Ready Entrepreneur

How to Find an Online Business Idea…

…That Works for You!

Part 1 of 4: You are in the Internet World Now!

by Case Lane

You are looking at a world where everyone seems to be making money online. 

Even if you do not really surf social media or pay that much attention to the online world, you know other people are building financial security and having an awesome time…and you’re not. 

And you’re wondering what to do next.  Should you join in?  Are you missing the future?  After all you’re educated and have worked for years and have tons of experience, and you’re wondering why you cannot have the same success, that these overnight online wonders seem to be having.

Then you think again, and wonder about jeopardizing your education, work experience and knowledge by doing something you’ll regret online.

Do you have to be silly?  Swear and be outrageous?  Do a song and dance like those other people you see?  Or can you be serious and spread your knowledge without becoming just another one of those annoying Internet show-offs?

The Value of Online Business

You know, many of us never imagined having to figure out how to earn income online…

We did not see, and did not have to see the rise of technology as a life-altering fact.

For many it was like a fad that would pass…

I noticed this back when I worked in Hollywood, and watched the rise of digital media from physical media (you remember film and tape, right?). Over a couple of years, we were first spurred on to switch from VHS to DVDs..

…but would you believe I worked with a high-paid home entertainment executive who once said, with all sincerity,  “I don’t know why someone would want to buy a DVD.”

Maybe in hindsight, when you think about the multi-billion dollar industry that was once occupied by DVDs, you want to laugh right? This guy was making millions, seriously millions of dollars a year, running a billion-dollar division of a mega global corporation, and he honestly had no idea what was driving consumer choices.

That executive could not see the future that was right in front of his face. He probably would not be able to do the same today.

The transition from the industrial age to the tech age is already overwhelming people, including, and maybe especially, those who are educated, and well-off, and think that they and their children are already set for life.

What if they are not?  What if you are not?

In 2020, the world changed overnight. We have always lived in a world where we could not, technically, predict the future. But in 2020, the uncertainty is at a new height.

Companies are spending day and night planning for the post-pandemic world.  But they’re planning in a fog. 

What’s the new normal?

Nobody knows.

Your Opportunity Online

Given the uncertainty around us, we have to react to changes…and learn to react quickly.

In the pandemic economy, essential workers, corporate management …and online entrepreneurs continued to work. Delivering value and solutions to increasing numbers of those who want or need new services and products.

After starting ebook self-publishing while in law school, I decided the best way to learn was to do, and I became immersed in the world of online entrepreneurship and the tech tools and resources available to everyone who wants to get online.

I firmly believe that a great number of us, maybe one-quarter to one-third of the population should be independent, self-sufficient entrepreneurs taking full advantage of technology and the global marketplace to maintain and enhance our security in the global economy.

We should not be living in a world of constant instability. 

And even if there is some recognition tomorrow that the global pandemic exacerbated the gap between rich and poor, and we have to do something about it, governments and civic society are unlikely to develop long-term solutions anytime soon.

How long will lasting permanent sustainable viable change take?  Longer than you you’ve got.

You are much better off securing your place – by yourself.

Follow a Guided, Tactical Path

The online entrepreneurship opportunity is alive and thriving, the investment is low, and the demand is high, yet many do not accomplish their dream to become an online entrepreneur, or they drop out while trying.

To avoid overwhelm, and help you see through the jumble of information so that you could get your chance in the digital economy, follow a clear path that makes sense to you.

Based on my research, reading, building my business, observing developments all over the world, talking to other entrepreneurs, helping aspiring entrepreneurs, and trying all the various paths myself, I developed a framework you can use to prepare BEFORE diving in to one of the online entrepreneurship fields.

Instead of randomly thinking about whether you could be a blogger or podcaster or course creator, take the cleared path through the noise, and adopt the blueprint you could use so you would know where to start.

Focus on Value

The tech economy both thrills and scares people. 

The first post is the hardest, right?

As an online entrepreneur, remember you share value. Your work is important.  You provide knowledge, advice or even useful tips from your hobby that other people can find useful.

The first time you decide to put your words online, you may feel a little trepidation. 

This fear is normal.  The reason is the visibility and permanence that comes with posting.  In this current environment, what you say online defines you, and stays part of your legacy forever…as far as we know…

And that’s pretty scary…

So spend time to think through the content you plan to deliver before you post your message…even if you’re still worried. 

What will happen?

A variety of people are making money online for a reason.  They overcame their initial trepidation to make sure they contributed.

Entrepreneurs have the courage to move forward. 

Define Your Personal Goals

Maybe you want additional income, or maybe you are really concerned about your current paycheck or your retirement…

Maybe you want to use the incredible education, knowledge and experience you have built up, and deliver it to a world that wants and needs what you have to offer.

If you can create an online revenue stream for yourself, you have a chance to build your future security, hedge your bets against job instability, and fully participate in the online global economy…

In other words, you can set your own future…and maybe set one for your kids, friends and others too.

This is the future we all have to get moving on together.

That old world Hollywood executive did not understand how the world was changing…

But you do…

…And so do I…

Get the Right Idea

To take advantage of the online entrepreneurship opportunity to make money, be successful, and achieve lifestyle freedom…

Focus on a business idea that:

  • Reflects your interests or skills
  • Delivers over the platform where you are most comfortable
  • Helps you be the automatic leader in your niche of niches

That means…

1. Technology, and the access to the global market you get through technology are not passing fads.  You have to recognize that this is a permanent change to our economy and society.  And you have to decide if you want to fully participate, by starting an online business, and becoming a contributor.

2. If you’ve come this far, you probably recognize that becoming an online entrepreneur allows you to take the best of all worlds…

…You can highlight your professional skills

…Reach deep into your interests

…And deliver value to those who are aligned with you. 

There may be other professions that provide you with job satisfaction or financial security, but they all also likely depend on the Internet. By starting your own business online, you are setting yourself up for the future that is already here and covering all your bases.

3. When you prepare to be an online entrepreneur you increase your chance of success by focusing on exactly what you like to do, and picking the platform and tools that best fit your vision for your ideal life.

You have your opportunity to achieve your vision of Lifestyle Freedom through an Online Business – the 21st century dream life – but without Feeling Fear, Embarrassment or Imposter Syndrome.

You want to be authentic and deliver value as you see fit.

Today, right now, you are living the opportunity to have the life that you truly want.   A life on your terms where you add value that you believe in, and that makes you feel like you’re really contributing to build the world you want to see.

Becoming an entrepreneur, being your own boss and having your own business is one of the best ways to take control of your life, and to deliver to yourself your own life dream.

But you have to get started.

Why is it so important for you to move forward with entrepreneurship now?

Summary

1. Technology is our lifeline and upon it we are building the future.  So the more you know about having a life online, the better you will be.

2. Being an online entrepreneur means you develop online skills, you learn the tools and resources which now are indispensable in the work world, and you can accelerate your professional development, and improve where you want to be.

3. When you prepare to be an online entrepreneur you increase your chance of success by focusing on exactly what you like to do, and picking the platform and tools that best suit your vision.

For the next article: Click Here for Part 2 of 4: How to Prepare to

Be an Expert Online

ENJOY LIVE TEACHING?

