In the next room, I told how a business can develop and grow with the efforts undertaken by an entrepreneur. A successful entrepreneur who can say when he can reach a stage where business thrives, for maximum profit and minimize cost and have many branches, this is physically entrepreneurs themselves. While in terms of internal nature and mental well-entrepreneur must have the characteristics of a successful entrepreneur and dare to venture into entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurship is not an easy field as expected. This field requires a variety of skills to ensure that the entrepreneur can survive in the business world. The business world is exposed to the risk of loss. If you've decided you can go bankrupt.
In this room I entered article related to entrepreneurship. I told him what entrepreneurs need to do to develop the business, obstacles to be faced by entrepreneurs in the business world and entrepreneurs benefit to society.
http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/200730
In this room I entered article related to entrepreneurship. I told him what entrepreneurs need to do to develop the business, obstacles to be faced by entrepreneurs in the business world and entrepreneurs benefit to society.
http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/200730
Common Characteristics of Successfull Entrepreneurs
Regardless of your definition of success, there are, oddly
enough, a great number of common characteristics that are shared by successful businesspeople.
You can place a check beside each characteristic that you feel that you
possess. This way, you can see how you stack up. Even if you don't have all of
these characteristics, don't fret. Most can be learned with practice and by
developing a winning attitude, especially if you set goals and apply yourself,
through strategic planning, to reach those goals in incremental and measurable
stages
1. Do what you enjoy.
What you get out of your business in the form of personal
satisfaction, financial gain, stability and enjoyment will be the sum of what
you put into your business. So if you don't enjoy what you're doing, in all
likelihood it's safe to assume that will be reflected in the success of your
business--or subsequent lack of success. In fact, if you don't enjoy what
you're doing, chances are you won't succeed.
2. Take what you do seriously.
You cannot expect to be effective and successful in business
unless you truly believe in your business and in the goods and services that
you sell. Far too many home business owners fail to take their own businesses
seriously enough, getting easily sidetracked and not staying motivated and
keeping their noses to the grindstone. They also fall prey to naysayers who
don't take them seriously because they don't work from an office building,
office park, storefront, or factory. Little do these skeptics, who rain on the
home business owner's parade, know is that the number of people working from
home, and making very good annual incomes, has grown by leaps and bounds in
recent years.
3. Plan everything.
Planning every aspect of your home business is not only a
must, but also builds habits that every home business owner should develop,
implement, and maintain. The act of business planning is so important because
it requires you to analyze each business situation, research and compile data,
and make conclusions based mainly on the facts as revealed through the
research. A business plan also serves a second function, which is having your
goals and how you will achieve them, on paper. You can use the plan that you
create both as map to take you from point A to Z and as a yardstick to measure
the success of each individual plan or segment within the plan.
4. Manage money wisely.
The lifeblood of any business enterprise is cash flow. You
need it to buy inventory, pay for services, promote and market your business,
repair and replace tools and equipment, and pay yourself so that you can
continue to work. Therefore, all home business owners must become wise money managers
to ensure that the cash keeps flowing and the bills get paid. There are two
aspects to wise money management.
The money you receive from clients in exchange for your
goods and services you provide (income)
The money you spend on inventory, supplies, wages and other
items required to keep your business operating. (expenses)
5. Ask for the sale.
A home business entrepreneur must always remember that
marketing, advertising, or promotional activities are completely worthless,
regardless of how clever, expensive, or perfectly targeted they are, unless one
simple thing is accomplished--ask for the sale. This is not to say that being a
great salesperson, advertising copywriting whiz or a public relations
specialist isn't a tremendous asset to your business. However, all of these
skills will be for naught if you do not actively ask people to buy what you are
selling.
6. Remember it's all about the customer.
Your home business is not about the products or services
that you sell. Your home business is not about the prices that you charge for
your goods and services. Your home business is not about your competition and
how to beat them. Your business is all about your customers, or clients,
period. After all, your customers are the people that will ultimately decide if
your business goes boom or bust. Everything you do in business must be customer
focused, including your policies, warranties, payment options, operating hours,
presentations, advertising and promotional campaigns and website. In addition,
you must know who your customers are inside out and upside down.
7. Become a shameless self-promoter (without becoming
obnoxious).
One of the greatest myths about personal or business success
is that eventually your business, personal abilities, products or services will
get discovered and be embraced by the masses that will beat a path to your door
to buy what you are selling. But how can this happen if no one knows who you
are, what you sell and why they should be buying?
Self-promotion is one of the most beneficial, yet most
underutilized, marketing tools that the majority of home business owners have
at their immediate disposal.
