But no two directories are alike in their search capabilities, categories or listings, which means podcast discovery is a challenge. Once a podcast listener learns to navigate a specific directory, and is satisfied with the search results, they tend to stay with their selection.

Types of Podcast Directories

Podcast directories can be desktop-only, app-only or both. Some are designed simply to list all podcasts, others are aimed at specific listener groups or languages.

Podcast search capabilities typically allow searching by keyword that returns all podcasts using the keyword in the show or episode title. Some directories also incorporate tags into their search.

Directories have show pages for each podcast in their listing. Most also have links to listen to episodes. Show pages have the show description, sometimes links to the show website or RSS feed, and episode information.

How to Use a Podcast Directory

Podcasting has a few best practices, but no rules. Podcasters create show titles, episode descriptions and tags based on their own assessment of their content. Podcast directories take these terms verbatim, and return search results based on the podcast definitions. This means podcast discovery is a huge challenge.

Word-of-mouth, advertising, and popular blogs tend to drive podcast attention and listener growth. But to find the podcast in a directory, a listener has to know how the directory search works.

While initial search will be by the podcast name or a keyword, some directories also provide suggested search which displays similar programs or subjects. Suggested search recommendations also connects shows that are about similar topics, but are not using the same keywords in the title.

For Podcasters

Since listeners come from all directions, podcasters should make sure their podcast is in every directory they know. Many podcast hosting services will automatically distribute the podcast to the most popular directories, but no service distributes the program to every directory.

Podcasters should use the lists like the this website’s Real Ultimate Podcast Directory list to check for their podcast in every available directory. If the show is not listed, the podcaster should submit it for consideration.

If the show is listed, bookmark the show page for future reference.

For Guest Podcasting

Potential podcast guests use the podcast directories to find shows that are speaking about their specific subject or issue. Understanding how the directories display information and search results is critical to D-I-Y Guest Podcasting, where guests search for shows on their own, and do not pay an agency or service to find shows for them.

For potential guests, start by listing all the possible keywords that are associated with your subject. For example, if you speak about tulips, you will want to search for flowers, gardening, outdoor activity, fragrances, and other key terms.

As you understand the search results, you will be available to refine your keywords to identify the most relevant programs.

For Listeners

With the rise of podcasting, interested listeners are having to learn how to find shows that are of interest to them.

Listeners must also use keywords to find new podcasts. For example, if you are interested in entrepreneurship, you would search for words like ‘entrepreneur’ or ‘entrepreneurship,’ or phrases like ‘start an online business.’

The directory will return thousands of results, often in no particular order, and you will still have to sift through the results to find the types of shows that you are seeking.

Unfortunately for listeners, the lack of a robust search engine limits their potential to find the full scope of programming that may fit their search needs.

Dead Shows

In the list of nearly three million podcasts are every podcast that has ever been posted. But many, probably the majority are not active or have not done more than a handful of episodes. Because podcasters come and go as they please, directories do not know if a show is finished or on hiatus.

If you are just intending to listen to a podcast, you are simply checking for availability. But if you intend to do guest podcasting, you have to know if the show is active. In directories, look for the last updated episode date or timeframe, this will help you understand if the show still has new episodes.

The Best Directories for Search

The best podcast directories for search provide two levels of relevant information. On initial search by keyword, the directory returns the show name, at least part of the description, and last episode uploaded date (to confirm if still active).

On the specific show pages, you can see the full show description, episode title, episode description, and episode uploaded date, plus links to the show website, RSS feed or even email, and recommendations about similar shows.

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The Apple Podcasts show page provides the full description, plus about 3 lines from each episode description, which makes it easier to determine if the show is relevant to your search

Only a handful of directories provide this type of information, and none of them are the big platform names that most people search by default.

To find quality search results take a look at:

Listen Notes – initially free to use but after a number of searches you will be prompted to sign-up and pay

Player.fm – free to use, also has search by tags which returns all podcasts using a specific tag

Podknife – free to use, one of the only directories that flags ‘inactive’ or ‘archived’ shows on initial search

TuneIn – free to use, but accessing information requires an extra click to collapse/uncollapse each section

Know Your Directories

To successfully navigate the podcast directories, you want to first identify your goals – confirming your podcast listing, searching for listening, or guest podcasting – and then understand how the directory is going to return results.