Case Lane is delivering a FREE WEBINAR: How to Start an Online Business With An Idea You Champion!

Thursday 10 am PST via Zoom

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What is an Aspiring Entrepreneur?

The two words ‘aspiring entrepreneur’ have their roots in Latin.

Aspire comes from aspirare – ad- ‘to’ + spirare ‘breathe’.  The root of the English word ‘aspire’ is to breath.  Yet we have come to associate aspire with ambition, dreaming and hoping for an accomplishment.

The idea of being aspirational often refers to the indefinite, those with their head in the clouds.  In fact, we even say lofty heights of buildings are aspiring into the sky. 

Are You Forever Aspiring?
Image by Daniel Reche from Pixabay

A word meaning breathing, the act we need for life, has ended up as a reference to lofty dreams that can be celebrated or ignored. From a root tied to actually staying alive, we have derived a hopeful sensibility to achieve something you desire. 

The word entrepreneur, comes from the French, entreprendre which means to undertake. The Latin root is prendere, which means to take. 

Would this mean the term ‘aspiring entrepreneur’ refers to a breathing taker – or the breather who seeks to undertake?

Two Words for One Intention

A friend of mine once told me he studied Latin to avoid needing a dictionary. When you look up words, you often find the Latin root, which if you know the definition, means you can define the word.

When it comes to the concept of an aspiring entrepreneur, the Latin root appears to betray a less serious qualifier on the action-oriented French intention ‘to undertake.’

Maybe aspiration alone is not enough.

Entrepreneurs also need ambition, drive and perseverance. 

The aspiring entrepreneur who ‘undertakes’ is more likely to transform dreams into actual action. A fact which brings the term ‘aspiring entrepreneur’ full circle.

The entrepreneur part of an aspiring entrepreneur undertakes to get things done.  The aspiration part is knowing you can make it happen.  The dreaming – breathing part of the definition is the vision needed to ensure a business idea gets into the global marketplace.

An aspiring entrepreneur, who stays aspiring, is the ‘almost’ entrepreneur who has not yet found a path to business success that will work. To get beyond aspiring that entrepreneur has to keep going until the correct road is identified. 

Follow Examples

In Wild Company, Mel and Patricia Ziegler’s awesome book about building the Banana Republic stores, they knew they wanted to have a business even if they did not have a specific idea which one.  They went out looking for a business that would work for them.

The titans of the early 20th century like Rockefeller capitalized on opportunities they saw growing around them in new technologies for steel and oil.

The titans of the 21st century like Jeff Bezos used the capabilities of technology and the reach of the Internet to build new businesses.

Are You Aspiring?

An entrepreneur who has yet to create a business must decide if activities reflect: Continuous aspiring?  Searching for visible opportunities?  Or preparing to create something new?

Begin first by considering where you have been.  What makes you believe you are an entrepreneur?  If it’s the idea that you want to have your own business, that you have a product or service you believe could be of value, or you know you want an independent professional life, then you are set.  You are already in the entrepreneurial space.

If you want to be an entrepreneur for the ‘bling’, the money, house, car and publicity, but you do not have a valuable product or service attached to your vision, then you may be stuck in aspiration for some time to come.

It is much easier to pursue your dream and work on it every day, if you believe in it and you care about results and the outcome.  You have a great chance to actually have a business if your passion for your product or service is also the fuel that prompts you to put the time and money in to making the passion a business.

It is a lot harder to commit to a plan if you really just see it as a ticket to…nowhere.

Actions for Moving Beyond Aspiration

To get beyond aspiring, make a commitment to a business idea that you can move forward into a business.

Take the time to research your idea, find your niche and community.

Determine where you can add value, and the product or service needs of the community.

And put your research in to action.

Forever aspiring means never doing. 

You want to see the results of your dream not just having the dream.

An aspiring entrepreneur is the person who focuses on the hope and dream of entrepreneurship.  You can start aspiring, but must transition to actual action to be considered an entrepreneur.

Summary: To Transition to Action:

  1. Research your idea – determine who wants or needs the product or service you would like to offer
  2. Talk to people who have done it before
  3. Identify the value you can add – your niche
  4. Put your research into action

Take your vision past aspiration, and on to implementation.

Disclosure: Links to Amazon.com are affiliate links. I earn for eligible purchases at no additional cost to you.

When aspiring entrepreneurs begin investigating the options for starting an online business, the variety of options can be overwhelming. People appear to be making money as bloggers, podcasters, vloggers, teachers, and not to mention the all-encompassing ‘influencer.’

The open question is: How do people actually get set-up and become successful online?

Then there’s the terminology.  The word website is ubiquitous, but what about landing page or squeeze page? Email, direct response, digital and targeted marketing? What’s the best approach and best tools for the type of business you want to create?

3 Key Online ‘Presence’ Tools

The most common tools, that you control, for establishing your online space are: your website, landing page and email management. 

If you want to understand more about what the online tools look like, and how you can get set-up using them go to: guide.readyentrepreneur.com to get a step-by-step introduction to getting setup on your website, landing page and email management.  And there are videos there too.

Reasons for Using a Specific Tool

You can decide which tool to use based on the depth of online presence you want to have.

You do not have to have a website to have an online presence.  You can use social media to build your online presence or start a YouTube channel.  Or just have an online store through Etsy or WooCommerce.  Establishing your content on a third party brand can act as your website, but that decision has its limitations.

Ask yourself: Do you want or need a specific place where you can send your community, or do you want to be hosted on a third party’s platform.

Important Considerations

If you do not have your own space – you are subject to the other platform’s control. You would end up being dependent on Facebook’s latest rules, or design limitations on a template store or similar constraints developed by others.

The consideration around the type of online presence you want is whether or not you want to have control. 

You also have to consider how you want to scale.  With your own space, you can scale on your own terms.

The question is: Are you a renter or an owner? You can imagine the preferred approach is to own so you can grow and have the flexibility you need.

Landing page or Website?

The terms landing page or squeeze page or lead page or lead magnet, all refer to the same thing.  Your landing page is a one page website that provides information about your business, product or service, and usually prompts the viewer to do something like enter an email address to receive a product from you.

Entrepreneurs start with a landing page as a way to collect e-mail addresses or sign-people up for a webinar or another service.  This is a great way to start if you want to build your community from the beginning, and manage e-mails from the beginning.  It may also be less expensive to have only a landing page instead of a website, and starting with one page helps you get started quickly.

A website is much more in-depth because it has multiple pages, and you can target each page differently.  On the Ready Entrepreneur sites there are pages that provide foundational information about finding your confidence, time, money, value, action and lifestyle – the 6 core factors in Ready Entrepreneur. 

There are posts for the blog.  If you plan to start a blog, you would start with a website, not a landing page.

You can have integrated pages from another site.  If you select the courses page on the Ready Entrepreneur website, it takes you to the platform where my courses live, which is Teachable.

And you can collect e-mails and other information.

In general, you have more flexibility to present more ideas with a website.  All the functionality of a landing page is with a website, but not vice versa.