8. Project a positive business image.
You have but a passing moment to make a positive and
memorable impression on people with whom you intend to do business. Home
business owners must go out of their way and make a conscious effort to always
project the most professional business image possible. The majority of home
business owners do not have the advantage of elaborate offices or elegant store
fronts and showrooms to wow prospects and impress customers. Instead, they must
rely on imagination, creativity and attention to the smallest detail when
creating and maintaining a professional image for their home business.
9. Get to know your customers.
One of the biggest features and often the most significant
competitive edge the home based entrepreneur has over the larger competitors is
the he can offer personalized attention. Call it high - tech backlash if you
will, but customers are sick and tired of hearing that their information is
somewhere in the computer and must be retrieved, or told to push a dozen digits
to finally get to the right department only to end up with voice mail--from
which they never receive a return phone call.
The home business owner can actually answer phone calls, get
to know customers, provide personal attention and win over repeat business by
doing so. It's a researched fact that most business (80 percent) will come from
repeat customers rather than new customers. Therefore, along with trying to
draw newcomers, the more you can do to woo your regular customers, the better
off you will be in the long run and personalized attention is very much
appreciated and remembered in the modern high tech world.
10. Level the playing field with technology.
You should avoid getting overly caught up in the high-tech
world, but you should also know how to take advantage of using it. One of the
most amazing aspects of the internet is that a one or two person business
operating from a basement can have a superior website to a $50 million company,
and nobody knows the difference. Make sure you're keeping up with the high-tech
world as it suits your needs.. The best technology is that which helps you, not
that which impresses your neighbors.
11. Build a top-notch business team.
No one person can build a successful business alone. It's a
task that requires a team that is as committed as you to the business and its
success. Your business team may include family members, friends, suppliers,
business alliances, employees, sub-contractors, industry and business
associations, local government and the community. Of course the most important
team members will be your customers or clients. Any or all may have a say in
how your business will function and a stake in your business future.
12. Become known as an expert.
When you have a problem that needs to be solved, do you seek
just anyone's advice or do you seek an expert in the field to help solve your
particular problem? Obviously, you want the most accurate information and
assistance that you can get. You naturally seek an expert to help solve your
problem. You call a plumber when the hot water tank leaks, a real estate agent
when it's time to sell your home or a dentist when you have a toothache.
Therefore, it only stands to reason that the more you become known for your
expertise in your business, the more people will seek you out to tap into your
expertise, creating more selling and referral opportunities. In effect,
becoming known as an expert is another style of prospecting for new business,
just in reverse. Instead of finding new and qualified people to sell to, these
people seek you out for your expertise.
13. Create a competitive advantage.
A home business must have a clearly defined unique selling
proposition. This is nothing more than a fancy way of asking the vital
question, "Why will people choose to do business with you or purchase your
product or service instead of doing business with a competitor and buying his
product or service?" In other words, what one aspect or combination of
aspects is going to separate your business from your competition? Will it be
better service, a longer warranty, better selection, longer business hours,
more flexible payment options, lowest price, personalized service, better
customer service, better return and exchange policies or a combination of
several of these?
14. Invest in yourself.
Top entrepreneurs buy and read business and marketing books,
magazines, reports, journals, newsletters, websites and industry publications,
knowing that these resources will improve their understanding of business and
marketing functions and skills. They join business associations and clubs, and
they network with other skilled business people to learn their secrets of
success and help define their own goals and objectives. Top entrepreneurs
attend business and marketing seminars, workshops and training courses, even if
they have already mastered the subject matter of the event. They do this
because they know that education is an ongoing process. There are usually ways
to do things better, in less time, with less effort. In short, top
entrepreneurs never stop investing in the most powerful, effective and best
business and marketing tool at their immediate disposal--themselves.
15. Be accessible.
We're living in a time when we all expect our fast food
lunch at the drive-thru window to be ready in mere minutes, our dry cleaning to
be ready for pick-up on the same day, our money to be available at the cash
machine and our pizza delivered in 30 minutes or it's free. You see the pattern
developing--you must make it as easy as you can for people to do business with
you, regardless of the home business you operate.
You must remain cognizant of the fact that few people will work
hard, go out of their way, or be inconvenienced just for the privilege of
giving you their hard-earned money. The shoe is always on the other foot.
Making it easy for people to do business with you means that you must be
accessible and knowledgeable about your products and services. You must be able
to provide customers with what they want, when they want it.
16. Build a rock-solid reputation.
A good reputation is unquestionably one of the home business
owner's most tangible and marketable assets. You can't simply buy a good
reputation; it's something that you earn by honoring your promises. If you
promise to have the merchandise in the customer's hands by Wednesday, you have
no excuse not to have it there. If you offer to repair something, you need to
make good on your offer. Consistency in what you offer is the other key factor.