As you use the different options, you will decide which one best suits your purposes and will become your go-to directory in the future.

Podcasters! Confirm Your Show is Available in all Directories…click here to Get the Real Ultimate Podcast Directory List and Service today!

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Author’s note: This blog by the same author is also available on https://podcastgueststar.com/

The Unavoidable Two-Income Individual You Will Have to Become

by Case Lane

In a world where labor has disappeared, the stock market is swelling portfolios for the invested, and post-pandemic contemplation has led to a reckoning with one’s life choices, it’s hard to imagine that the average person will have any difficulty living comfortably for the rest of their lives.

But they will…

Underneath the seemingly empowered labor market movements, there is no booming economy, no sense of unrelenting optimism or hopeful joy. But there is a level of fear.

Fear of not having enough money for a successful middle class life, let alone colleges, retirement homes, and the occasional vacation.

As every price for every good and service creeps up, and spending money precipitously falls down, the average person begins to look around and sense that they had best do something soon…meaning, right now.

And that something is…get a second income stream…preferably something online.

Imagine Your Income Coming through Your Computer Screen

The Lure of Entrepreneurship

Even without any looming threat of economic collapse, the average person looks with envy at the Internet millionaires who are living the Instagram lifestyle without seemingly lifting a finger.

There is no shortage of gurus telling you: how to make a million dollars in ten minutes doing nothing, and an equally jaded community of those who have tried, and not succeeded, in following their instructions. But undaunted, they complain and move on to the next one.

There is also another group of side hustlers, as they have come to be known – teachers, nurses, mechanics, technicians, everyone and anyone – who spend their evenings and weekends, teaching art, coding, or reviewing products, for strangers who are waiting to hear from them.

Each hustler is caught up in their own dream…the opportunity at lifestyle freedom. Even though every successful entrepreneur will tell you there is no freedom in being responsible for a business enterprise, and all that could go wrong – the dreamers cling to the idea that on the other side of being your own boss is having your own bounty, and with it, all the choices that will lead to your happiness.

Entrepreneurship is considered the road to that freedom. And with the advent of the Internet, the road has become an increasingly more crowded, no guardrail freeway.

The Support of Technology

Technology and connectivity have given almost everyone the opportunity to start a business from their smartphone, earn income from their thoughts and photos, and build private communities of thousands of followers who are willing buyers of products and services aimed at crushing their own most pressing problems.

Every day thousands of people all over the world pour online to deliver value to the millions who are asking questions, and looking for answers in social media, search and stores. 

Many aspiring entrepreneurs will give up on their quest, but those who don’t will eventually succeed at something – likely not the idea they started with – but something will start making them money online.

Then they will have their own story to tell about ‘making a million dollars in ten minutes doing nothing,’ and the cycle will begin again.

The Unhappy Economy

For those who walked away from entrepreneurship, there will remain a brutally intense pull that forces them to reconcile with their decision every day.

You can’t win, if you don’t play. And you’ll never get out of a job you don’t like, if you don’t make a move to leave.

But to leave…you’re going to need financial support.

The opportunity to have a successful comfortable life comes at a cost. And you won’t be able to pay it, if you don’t have the money.  And maybe you’ll get part of the money from your 9-to-5 job, but where will you get the bump you need to really start enjoying yourself?

At the moment, you live in an unhappy economy.  People have jobs and money, but it’s not enough to get over the hurdles to true contentment.

The Other Side-Effect of the Pandemic

During the pandemic, this gap was made glaringly real. Some people actually enjoyed lockdown. They live in beautiful homes full of all the amenities, every household member had a comfortable private place to work or study, delivery trucks pulled up all day with their orders, and when they wanted a break, they even went off on vacations and extended stays to Caribbean islands that stayed open.

For many, seeing those people (yes, you can view it all on Instagram) opened up a realization that they did not have the kind of money that would have made for a cozy lockdown. In fact, they had to be afraid for their job, their industry, and the future of their community.