Collecting E-Mail Addresses 

Whether you start with a website or a landing page, you have to decide if you are going to collect e-mail addresses. 

Why do businesses ask for your email?

The top reason is they want to own a record of interested customers for continued marketing. Over time, you want your own community – that you own – by having a list of emails of people who are interested in what you do, and why you do it.

Almost everyone looks at email every day.  Even the people who use multiple email addresses to keep the marketing separate from personal or business correspond, still definitely look – because they want to see if there are any new deals or offerings that are interesting.  And they know the businesses who have their emails are the businesses they have done business with, and might want to do it again.

An aspiring entrepreneur has to make a decision about collecting emails. Many people may believe it’s an obvious decision, but it’s not as obvious as it sounds.  Once you collect a customer’s e-mail you have to protect it, and you should decide what to do with it.

If you decide to start communicating with the people on your list, you want to be able to provide them with continuously interesting information so that they will remember you, and be engaged with your e-mails. If you decide to neglect communicating, and then suddenly start up again, you may surprise people. If they’ve forgotten you, you may receive a quick unsubscribe.

Before you start collecting e-mails, think about what your plan will be for your email list.

Will you have an opening sequence, a series of emails that are scheduled to send you messages in a defined sequence?

If so then you are probably wanting to use an email management system, like ConvertKit, which is what I use (and for which I’m an affiliate).  At ConvertKit, Mail Chimp and a few other providers, you can set up your account for free. You begin to pay as you attract more subscribers and scale.

If you are not planning to do elaborate communications, or you do not want to have any upfront costs, you can manage emails in a spreadsheet.  However, you have to be careful that your system does not get out of control as your business grows.  If you are planning to do a promotional push to get people to sign-up with you, you probably want to get a paid system, and automated, system.

There are many different email management systems that are differentiated on features and price.  What you want is ease of us and flexibility.  Think about your strategy for emails.  Are you going to have different programs with different lists that need to be managed differently?  Then you definitely want a system that can help you to do that efficiently. 

The considerations are flexibility, growth management and cost.

Summary

When you are starting out as an aspiring entrepreneur, you will know doubt look at online resources and try to decide how to use them.

For each option, tactically think through each option to avoid being lost or wasting time trying to make a decision.

  • Decide what kind of online presence you want – your own controlled or hosted on another platform
  • Do you want to manage your own image and style without limitation and not be subject to someone else’s rules, or do you want to keep it simple
  • If you pick your own space – between a landing page or a website do you want to start big or small
  • If you are going to collect emails you have to decide if you want to manually or automatically manage the process
  • Manually is potentially more difficult especially as you grow.
  • Automatically will grow with you, and provide flexibility to do different approaches with different groups
  • Think through your reasons for using a particular tool before you get started.

Disclaimer: Links to Bluehost, Convert Kit and LeadPages are affiliate links which earn for eligible purchases.

by Case Lane

Entrepreneurship and entrepreneurs have a long, dynamic impact on the economy, and society in general.  If you look at the great grand inventions like electricity and automobiles and planes – you can quickly conclude that entrepreneurs are basically indispensable to progress.

Now as our society evolves and changes with technology, what is the role of entrepreneurs? 

In the documentary, Consume this Movie, they put the transition of human labor like this: when human beings first became settled around farms, they traded with each other using barter – you do something for me, I’ll do something for you and it’s even. 

When cities were formed the farmers could sell their goods – grain, fruits and vegetables to the city dwellers and buy stuff they need for the farm – equipment, tools, implements – goods for goods on an individual basis. 

When the industrial age came around, large groups of people left the farm and gave their time and their labor in exchange for money, they earned in large organized industrial enterprises which required concentrations of labor at a time so you traded – time for dollars. 

Now in the technological age, we have a new trade going on for human brainpower – information, knowledge and how-tos.  Which means entrepreneurs are among the best positioned people to take advantage of this evolution.  Because 21st century entrepreneurs like you are all about the application of knowledge, and the distribution of information.

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

Are you ready to be part of the Brainpower Age?

The brainpower required in the digital age means that instead of needing to have a certain type of body to do a job, you need to have a certain type of mind.  One that can think and produce results through your ability to analysis and act.

An entrepreneur is a brainpower person regardless of the type of product or service you are delivering to the global marketplace.  You have to figure out first where you can add value.  This requires observation, contemplation and curiosity about the opportunities around you.

As an aspiring entrepreneur, the Digital Age is a set-up that’s tailor-made for your chosen pursuit.  Since you are already that person who is looking at the world critically and looking for opportunities.  You are not just going passively go through life.  Even when you may be working at your 9-to-5 or studying in school, you are actively looking at the world, and wondering where you can make your contribution.

This constant firing of your brainpower eventually leads to a spark that creates a business that provides a solution for those who want or need your product or service offering.

The evolution of our labor force towards a more knowledge-based individual is sweeping you up from your position as an entrepreneur.  This inevitability is exciting and loaded with possibility.  The knowledge you gain building your business can translate across other enterprises.

Many entrepreneurs do not build just one business, so your brainpower skills, the successes and challenges, are continuously worthwhile in an advanced economy.

Some may believe the Brainpower Age is going to limit the majority of humans from finding productive employment because, unlike during the agrarian and industrial ages, the thinking you have to do requires analysis that people do not typically use.

Without an education system that encourages analytical thinking, many people will rise to adulthood and not be able to cope with the demands of the tech age.

The transition has already begun, but it’s important to understand, the current lapse is not a permanent state.  The education system just happens to be behind the times, eventually people will catch up.

The Tech Age is Designed for Entrepreneurs

For entrepreneurs, technology is actually designed to allow thinking people to participate in the new economy without having to code.  How often do you see new software that specifically says – no coding required.

Living in the Brainpower Age is not an untouchable reality if you are not an engineer or computer programmer.  You can take advantage of online tools by learning how to use them, or you can use online services to outsource to another individual who is willing and capable of doing the work.

In all cases, you are participating as an entrepreneur in this economy because you are thinking for yourself, and developing your contribution based on your own analysis.  What makes you part of this evolution is your ability to look at the world differently – and to act on what you see

Take Action

As Tony Robbins says – knowledge is not power, execution is power.  You have the knowledge when you see opportunity that you can develop as an entrepreneur.  But you become an entrepreneur when you execute on that knowledge and build your business. 

And you execute really well, when you use existing technology resources to make your business move forward.  You can get your landing page or website up and be doing business all over the world without being a computer programmer.  But you do have to know and understand how to use the software tools that are available.

The difference for today’s entrepreneur is you have to be willing to adapt and experiment even with established software because there are so many features available.  Microsoft Office products have been around for 35 years, which is amazing – and although there are tens of millions of people who use its core products like Word and Excel – there are probably not more than a handful, if any, who know what all the features are.

You, as an aspiring entrepreneur, take the features that are of interest to you, and adapt them to your business.  You can share documents across borders, and people do not need an explanation of how to use the features either.  Everything is just available.

In my fiction books, in the Life Online series, which take place in the near future are about global cyber threats. But the underlying societal situation involves a world where most people are docilely functioning under an omnipresent Network, and thinking people like entrepreneurs are taking advantage of technology to give themselves a better life.