When things began to bounce back, with employment and choices for all, they realized just how unhappy they were in their current situation. And how quickly it could be worse.

The Bounceback Will Not Be Cheap

The fact is, most people are holding on to a precarious wedge of comfort that could crack at any time. You can see this in their general unhappiness with their lot in life.

They simply do not have enough money, to do everything they want to do, for themselves and their family.

And as prices rise, especially for housing, their window to make a change gets narrower and narrower.

Coming soon to a neighborhood near you are house prices that start at a million dollars for what we used to call a bungalow; food prices that demand a premium to be considered healthy; travel prices starting with gasoline that reflect the need to keep moving; clothing, entertainment and dining out – the malls – building their comeback on healthy price jumps; and healthcare, education and retirement living, directly tying quality and safety to upper echelon prices.

The average person is going to realize that to have a full life with all the amenities, they will have to have more money…a lot more.

Getting an extra job is an option, there are plenty around, but that’s time spent commuting and networking that they won’t get back.

The other option, one that screams out from the Internet is to start something online.

The Online Options

How do people make money online:

  • Sell a product
  • Sell a service
  • Sell ads on a website
  • Sell ads on a podcast
  • Sell ads on videos
  • Get paid by sponsors
  • Sell someone else’s product or service

The mechanics are straightforward: Get your product or service in front of the right audience, and convince them you have what they need.

But the results vary widely.

Success has but one common attribute…the entrepreneur is delivering value to those who want or need it.  The value can be anything from cat videos to coding instructions, but the key is it’s valuable to someone. 

And the more people who receive it, the more money the entrepreneur makes.

To become an online entrepreneur, you must understand the problems people want solved, and solve them.

Identify Problems to Solve

For an aspiring entrepreneur, the best outcome for a business idea happens when the target customer’s problem aligns with one the entrepreneur has already solved, usually for themselves, and are ready to help instruct others on how to do it. 

But you can also earn online income by having an interest in an area where others need the information, and have no time to get it. If you are willing to put in the time, and do the work, you are one step ahead of the members of your eventual paying community.

You can also be a middle-person between someone who has already solved the problem, and people you know want to find out about it. For example, there are plenty of travel sites offering guidance to destinations all over the world, and they have ads on their pages, probably making some money just for giving their opinions.

More robust offerings may go deep into a subject like dieting or healthcare, and amass a following by providing practical advice that cannot be found elsewhere.

And others still simply test and promote products, but do it with a commitment to content – posting text, images and videos every day, sometimes multiple times a day, to a growing audience that comes to rely on their advice.

You don’t have to invent the product yourself, there are plenty of sellers looking for affiliates.  But you do have to be in the position where the ‘eyeballs’ fall, and either be selling the product directly from that point, or benefiting from advertisers who want to get to the audience you build by providing great content.

If you are looking at online business, you can be any one of these people. Start where you have an ‘in’ and can get some money flowing immediately and build from there. In Napoleon Hill’s great classic, Think and Grow Rich, he counseled readers to find personal services people need, that’s one thing people will always pay for.

Start somewhere…

Look at Google and Amazon search trends. People are literally making requests all day long, looking for information, products and services to fulfill a need.

Ask around.  Look around. The possibilities are endless.

The idea that ‘everything has been done’ is over-ridden every day by the fact that new businesses are always succeeding, and new ideas emerge every minute.

Why You Need Two-Incomes

The impact of the pandemic has already started. With millions of women staying out of the workforce to care for children, or elderly, there is a need for every person to earn more. 

And an online business provides the perfect opportunity.

Plus, once you know what to do in the online arena where you choose to play, you can do it over and over again.

Your other consideration is simply the cost-of-living.  After the housing crash in 2008, the prediction was people would not risk their income on sprawling homes in the suburbs again, but instead would revitalize the less expensive inner city.  And for a minute that was true.

The 21st Century List of Costs

But now after the pandemic, it’s back to the suburbs…and even further. If you no longer have to commute, you want to be in the most comfortable space, and apparently that means, far away from everyone else.

Demand will drive rising home prices, and the amount someone has to pay will increase, or they will not find a place. That will be the reality.

You’ll want to upgrade your car to electric, upsource your food to local and home-grown, change your child’s schooling to private tutors, and have personalized medical care.

And after seeing the suffering of retirees in group homes during the pandemic, another wave of concern swept those who will not have enough to live safely on their own as they age. Up goes the price of elder care, and the demand of those who want it to be safe, comfortable and healthy.

When you go to travel, you’ll be competing with the new wealthy and rising middle class of countries from Estonia to Chile to Tanzania and back again. Everyone wants to see the Mona Lisa, and you will have to get in line. And let’s not forget the places that are threatening to close to idle travelers, you’ll need more money to see Venice, Machu Pichu or the islands of Belize.

Every aspect of the American Dream has already begun to fade away. 

Rethink How to Get Your American Dream

The picket fence house in the suburbs…unaffordable…

College…unaffordable without debt…

Solid wage job with benefits…maybe independent contractor on your own…

Retirement…a stressful strain without a cushion.

Yet, the last clinging hope remains to the ideal of a middle class, where tens of millions live a comfortable life.

But the definition of ‘comfortable’ will be changed to mean ‘managed’ as a certain taxpayer-assisted core of the workforce gets by on subsidies and credits designed to keep them afloat.

Another core will accelerate forward to adventures unknown, properties unseen, and generational wealth everlasting.

The ‘middle’ will only remain independent, self-sufficient and comfortable, if each individual generates two incomes – typically one from the public workspace and the other from an online venture – and continues to do so throughout their working lives.

Decide On Your Next Action

Turn now to develop your second income stream from an online platform, or hope against hope that the swarming tide does not catch you going the wrong way.

The window to benefit from the available technology tools and open global marketplace is right now. And the need to begin the process is acute.

The two-income individual will be a fact of life, not a burden, but an opportunity to ensure that you are on the wealth side of the income gap, and benefiting not only from the revenue you are earning, but the value you are delivering to those who were just waiting for you to put your talent to work to help them.

Disclosure: Links to books and products are affiliate links that earn for eligible purchases at no additional cost to you.

Are MBA subjects Important for an Entrepreneur?

by Case Lane

Does the traditional MBA business school curriculum, help you to become an entrepreneur? 

The expectation is you will spend two years attending classes, interacting with professors, and learning from books.  You will not be creating your own business and being your own boss

However, if you read the life stories of the most successful entrepreneurs, the short answer about business school is almost certainly, is ‘no.’   The formal education will not help you become an entrepreneur. 

But the long answer is different story.  In the long run, the information taught at business school is almost certainly going to be important to entrepreneur.  Knowledge about accounting, finance, marketing and the other disciplines will have to be acquired or you will have to pay other people to look after the details for you.

The question to ask is whether it worth the two years and the expense to get that information yourself through the classroom?

Do you picture yourself among students when thinking about your business?
picture credit: Stocksnap at Pixabay

Alternatives to B-school

Even if MBA subjects are important to entrepreneurs, the information taught in B-school is not exclusive to the walls of your preferred campus.  You can go online, take one off courses in specific subjects, hire someone to teach you, do an internship or paid work with a specialist or ignore the details.  This article will focus on the choice for a two-year full-time MBA program at an established business school, or anything else. 

Considerations

  • How do you prefer to consume and understand information education?  Scroll online or formally sit in a classroom?
  • Do you want the back-to-school experience?
  • Do you want to work, in management, for a big corporation, investment bank, consulting firm, or technology company – even for a couple of years?
  • Do you immediately want to work for yourself?

NOTE:  The author’s MBA is from the Anderson School at UCLA.  In reviewing the core curriculum classes for two-year, full-time MBA students, the author also looked at the universities of Chicago, Harvard, Stanford, and the Wharton School.

Purpose of MBA

The Master of Business Administration degree is one of the flashy pedigrees of the educated.  If you said to someone, “I was in a room full of MBAs,” the person will know what you mean.  A room full of MBAs means professionally dressed, polished, number-crunching thinkers.  People who will work 80 or 120 hours a week for hundreds of thousands of dollars and lots of perks.