You want to be using your brainpower to ensure you capture the gains of tech change and minimize the losses. 

Summary: Your Opportunity as an Entrepreneur in the Digital Age

  • We are past the time when you bartered and traded your production equally with someone else
  • We are past the time when you produced goods with your labor and sold them for goods that others produced
  • We are past the time when you traded your hours for dollars in organized industrial enterprises
  • Now is the time you can use your brain to create from your imagination, observation and analysis, a valuable product or service that you can deliver directly to those who want or need it
  • As an entrepreneur today, you are participating in the evolution of the labor force and society by being someone who is actively not only observing, but also taking action
  • You provide value through thinking and organizing knowledge in a way that people want and need to absorb it
  • And you create a community, tied to your vision and your brainpower

Links to Amazon.com are affiliate links which earn for eligible purchases, at no additional cost to you.

Offline U: The Education You Get from Not Going to College for Business

by Case Lane

Aspiring entrepreneurs have heard they do not need to go to college to obtain the information they need to run a business. There are other ways to obtain an education. But the ‘other ways’ are not always clearly defined.

The value of post-secondary education has always been in its formality.  Not only do you do through a prescribed set of courses that result in a diploma, but also the diploma is recognized because other people understand the process, and the value of the paper.

But given the cost, time and demands of a formal college education, many are opting to move forward with a business and you do not want to use formal education to help you.  Aspiring entrepreneurs want to learn in the real world, doing real business activities.

How do you succeed without the college formula?

Neither business school nor college is necessary to become an entrepreneur. Many successful entrepreneurs did not go to college, and few (as a percentage of all entrepreneurs) come out of the B-schools. 

But both business school and college are also considered outstanding opportunities. College is still the ticket to higher wages, professional careers and advancing in life.

The challenge is to determine which path fits for each individual situation.

Go ‘Offline’

An aspiring entrepreneur can obtain an education, learn the facts and concepts necessary for business outside of the formal college campus.  A self-disciplined person can pursue an ‘offline ‘course of study that will help achieve the success they’ve been looking for.

And self-discipline can be imposed if the person has some idea about what to do to achieve similar results to the formal college student.

This approach is Offline U because many courses of study are presented online, and are still formal methods of learning. 

Offline U means turning away from all structured education to learn through direct action, observation and doing.

When pursuing an ‘offline’ business education, meetings are on your terms
Image by Sebastian Šoška from Pixabay

You get the information you need from available sources, usually for free.  Following this path, you have to remember the information is not going to be presented in any particular order or context like in business school.  You are not going to be able to segregate the marketing information from the finance information.  You are going to require your own system for doing that.

So to start, you decide how you are going to organize the information you receive.

If you already have a business idea, the ‘offline’ course of study can be even more productive because questions and information gathering can take place within the context of turning your idea into a business.  The research becomes directly practical.

If you don’t have a business idea, you can use one that already exists to practice how to frame your ‘offline’ studies around a specific product or service.

Once the organizational infrastructure has been set-up for your offline education, you can implement the following practices to give yourself an Offline education that advances your business opportunities:

Read books and articles about successful entrepreneurs

The information you need about how entrepreneurs built their businesses is readily available in thousands of magazine articles and hundreds of books.  The blueprints are spelled out in black and white. 

If Sir Richard Branson were your best friend, you would read all his books to have the answers about how he built his business, not ask him to explain the story (or else he would know you had never read his books).

Reading the entrepreneur’s story allows you to understand the background how the enterprise was built.

Reading entrepreneurs’ stories also reveals one obvious and timeless fact – the most successful entrepreneurs did the work.  They worked night and day on their business enterprise, and reaped the reward. It’s as simple, and as difficult, as that.

Interview someone who is doing what you want to do

If you know anyone near you who is a successful entrepreneur, ask for an interview.  For the cost of coffee or a lunch, you may get information that is never taught in school.

To get the interview, honestly make the request from the perspective of a niche demographic that is either unique or aligned with the person’s causes or ideas. Even if you are a working professional, if you belong to any type of club or organization find a connection with the person you want to interview. 

You can also interview on behalf of the organization perhaps as a profile for their newsletter.  But make sure the request is legitimate.

Research the information other people are saying

Today you can find a lot of material about entrepreneurs and businesses, including interviews, documentaries and profiles that reveal more about how the business is run than you may have calculated.

Do a search for these resources, both positive and negative.  Give yourself time each day to spend an extra hour or two with stories that give you ideas. Take notes, and then go back and review your notes, and put them in the context of your own business idea.  

Meet like-minded people

Take a look at the meet-ups for entrepreneurs in your city or events that involve entrepreneurs.  If you’re shy, approach different people with the same prepared set of questions. For example, ask:

‘I’m curious, how’d you get started as an entrepreneur?’

‘What do you wish you knew from the beginning?’

‘What do you think was the one key to growing your business?’

People love to talk about themselves, especially if they have a willing, eager audience.  While stroking an ego, you can give yourself an entrepreneurship 101 lesson.

Go to work for an entrepreneur or organization you admire

If you want work that is meaningful, but are not quite ready with your own business, you can check the job openings at companies you admire, or with organizations you are interested in exploring. 

One caution, going to work for any company may not be as glamorous as you could hope, and you may never meet the founding entrepreneur.  In fact, the experience may even be a turn-off.  But you will learn.

All experience – work, education, going to the store – could teach you something you did not already know which could help you in your business. 

If there is a business run by someone you admire, and you think they could use someone like you, there’s no harm in applying, and earning money instead of spending it to get the information you believe you can use in your own business.

Attend conferences

Conferences will cost you some money, but the events are rapid-fire learning experiences.  Pick the conference that focuses on your business idea or industry, and use the opportunity to not only learn about the industry, but also to meet other people working in the same field. 

You might even find the connections that will feed back into interviews, meetings or employment opportunities that lead you exactly where you want to go.

In summary, to get an ‘offline’ business education outside of formal college or B-school:

  • Read books and articles about successful entrepreneurs, and learn how businesses are built
  • Interview someone who is doing what you want to do, and ask them about getting started and growing a business
  • Research the information other people have about successful entrepreneurs including through interviews, analysis, documentaries and articles, that present both positive and negative views.
  • Meet like-minded people at your local meet-ups or entrepreneurial events
  • Go to work for an entrepreneur or organization you admire
  • Attend conferences

Disclosure: links to books and physical products are Amazon affiliate links. I earn for eligible purchases at no additional cost to you.

How to Successfully Take an Online Course

by Case Lane

When researching how to become an entrepreneur, many people watch and listen to the pitches for online courses made by a variety of ‘gurus’ who claim to be able to get you to a million dollars, in ten minutes, doing nothing – if you just pay for their multi-part program.

Course are offered for everything from how to make money on Instagram to how to launch a product.  These courses often come from successful millionaires with plenty of testimonials and ideas around – their ‘proven’ system that anyone can emulate. 

And there lies the catch.  The course program often comes from the creator’s process that led to success. 

But how do you know if it will work for you?