In general, the MBA degree is the calling card of professionally trained business managers.  The degree provides foundational business knowledge that allows a graduate to talk the talk.  And the talking is done with recruiters.

Recruiters

The MBA program is for recruiters – people who work for companies who are looking for skilled managers, and want to know that the people they are interviewing have some grounding in the core subjects a typical businessperson should learn.  Recruiters need people who can be trained as managers within a corporate structure. 

Therefore, a graduate must know the difference between assets and liabilities.  Companies do not want to spend money teaching potential managers the basics.

The Entrepreneur’s Dilemma

MBA subjects are important to entrepreneurs in the context where the entrepreneur must also know the difference between assets and liabilities.  But many entrepreneurs wait until they have sufficient assets to protect, and hopefully not to many liabilities to pay off, before wondering how they can learn more.

Therefore, an entrepreneur needs to understand these issues before there is any chance of being ‘ripped off.’  The criteria for deciding when to acquire non-expert knowledge is before you are in a position to be ripped off.

If you decide to pursue the MBA to learn the basics of business, what are the subjects you will learn?

Types of Courses

To begin, there are basically three types of courses, the standards, the some-form-bound-to-haves, and the rare.  Different schools may call these courses by different names, but the content is usually the same or similar at each school.   Also the assumption in all cases is that the entrepreneur’s proposed business is not based in a core MBA subject.  If it is, learnings beyond the MBA may be necessary.

Standard

A first-year MBA is almost guaranteed to have a core curriculum that includes courses in accounting, economics, finance and marketing. 

An entrepreneur will almost certainly want to know about accounting and marketing, and probably about economics and finance too.

Accounting

Basic accounting is the discipline of keeping track of your money, balancing your books and knowing the situation for your revenues and expenses.  Accounting is a crucial skill for people in business.  It is also a formal profession and a business can outsource its accounting work.

But an entrepreneur will need to understand the information the accountant is presenting.  As the head of your a business, the founding entrepreneur or CEO is ultimately responsible for the numbers.  The business can find a trusted accountant, but must take ultimate responsibility.  At some point as an entrepreneur with an ongoing business concern, you will want to have a general understanding of accounting.

Economics

The discipline of studying the economy is a subject for entrepreneurs who want to understand the larger economic issues of the day.  If you intend to frequently watch CNBC, and understand and interpret the discussions, economic terms and concepts are the foundation required for this type of conversation.

An entrepreneur may decide to take an interest in economics as a matter of general business interest.  If the business operates in the global economy as a global corporation, the head of the company should understand how economics issues may affect business.

However, when an entrepreneur is getting started or in the early years of business, the subject of economics may not be of interest, except the field of behavioral economics, the discipline covering how humans (and therefore your potential consumers) behave in the marketplace.

Finance

Many people view finance as stocks and bonds, but as the world came to understand in 2008, financial companies create and use many different complicated financial instruments.  These instruments are created by mathematicians or physicists and other geniuses who are crunching numbers in search of value in the marketplace.

For an entrepreneur who may one day contemplate an initial public offering (IPO) or become an investor, the information in finance class may be especially valuable.  But at the beginning of the business, years before a IPO, the intricacies of financial minutia will not be valuable. 

Marketing

With the exception of unique high demand products or services, or a specific dedicated super-niche customer bases, most entrepreneurs want or need instruction in marketing. Marketing gets your product or service in front of customers.  And the MBA-level course will teach the traditional tricks and concepts for accomplishing this goal.  Successful entrepreneurs today still refer to classic marketing gurus like David Oglivy as the standard to follow for creating marketing campaigns.  The student learns how to analyze company campaigns, slogans, jingles and customer targeting.  But the lessons tend to focus on corporate marketing. 

An entrepreneur building a business today will almost certainly look at tools like social media and direct e-mail marketing.  These still new and rapidly growing fields may not yet be covered in traditional business school classes.  One common complaint about university is around their inability to keep up with the times.  Online advertising strategies and developments may not yet be fully integrated into the curriculum.  And even if it is, the information may be outdated before school starts.