You probably want to be a little more relaxed when you make an investment in an online course
Image by Jan Vašek from Pixabay

An online course is a shortcut. Instead of trial and error, you follow a step-by-step process that has a proven record of success. But people rarely finish the entire course, or they do finish, but are discouraged by the results. This disconnect can be avoided by understanding a few points about the process.

The Value of Online Courses

Online education in general is growing and critical to the way we function in the 21st century.  Learning from successful people who have done the work you wish to do is highly valuable. But most people can only reach those great teachers through an online course.

The course price ranges from free to thousands of dollars, with access from one-time to lifetime, and the time commitment from fifteen minutes, to months. The results are just as varied and unyielding.

Some include plenty of additional materials, some provide access to a private Facebook group, some provide coaching, some keep trying to upsell you additional modules, some are subscription based – and everything in-between. 

For an aspiring entrepreneur who wants to use an online program of study to learn how to start a business, the value for money offered by the program is important. This article covers this type of experience and intention, and covers how to evaluate a course, and use it to your advantage.

Courses provide aggregated information and save time in researching blog after blog or watching video after video about a specific subject.  Many are set-up around processes you can follow to create and launch a business based on the topic you have chosen.

When it comes to online courses that make a promise for your business – like how to build an audience, sell more product, or grow X times – it is important to consider these four factors when deciding to whether or not to move forward with the course purchase:

1. Listen carefully – Do you understand the context for the promised success?

2. Do the work – Are you prepared to do the course work?

3. Hold the course creator to the promise of the course

4. Measure your ROI – How much will you need to earn to recover the cost of the course?

Audio fans! Prefer to ‘listen’ to the content of this blog. You can check out the podcast of the same name, Episode 48 of The Ready Entrepreneur Podcast is available at Apple Podcasts, or wherever you like to listen to podcasts.

Before you start

Keeping those four points in mind, there are also common ‘technical’ factors you should consider.

Price

If you are taking the course to learn how to start a business, you will have no idea if the course will be worth the money.  Until you have seen the course, gone through the work, and applied it to your business, you will not know the benefit.

If you are buying the course because you saw a webinar or online seminar from the course creator – and that material was solid – you can have some confidence that the whole course will be good.  At that point, you can consider the money an investment in your education like the $100 grand you spent on college.

Testimonials

Course creator will inevitability use testimonials to encourage you to believe in the value of the course. Go beyond the course creator’s word for feedback on the course.  Sometimes this is difficult to find because people with buyers’ remorse are reluctant to confess they spent thousands on a course that turned out to be useless for them.  But sometimes you can find the information you’re looking for if you look at forums or Facebook groups where people are posting comments

Time

Once you make the dollar commitment, you must set aside the time to work on the material. If the buy offer is time sensitive, you have to decide quickly if you intend to keep the course. Often there are money-back guarantees, but only if you act within a certain timeframe. So make sure you are ready to work right from the day you buy. More on this below.

1. Listen carefully – Do you understand the context for the promised success?

Many how-to types of courses are based on the course creator’s own experience, which is great.  But you have to decide if that experience applies to you.  When the course creator is promising success, listen carefully for the context that the creator is telling you about especially when they give background material about how they created the process.

Is the creator an expert in the field based on work or experience?

Has the creator taught others offline, and therefore applied the process in the real world?

Did the creator have a once-in-a-lifetime event like a specific mentor who propelled the business along?

Listen for what they’re not telling you.  What part of their background story has been left out? If they seem to have gone from 0 to $1 million overnight, ask about that.  Many presentations have Q&A sessions where you can ask about the details.

Take advantage of this time, or send an immediate e-mail to the facilitator or directly to the presenter’s business e-mail. You may be told the the answer is in the course, but you have to decide if the story makes sense to you.

Does the proposed path to success fit the circumstances of your life?

2. Do the work – Are you prepared to do the course work?

Sometimes a course creator will guarantee a refund within a specific time if you can prove you did the work.  That is valid.  If you’re going to spend the money at least do the work before complaining that the process does not work.  Start from the beginning, and work through every module and exercise.

Determine the ‘extras’ you have to do to make the process work.  For example, if the course is about how to use Facebook ads that will grow your business – does it include how to write copy, select pictures and create clever headlines? Or will you have to learn that separately or figure out how to outsource the work?

As you’re watching the videos or reading the documents, pay close attention to every step that you have to do. Keep a step-by-step list of exactly which resources you will need, and estimate how long each step might take. If you’re not sure about a step, send them an e-mail and ask for clarification.

For example:

If their example has images – make a note that you will need to look for images related to your product (and that takes time).

If the recommendation is to create an e-mail list, an account will be required, so you will have to sign-up.

If they are showing you software or apps, you might want to take a separate day or two to review all your options before picking the one they show you in the video. Often the course has a discounted offer, but you may not like the features, or it may not be the best option for your business.

Keep track of all these extra steps.  Believe me when they tell you it will only take 5 minutes to do a particular step – it never does.

One way to get a good overview is to review every video once just to understand the general intent, and go back and do the work in ‘real time’ with my own business. 

If you took solid notes on the ‘extras’ you’ll be prepared, and not overwhelmed by surprises.

3. Hold the course creator to the promise of the content

A good course should absolutely provide you with a support email or process for contacting the creator or course organization.  Make sure you follow-up on any questions you have. You can send e-mails every day about the course materials.

Some creators may try and prompt you to their ‘coaching’ offering. But if you are asking questions specifically about the course materials (not your business), you should be able to get direct answers.

Especially ask questions if you followed the process to the letter, and it still did not work for you. Maybe policies have changed, or an application became super expensive, or any other reason that separates their method from your success.  Although courses can be upgraded, materials are all created in the past, and can become outdated.

These clarifications are helpful to course creators who should want to know if there are mistakes or outdated material.  Also by taking advantage of their support process by pointing out a disconnect between the material and the current marketplace, you might get an extra bit of coaching or assistance included in the price.

4. Measure your ROI – How much will you need to earn to recover the cost of the course?

Make sure you keep track of exactly how much you spend on the course, including any ‘extras,’ and therefore how much you want to get back in the form of increased revenue to your business.

If you’re just starting out and trying to learn as much as possible, you probably won’t have an ROI, but you could be saving money in the future because you are learning shortcuts that will help you in the business. 

Keep track of these ‘wins’ to decide if the course is really valuable.

If you have been doing a lot of individual research and decide to do a course – compare the process of reading blogs and watching YouTube videos to having everything in one compact place.  There are some courses that provide hints and ideas that do not appear anywhere else.

Courses are a great way to get started, gather a lot of information related to your business, and learn a path for moving forward. But you do not need to believe the promises made by the course creator.

Instead, you can methodically approach the material, and make sure it delivers to your expectations.

If you would like to ‘listen’ to this information. Check out the podcast on this subject, Episode 48 of The Ready Entrepreneur Podcast is available at Apple Podcasts, or wherever you like to listen to podcasts.

What the UN says about entrepreneurship

by Case Lane

Entrepreneurs exist in every country, region, gender, ethnicity and neighborhood. 

Even in countries facing oppression or government control, there always appears to be a go-getter who is trying to make a deal.  And at the highest levels of international multi-lateral organizations that provide ideas and guidance to governments, countries agree that entrepreneurship is vital to economies

So why is it that at the grassroots level, at our level, entrepreneurship is discouraged?  And so many people want to start a business but do not actually get started?  Why is there this conflict between the official policies of multilateral organizations you pay for, and the actions you and others take on your own?

Image by Gordon Johnson from Pixabay

Prefer to ‘listen’ to this blog. Check out the podcast of the same name: Episode 47 of The Ready Entrepreneur Podcast at Apple Podcasts, or wherever you like to listen.

The Value of Entrepreneurship

The idea is clear: “entrepreneurship is a vital component of economic growth and development.  The creation of new business entities not only generates value added, fiscal revenues, employment and innovation, but is an essential ingredient for the development of a vibrant small and medium sized business sector—the core of most competitive economies. It has the potential to contribute to specific sustainable development objectives, such as the employment of women, young people or disadvantaged groups.”

Those words appear in the Introduction to the Entrepreneurship Policy Framework and Implementation Guidance created by UNCTAD, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.  A UN organization taxpayers pay for that among other things believes in entrepreneurship, and therefore believes in you.

Part of the mandate of the various UN organizations is to develop policies that countries can implement to achieve set goals.  Effectively, they provide information about how to do the things you want to do.

You may be just starting out as an entrepreneur, and think you really don’t know if you have the skill or are the right type of person for the job. 

The Definition of an Entrepreneur

UNCTAD states an entrepreneur is an individual who identifies opportunities in the marketplace, allocates resources, and creates value. Entrepreneurship—the act of being an entrepreneur—implies the capacity and willingness to undertake conception, organization, and management of a productive new venture, accepting all attendant risks and seeking profit as a reward.

But you should realize that entrepreneurship is a core global initiative, and you are exactly the person for the job

The UNCTAD document is used to help countries develop their entrepreneurship policies.  Money and time is being spent helping every country in the world develop entrepreneurs. 

You may think you’re doing something bizarre because you’re the only person in your family who wants to run a business, or the only person among your friends.  But in reality, you are the one who is taking the initiative, and in doing so, you join million of others around the world who are doing the same thing.

The UN policy framework at its core wants to “unleash entrepreneurial capacity and facilitate start-ups.” A goal that is directly aligned with yours.

UNCTAD focuses on 6 components for what they want to do for you:

1. National entrepreneurship strategy

2. Optimize regulatory environment

3. Enhance entrepreneurship education and skills development

4. Facilitate technology exchange and innovation

5. Improve access to finance

6. Promote awareness and networking.

Numbers one and two – national strategy and regulation involve talking about government. But three through six are directly about talking to you, the aspiring entrepreneur.

Enhance entrepreneurship education and skills development

Starting at number three, your skills and education, you can begin to develop your entrepreneurial dream immediately.

The best way to start a business is to start a business.  Many aspiring entrepreneurs do not start because of concern about their knowledge and skill. But you do not know what you can do unless you go forward and try with the skills that you have.

If you have a business idea in your head, you need to do the preliminary research necessary to transform it into an active business.  You do not need to study every facet of the business until you are too worried about having the right skills to actually get it done. You need to give yourself the confidence to move forward by taking on your business building tasks.

In the introduction to the skills section UNCTAD states “Entrepreneurial skills center around attitudes (soft skills), such as persistence, networking and self-confidence; and enabling skills (hard skills), including basic start- up knowledge, business planning, financial literacy and managerial skills.”

As you strengthen your own capabilities and desire by working on your business, doing research, and discovering the resources you need to move forward, you will indirectly be building the entrepreneurial culture in your own community.  You will lead by example

Mentoring is a major part of the initiative whether through formal programs, courses or the private sector.  Many aspiring entrepreneurs are concerned about where to find a mentor, and how to get a mentor, but you do not have to find someone who will help you before you begin.

The purpose of a mentor is to help you navigate by providing knowledge you do not have. To that end, you can surround yourself with virtual mentors. You can follow people you admire online, watch YouTube videos of speeches and interviews, and read their books or articles.

You do not have to personally know all your mentors. But you do have to know what you would ask if you ever met them. 

Create your own mentors and incorporate them into your life.  As you go forward with building your business, you will meet people who are in your industry, or interested in your ideas. Those opportunities will eventually lead you to your personal mentor.

Technology exchange and innovation

Technology is absolutely critical to building a scalable global-business in the 21st century. For this factor UNCTAD states “technology provides entrepreneurs with new tools to improve the efficiency and productivity of their business, or with new platforms on which to build their ventures. In turn, entrepreneurs fuel technological innovation by developing new or improving existing products, services or processes and ensuring commercialization.”

Aspiring entrepreneurs have two parallel goals.  You want to improve your own business by using technology resources, and you want to improve technology by providing new ideas to the global marketplace.

You may be thinking of your business idea in isolation of these larger goals, but your idea might be fuel for others.  You never know what kind of impact you can have.  That’s why you just have to get started.

Access to Finance

When you are ready to scale your business, or in some cases to just get started, you may face the issue of financing.  Improving entrepreneurs’ access to financing is a key factor in the entrepreneurship policy framework for the UN.

Governments are encouraged to motivate lenders and investors to invest in the great business ideas of rising entrepreneurs.  And entrepreneurs are encouraged to prepare to meet investors’ expectations.

Many initiatives to support entrepreneurs are aimed at fostering connections with the private sector. As an aspiring entrepreneur who is looking for financing, that is where you direct your attention.

NOTE to readers: For additional ideas about finding financing for your business, check out the video How to Find Money to Start a Business on the Case Lane You Tube channel. The video is specifically focuses on how you find your own financial resources from your own funds, but also covers some of the different avenues that are open to entrepreneurs.

Promote awareness and networking

A hesitant aspiring entrepreneur needs to find an entrepreneurial culture that will support the business dream. Many aspiring entrepreneurs do not get started because there is no general atmosphere aimed at new business people.

How many of you are simply afraid of what others will say, or of doing something that is not common in the neighborhood? 

The UN wants countries to create an entrepreneurial culture.

UNCTAD says negative socio-cultural perceptions about entrepreneurship can act as significant barriers to enterprise creation and can undermine the impact of policy intervention in support of entrepreneurship.  Under the UN, all governments are ‘officially’ aware of this conflict between what they say and what they do.  And aspiring entrepreneurs should be aware of this disconnect also.

When receiving negative feedback around wanting to start a business, or being out on your own, you have to recognize that it’s a global issue that the world is trying to counteract.  You are not alone in trying to get people to understand your desire to be an entrepreneur.  But this all-too common issue has some universal solutions.

Aspiring entrepreneurs should create networks – of models, champions and references of success.  You can go where other entrepreneurs are gathered and speak to them about their experiences.  There are many similar stories of discouragement in the entrepreneurship world.  Knowing you are not alone is a step towards counteracting the unfavorable comments.

You must also improve communication. The UNCTAD framework states “A country’s (or in your case friends and families) general attitude towards entrepreneurship is a product of societal values, tolerance of risk, fear of failure, rewards of success, encouragement of creativity and experimentation and recognition of persistence.