Some Form

The core curriculum also contains some form of subjects with names like Human management, Operations management, Personal Skills, statistics and strategy.

MBA subjects are important for entrepreneurs if these types of corporate business skills, which are rarely needed when starting a business, become critical as the business grows.

Human management – Organizational Behavior/Human Resources

Courses that can be called organizational behavior or human resources or human resource management are about managing people.  This is a critical and important skills which, as we often learn in the news, is not given the respect deserved by corporate management. 

This subject teaches processes, structures and ideas around managing people.  As a business grows, some of these structures will be legally required, but may be implemented by skilled professionals trained in the field.  But when an entrepreneur is starting there is typically no reason to hire these expensive resources, unless the business has a specific reason begins as a corporate entity with employees.

Operations – Operations/Technology/Information Management

Courses with names like operations management, technology or information management have a similar approach as the human management courses, with one crucial exception, operations skills will be required earlier than human resource skills.  An entrepreneur is likely to be put in place systems to run a business from day one.  If the business owner understands how to develop and setup these systems, the efficient approach will save time in the long run.

Determining how to run the business is an early introduction into learning how to think like a businessperson.  Operations processes look at the inputs and outputs, time constraints and productivity issues.  If an entrepreneur understands which components need to be assessed, then she will also want to understand how to get established.

Deciding how to run the business often takes different permutations, trial and error, and the application of technologies.  As an entrepreneur becomes more experienced, the processes become more functional.  But filling in the operational processes after the business is successful can create a bottleneck to future growth.  Knowing how to move forward early, can prevent future disruptions.

Personal Skill – Communications/Inter-Personal Skills/Leadership/Ethics

The MBA courses dedicated to personal skills such as communication, leadership and ethics, are among the most useful.  Personal skills are as valid for solopreneurs, as for the CEO of a Global 500 corporation.  However, many executives do not develop these skills or forget how to put the knowledge into place once they arrive at a company.

An entrepreneur will want to figure out how to learn these skills at some point on the entrepreneurial journey.  But personal development is probably the easiest of the skills to develop outside of school.  Organizations such as Toastmasters have been training managers on speaking techniques for years.  And books about communication and leadership are often bestsellers that can be used to learn the foundations of the ideas and why they’re important. 

Statistics – Data, Decision-making

A statistics-related course is often in the core because businesspeople need to know how to analyze numbers and make decisions from those numbers.  Data has become even more critical with the rise of online usage and the accumulation of data in the background of search activities.  Even a solopreneur, will want to keep track of business activities by analyzing statistics that tell a story.

But the formal statistics training in B-school may go far beyond the information you need to run your business operation.  Online courses that split this field up into manageable sub-topics may be more effective.

Strategy

Business strategy is MBA-speak for: what is the company doing and how are they going to do it.  Strategy is the core activity of the highest-paid executives, and the top subject of their meetings and decisions.  In business school, strategy focuses on big corporations and how they make or fail to make changes to reflect realities.

Is this your future business meeting?
picture credit: rawpixel at pixabay

An entrepreneur starting out will likely make adjustments on the fly.  Strategy adjusts constantly as new processes are learned and the statistics reveal new opportunities.  Entrepreneurs decide every day how they want to run the business.  Strategy is a core activity for a rising entrepreneur, but the corporate strategy class may be too much too soon.

Rarely Core

Often outside the core, but part of electives for second year are two glamour subjects for prospective business school students, entrepreneurship and international business.

Entrepreneurship

Many schools offer courses in entrepreneurship – both the study and the practice of the field.  Some programs have start-a-business project may be available for credit.  When assessing business schools, an aspiring entrepreneur should look for the option to finish the first year core classes then focus on entrepreneurship oriented classes or starting a business in the second year.

The programs that actually offer practical opportunities to start a business, not just theory, will be more effective.  If an entrepreneur can get the best of both worlds, work through mandatory classes in first year, and spend the entire second year on a business, the entire process may be rewarding, especially if the business is up and running by graduation. 