All of these factors are important.

So-called “soft” barriers to entrepreneurship, including negative cultural perceptions, are as equally important as the “hard” barriers, and because they tend to be deeply ingrained in a society, they take time to address.

But the positive image of entrepreneurs comes from you – the aspiring entrepreneur – and the people you highlight as examples.  You can point out that entrepreneurs play an important role in addressing problems that are important to society, such as unemployment, social inequality and poverty, and by showing how entrepreneurship, including social entrepreneurship, serves as a key component of national development.

Focusing on this factor is about allowing you to be free from criticism so you can do what you most want to do.  Get your business up and running.

Using the UN’s own words as a guide, the aspiring entrepreneur can feel encouraged that the world is working on making entrepreneurial dream come true.  You are supported, and there are initiatives designed for you and people like you to become business people in the global economy. 

Knowing that these initiatives exist should help you recognize you are on the right track.

The United Nations position on entrepreneurship is important to aspiring entrepreneurs because it reflects the collective intentions of global governments. You are a participant in a worldwide movement to enhance economic development through individual businesses. But you need to get started. 

This blog is also a podcast. Check out Episode 47 of The Ready Entrepreneur Podcast at Apple Podcasts, or wherever you like to listen.

The Information Privilege

Robert Kiyosaki’s best selling book Rich Dad Poor Dad explained a reality that is rarely spoken about out loud. 

In life, some people are successful not because of demographics or wealth or education, but simply because they get great information early enough to apply it to their life choices; and other people…most in fact…do not. 

In a world built on democracy and free enterprise, there’s a belief that people operate on a leveling playing field – that the society by virtue of its success values will encourage anyone to be successful.  But in reality, success often comes to those who have the right information, and you get the right information by either having a ‘Rich Dad’ who will impart it, or by knowing where to get it.

The Real Key to Success is Having the Right Information
Image by Shahid Abdullah from Pixabay

A ‘Rich Dad’ is any human who pro-actively teaches or demonstrates how to maximize wealth and grow for success; and ‘Poor Dad’ teaches nothing, but moving along with the status quo.  So ‘Poor Dad’ leads a life of paying monthly bills, earning a salary, and scrimping and saving for retirement.

People who grow up with ‘Poor Dad’ often believe they are doing everything right, and they are, until they hit financial concerns. ‘Poor Dad’ learners are the ones who are shocked by financial crises, rising mortgage rates, equity market swings, and the interest rates on their car loans, student loans and credit card debt.

Being taught by ‘Poor Dad’ means spending on the items you believe you need like a house and car, and being worried that you cannot afford those same items when you run into financial difficulties.

With ‘Poor Dad,’ you are surviving life, and not exactly having a good time. Even the ‘Poor Dads’ who teach frugality, and end up with a couple million dollars in the bank at retirement, don’t seem to be having a good time because they have never learned how to spend money for enjoyment.

Many people who are interested in entrepreneurship and starting a business are discouraged by their ‘Poor Dads’ who preach caution and security. Entrepreneurial ideas go untested because of fear and the inability to break habits from the past.

But those same people, maybe even you, are watching ‘Rich Dad’ and trying to determine how to have a great life now

Entrepreneurs are risk takers, but it’s calculated risk based on their ability to find gaps in the consumer marketplace. ‘Rich Dads’ are focused on long term wealth creation and never having to worry about money. Rich Dad teaches to invest to earn the money to buy the items you want, including a house or a car.

Since financial education is not taught in schools, you have to be exposed to a ‘Rich Dad’ to get the information you need to be successful.

If you have an intellectual ‘Rich Dad’ consider yourself among the privileged – you will end up living better than probably everyone you know because you have been given the information you need to be successful.

But if you don’t have a ‘Rich Dad,’ and you know you are missing out on the information you need, you create that valuable mentor for yourself by absorbing and applying the lessons learned.  It’s never too late. 

If finances are leading you to delay your business plans and questionable past choices are discouraging you from moving forward, focus on getting back up.

You can make yourself information privileged as an aspiring entrepreneur by giving yourself the information you need to be successful.

Read to Wealth

Start by reading. Of course Rich Dad Poor Dad, and many other books about personal money management will give you the crucial information you did not receive when you were growing up. These are books that can help you understand how to accomplish your dreams. 

Being one step ahead of others and making life happen for you is about having information.

The Information Privilege means you know:

A) You do not have the information you need to be successful, and

B) Where to get the information

Even if the information is that you need more information, you are one step ahead of the next person who has no clue they are working themselves into a trip

Successful people rarely blindly move forward without some other piece of information that helps accelerate their business plans.

To get the information you need, and make yourself an information privileged aspiring entrepreneur:

1. You have to put yourself where information flows

2. Gather to the information

3. Use the information you get to drive the creation of other information that you can use

1. Put yourself where information flows

Attend meetups and conferences, go to college or vocational school, form a mastermind, ask a few questions at parties, offer to do activities at work that give you proximity to senior executives or leaders, volunteer in the community with accomplished people, and/or seek those with whom you most wish to align.

2. Gather the information

If you don’t like people or can’t afford to go anywhere, you must uncover and gather the information you need.  Use books. If no one ever told you, you could get the information you need from reading books, consider yourself told now, but there are also other options.

Find the information in free YouTube videos and PDFs, and free ebooks.  Sign-up for free ebook distribution sites that will send you a curated email each day or week with free books that are available in the genre you seek.

3. Use the information you get to drive the creation of other information that you can use

However you choose to get the information, use it to uncover more of what you need.  Learn at every step.  If you spend time developing your own website on WordPress, use that information to learn, for example, how people leverage websites to drive affiliate advertising.  One thing can be the base or foundation for the next.  You build layer upon layer upon layer.

You make yourself the top of the heap in your own sphere by learning and understanding the information that moves you forward as a person, an entrepreneur, and a deliverer of value for the product or service you bring to the marketplace.

Disclosure: Links to books are affiliate links to Amazon.com, and I earn from eligible purchases

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.

Read to Wealth: How to Select Books for the Road to Success

by Case Lane

You have probably read that many successful people read.  The world’s movers and shakers, billionaires and influencers read books (and magazines and newspapers).  They read to stay informed, learn practices and strategies for success, and to continuously improve their minds. 

Part of your success strategy for transitioning your life to entrepreneurship, should include reading.

But where do you start? 

There are hundreds (probably thousands) of “best book” lists that you can Google and reference.  But how do you even choose which books to read from that list? 

Okay let’s get that booklist going…

One way to start is to think first about what you want to get out of the books.  What do you want books to teach you?  You want to be reading for implementable action, things you can do to improve yourself as you build your business.

Here are five categories of books to begin with:

The Definition of an Entrepreneur:  Read biographies, autobiographies, and books about entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship to learn who entrepreneurs are, what they do and how they are formed.

Skills of Successful people:  Read personal development books to learn how to improve your success skills and yourself, so you can move more efficiently in the entrepreneurial world.

General business environment:  Read books about the business of business, the histories of specific industries and companies to learn how the broader global economy functions.

Think like a Billionaire: Read books about investing, the road to super-wealth to understand how markets work, and how entrepreneurs access private funds to fuel growth.

Life in Action:  Read fiction about successful people, business people and business-related ideas to see the big picture, and get background and inside information about how people function in a success-driven life.

Here are suggestions in each of these categories.  There are dozens of books in every category considered “the best” or “must-haves,” below are only some initial suggestions.  You can start in any order. 

If you find you would prefer to read books about your specific product or industry, of course add those ones as well.  The key is you want to understand which books to read, and why.  You want to be able to implement the learnings from the book into your lifestyle

DEFINITION OF AN ENTREPRENEUR

When you are starting out as an aspiring entrepreneur, and the only idea you have in your head the concept of starting a business, you might not be confident about what your vision will really mean. 

To develop a more specific idea of how entrepreneurs are formed and what entrepreneurs do, you can read biographies and autobiographies, and books about entrepreneurial ideas.  People often wonder: how did so-and-so get rich?  One of the best ways to find out is to read the biographies about rich people, and learn the facts for yourself.

You are looking for an in-depth accounting of the entrepreneur’s story – what were the actual steps this person took to become successful.  The best biographies tend to be those thick ones that take you back not only to the entrepreneur’s childhood, but also through his or her parents, or other significant influences.  This additional insight will help you realize the most successful entrepreneurs come from a wide variety of backgrounds, and have had an even wider variety of experiences on the road to success.

While industry and technology do change our economic landscape, the day-to-day realities of humans rarely change.  Everyone still must secure food, clothes and shelter to have a civilized life.  The actions taken by John D. Rockefeller in the 1800s – walking up and down the street to ask for a job – are still relevant today.  Despite all the online employment services, in the 21st century people still often find work by word-of-mouth.

Use biographies and autobiographies to help you understand how you can write your own story as you transition to entrepreneurship.  Look for the lessons that explain the idea of an entrepreneur.

Books in this category include: Biographies and Autobiographies

Losing My Virginity: How I Survived, Had Fun and Made a Fortune Doing Business My Way by Richard Branson

The Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr. by Ron Chernow

Shark Tales: How I Turned $1000 into a Billion Dollar Business by Barbara Corcoran

Andrew Carnegie by David Nasaw

Morgan, American Financier by Jean Strouse

Entrepreneurship:

The Four-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-to-5, Live Anywhere and Join the New Rich by Timothy Ferriss

The Little Red Book of Selling: 12.5 Principles of Sales Greatness by Jeffery Gitomer

Zero to One: Notes on Start-ups or How to Build the Future by Peter Thiel

SKILLS OF SUCCESSFUL PEOPLE

Most of us are not born ready to take on the world with our entrepreneurial ideas.  In fact, when you realize how big the personal development book market is, you realize that being an organized, attentive, polished, successful person takes information – ideas and strategies that you can learn and implement for yourself.

Successful people have a mix of skills, but they are not always the same.  If you learn some of the basic, timeless behaviors, you can use those attributes anywhere.  Personal development must be taught and practiced.  It is not enough to read the books, you also have to implement the ideas from the book.  And you must be consistent in applying the changes to your life. 

Perennial sellers like Napoleon Hill’s Think and Grow Rich have been around for decades, yet the number of people who stick to the advice is certainly not visible in today’s economy. If everyone who had bought or read Think and Grow Rich had applied all the activities, average incomes would likely be much higher.

You can be an exception.  You can use personal development books to actually make changes to the way you behave.  The advice exists (and continues to sell) because it works.  And it works because people like you make it happen.

Books in this category include: Personal Development:

Choose Yourself by James Altucher

How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie

The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey

Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill

Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman

The Power of Positive Thinking by Norman Vincent Peale

The Art of War by Sun Tzu

GLOBAL BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT

As an entrepreneur, you want to be thinking about the global economy in which you run your business.  Even if you have a small enterprise, you are affected by global economic changes in the price of oil or the value of the dollar.  Having a more knowledgeable background on these issues can help you manage your business rationally.

You can muse about inflation or trade like the average person, or you can read books that explain current economic development and trends.  These books will provide you with an insight that you can use to develop your own business.  They tend to be interesting histories giving you the information you did not know, and helping to dispel certain fallacies about business, trade and investment. 

Although these reads can often be dense, they are well worth the effort to give you a broader grounding and overview of the business world that you now occupy.

Books in this category include: Business of Business:

Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk by Peter L. Bernstein

A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World by William J. Bernstein

Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies by Jim Collins and Jerry I. Porras

Guns, Germs, Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond

In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America’s Best Run Companies by Thomas J. Peters and Robert H. Waterman

The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power by Daniel Yergin

THINK LIKE A BILLIONAIRE

As you read the biographies of entrepreneurs, you may notice a pattern – the big money, mega wealth, came from the stock market.  Either the entrepreneur became an investor or was invested in, when the company was taken public.  The real jump to billionaire wealth, comes from owning the factors of production, from owning capital.

You can begin to build your billionaire mindset by reading books about investing.  These are books that help you develop a money consciousness, to see money not just as the tool that pays the bills, but as a factor that can be transformed into changing your life for the long run.

Many people have a poor financial management and investing education.  Without these types of books, the situation would be even worse since this information is not taught in schools.  In fact, good investment advice is passed on from one generation to the next within the same family, but not transferred horizontally through a society.  This is information you are unlikely to hear. 

So your best bet for putting yourself in line to understand the business of money is through an investment in time spent learning more about how investment works in the global economy. Educate yourself before you become an investor.

Books in this category include: Investing and Financial Management:

The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing by Benjamin Graham

Security Analysis by Benjamin Graham and David L. Dodd

Rich Dad Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids about Money That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not! by Robert Kiyosaki

The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine by Michael Lewis

The Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America’s Wealthy by Thomas J. Stanley

LIFE IN ACTION

As a bonus, fiction books featuring characters in business can give you a broader overview of the world you are entering.  By reading about fiction characters, you have a sense of day-to-day life, as well as the road to wealth.

Unlike a biographer, a fiction writer can tell you everything. You get inside the character’s head, and maybe even read words that resonate with you, and your entrepreneurial vision for yourself. You may even decide to emulate the behaviors and practices of business or success-oriented fiction characters who you feel connected to through the story. 

Books in this category include: Fiction

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The High Flyer by Susan Howatch

The Financier by Theodore Dreiser

Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand

The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand

If you are starting out as an aspiring entrepreneur and looking for guidance on how to face the entrepreneurial world, start by reading.  When you set aside, 15 minutes a day to work on your business, your time can be focused on reading, your research for creating the life you really want.

Many of the classic books now have e-reader versions and you can upload copies to your phone or tablet to read when you are standing in line or commuting on public transit. 

If you have no idea where you want to start, begin with a few books.  You will likely find yourself inspired to keep going until you have your business up and running, and you can begin to live your life on your terms.

NOTE: In future blogs, I will follow-up on each of these books and provide more detail about what you may be able to learn from each (especially the fiction) as you move forward on your entrepreneurial journey.

Disclosure: book links are affiliate links to Amazon.com which if used may result in compensation to the author to help support this business and future posts