Also, aspiring entrepreneurs should carefully review the mentoring or guidance offered by the programs.  Check for professors who are really going to support practice over theory, and strong links to the entrepreneurship network of the community.

International

The other missing piece that’s rarely in the core program is global or international business.  Yet many aspiring entrepreneurs are interested in how they can participate in the global economy.  Some programs will weave international case studies into the other core courses, but rarely is there a focus just on global business.  In this day and age, most rising entrepreneurs need a grounding in trade policy and international business issues to operate in the global economy.

So what is the value of doing an MBA if you want to be an entrepreneur? 

The Decision

Before deciding if MBA subjects are important, an aspiring entrepreneur should take a second look at the considerations for business school.  What are your answers to these questions?

  • How do you prefer to consume and understand information education?  Scroll online or formally sit in a classroom?
  • Do you want the back-to-school experience?
  • Do you want to work, in management, for a big corporation, investment bank, consulting firm, or technology company – even for a couple of years?
  • Do you immediately want to work for yourself?

Some future entrepreneurs are discouraged by their lack of training and skill, and believe business school is required before getting started – but that’s not how it works.  Many people also start with no knowledge and run into trouble later when their business is making money.  In all cases, experience is the skill that often makes a difference, and just getting started with the business is the only way to move forward.

Others prefer to hedge their bets and do both.  That’s a viable option if you can find a program that supports your entrepreneurial dreams.  You have to decide based on the of your decision against the benefits or drawbacks you may receive from paying to obtain skills you believe you need.

Popularity vs Excellence: The Hollywood Version

This blog sidebar is background on my position for the issue of popularity vs excellence as it applies only to the Academy’s decision to create the ‘Popularity’ Oscar.  The opening paragraph of this sidebar reads the same as the original blog.

On September 5, 2018, the Academy rescinded its decision to award a ‘popular’ Oscar.  So this post is now dated but still applicable to the overall message.

As a former Hollywood executive, I was inspired to use the decision to create a ‘Popularity’ Oscar as an example of the decision rising entrepreneurs face when positioning their business in the market.  I also consider this story another example of how we need to be a aware that technology is changing our world, and react appropriately.  

Excellence vs. Acceptance:  The Hollywood Version

The Academy has given in.

Read More

Prepare to Pitch Investors in under Five Minutes: Tips for Rising Entrepreneurs

Are you ready to pitch your business idea in under one minute?

You have one minute. One minute to convince someone with money to give you money for your business. Have you prepared?

Rising Entrepreneurs have an opportunity to directly pitch angel investors and venture capitalists at events like the Funding Post Investor Roundtables held all over the country.  Here are some tips to make sure you arrive prepared and give your business an opportunity to get funded.

Want the FREE Pitch Investors in under 5 Minutes Cheatsheet  CLICK HERE 

 

Attending a recent Funding Post Investor Roundtable and listening to about thirty pitches, it was clear some people had prepared, maybe some people had not or maybe some were just a little nervous.

In all cases, the opportunity was presented and available to anyone who wanted to get a business idea in front of potentially interested investors (for a fee).  Entrepreneurs signed-up to pitch for either one minute or five minutes, followed by questions from the investor panel. Watching the event and speaking to both investors and entrepreneurs, here are the key tips for entrepreneurs who want to try this next.

If you have one minute:

  1. Show Them the Money!

Every entrepreneur must be able to explain how the business will make money. Funders are investing in enterprises that will bring returns, fundamentally the return on their investment. Without quickly stating exactly how this will be possible, you could lose the investors’ interest.

 

  1. Explain the Problem you are Solving

Successful entrepreneurs find gaps in the marketplace. Consumers are searching for solutions to help them with their problems. You must be able to make it clear to investors how you are filling a gap.

Even if you are creating a new version of an existing product, you must be able to explain how your vision is solving the gap created within the existing marketplace. Make the gap and the solution clear.

 

  1. Highlight why you are the person to solve the problem

Investors may quickly recognize the business opportunity, but since they don’t know you, you have to convince them you are the best person to solve the marketplace issue. Like most people, investors want confidence around their decision based on the information you are providing.

How did you come up with the idea? Who are you working with? Do you have advisors or mentors on your team?

You can convince them your business is ready to take control of your market, because you have the ability to exploit your advantage.

 

  1. Clearly state the name of the company

Seriously, pronounce this one word or phrase, the name of the company, clearly for future recognition.  At least investors can remember you by that name. If they hear a great pitch, but not the name of the company, you make it harder to follow-up or find you in the program, and you will miss a great opportunity.

All this in one minute?

Yes, you can make these points in under one minute, but you have to practice. Put yourself in the investors’ shoes, would you invest in you after your pitch?  If you have doubts about how you sound, imagine how the investors feel.

Here’s how to prepare to pitch to investors:

Create your response to points 1 – 4. Write out and organize your points first, without thinking about time.

Read the answers aloud. Does your response make sense? Have you stated how you will make money, the problem you will solve and why you can solve it? If yes, you have the fundamental information together, now work on getting those details under one minute.

Time your response. Use the timer on your smartphone. Turn it on as you read your response, how long is it taking?

Based on the time, edit, edit and edit again.  Cut out extraneous words. Tighten long phrases. Use everyday language. Make the message short and concise.

Keep editing until you are under one minute. You’d be surprised how much time 60 seconds really gives you. Keep re-writing until you get this right. You will get cut-off if you go over one minute so leave the extra details out of the story.

 

If you have five minutes, all of the above plus:

The five minute presentations featured more detailed explanations of the business, and slide decks to support the information.

  1. Prepare a solid slide deck

Assume the investors are going to ask you for your pitch deck. You want to incorporate all the information from points 1 to 4, plus the details behind all those points.

But stick to clear, concise details that people can understand. If you have a technical solution and want to attract a certain type of investor, you can tailor your deck to that language. For everyone else, make your points clear and straight-forward.

Include your contact information. Do not miss a chance to put your name, company name, website, phone number, e-mail, social media sites – all this information should be in your deck. You do not have to mention it, but make sure it’s there for investors to find later.

 

  1. Speak to your audience, not to the screen

You are pitching to the investors in front of you, not to the screen behind you. You should know the information in your deck and not need to read off the screen to make your pitch. You do not have to read the slides verbatim. Speak to each point on the slides. But address the investors directly.

 

Questions from Investors

 Whether you pitch for one minute or five, you may get a question from an investor, any question.

At a minimum, you must be able to answer the following questions about your business:

How your business makes money

How much money you are asking for

Why you want money at this time

Your credentials and those of your advisors and mentors

Technical details related to anything you said in the presentation

Answer as many questions as you can.  If you absolutely do not know the answer, ask the investor if you can follow-up. This is a great way to ensure ongoing contact with someone who has expressed some interest in your idea.

 

Questions from entrepreneurs:

Does it matter how I’m dressed?

No one mentioned the entrepreneurs’ look as a factor. You are doing the presenting, so dress how you are comfortable. It’s only one minute so the information you deliver is more valuable than your personal look.

What if I’m shy?

Put on the investors’ shoes. You have asked for their valuable time and you want money for your business. You have to be able to speak about your business. If you are terrified, you may have another person make the presentation, but investors want to hear from founders so at least be in the audience for follow-up questions or one-on-one contact.

Summary

As an entrepreneur, you want the opportunity to speak directly to investors so you can raise money for your business.

Practice your pitch to investors. You may end up attending dozens of events before you receive one dollar. Look at those presentations as an opportunity. You want the practice. You want to be able to clearly state what your business can do. You want to hear the types of questions investors will ask. And you want the exposure to as many investors as possible. So keep attending events and practicing your pitch.

Know your audience. Read the program and have an idea who will be listening to your presentation. Watch for investors who have an interest in your field or industry. Even if they do not ask you a question during the event, you can follow-up afterwards, or offer to send more detailed information.

If you’re serious about taking your business to the next level and want to reach out to investors to participate in your world-beating idea, make sure you are prepared to let them know how ready you are to work with them.

You have a great opportunity to bring your idea directly to the people who have the money to fund it, take advantage of every second you get.   Good luck!

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