If you cannot come through with the same level of service (and products) for
clients on a regular basis, they have no reason to trust you . . . and without
trust, you won't have a good reputation.
17. Sell benefits.
Pushing product features is for inexperienced or wannabe
entrepreneurs. Selling the benefits associated with owning and using the
products and services you carry is what sales professionals worldwide focus on
to create buying excitement and to sell, sell more, and sell more frequently to
their customers. Your advertising, sales presentations, printed marketing
materials, product packaging, website, newsletters, trade show exhibit and
signage are vital. Every time and every medium used to communicate with your
target audience must always be selling the benefits associated with owning your
product or using your service.
18. Get involved.
Always go out of your way to get involved in the community
that supports your business. You can do this in many ways, such as pitching in
to help local charities or the food bank, becoming involved in organizing
community events, and getting involved in local politics. You can join
associations and clubs that concentrate on programs and policies designed to
improve the local community. It's a fact that people like to do business with
people they know, like and respect, and with people who do things to help them
as members of the community.
19. Grab attention.
Small-business owners cannot waste time, money and energy on
promotional activities aimed at building awareness solely through long-term,
repeated exposure. If you do, chances are you will go broke long before this
goal is accomplished. Instead, every promotional activity you engage in, must
put money back in your pocket so that you can continue to grab more attention
and grow your business.
20. Master the art of negotiations.
The ability to negotiate effectively is unquestionably a
skill that every home business owner must make every effort to master. It's
perhaps second in importance only to asking for the sale in terms of home
business musts. In business, negotiation skills are used daily. Always remember
that mastering the art of negotiation means that your skills are so finely tuned
that you can always orchestrate a win-win situation. These win-win arrangements
mean that everyone involved feels they have won, which is really the basis for
building long-term and profitable business relationships.
21. Design Your workspace for success.
Carefully plan and design your home office workspace to
ensure maximum personal performance and productivity and, if necessary, to
project professionalism for visiting clients. If at all possible, resist the
temptation to turn a corner of the living room or your bedroom into your
office. Ideally, you'll want a separate room with a door that closes to keep
business activities in and family members out, at least during prime business
and revenue generating hours of the day. A den, spare bedroom, basement or
converted garage are all ideal candidates for your new home office. If this is
not possible, you'll have to find a means of converting a room with a partition
or simply find hours to do the bulk of your work when nobody else is home.
Constant contact, follow-up, and follow-through with
customers, prospects, and business alliances should be the mantra of every home
business owner, new or established. Constant and consistent follow-up enables
you to turn prospects into customers, increase the value of each sale and
buying frequency from existing customers, and build stronger business
relationships with suppliers and your core business team. Follow-up is
especially important with your existing customer base, as the real work begins
after the sale. It's easy to sell one product or service, but it takes work to
retain customers and keep them coming back.
Next, before the successful entrepreneur he has faced many challenges to achieve success in business. Here if it was not strong entrepreneur spirit can demoralize the entrepreneur to continue to develop the business. The next article I chose was related to the obstacles faced by entrepreneurs in the business world.
Next, before the successful entrepreneur he has faced many challenges to achieve success in business. Here if it was not strong entrepreneur spirit can demoralize the entrepreneur to continue to develop the business. The next article I chose was related to the obstacles faced by entrepreneurs in the business world.
http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/243143
While many people dream of starting their own business, not
everyone takes the plunge. Meanwhile, among those who do embark on an
entrepreneurial pursuit, many face the difficult reality that 50% of new
businesses will fail within five years.
1)Client Dependence
If a single client makes up more than half of your income,
you are more of an independent contractor than a business owner. Diversifying
the client base is vital to growing a business, but it can be difficult –
especially when the client in question pays well and on time. For many small
businesses, having a client willing to pay on time for a product or service is
a godsend.
Unfortunately, this can result in a longer term handicap
because, even if you have employees and so on, you may be still acting as a
sub-contractor for a larger business. This arrangement allows the client to
avoid the risks of adding payroll in an area where the work may dry up at any
time. All of that risk is transferred from the company to you and your
employees. This can work out fine provided that your main clients have a
consistent need for your product or service. However, it is generally better
for a business to have a diversified client base to pick up the slack when any
single client quits paying.
2)Money Management
Having enough cash to cover the bills is a must for any
business, but it is also a must for every individual. Whether it is your
business or your life, one will likely emerge as a capital drain that puts
pressure on the other. In order to head off this problem, small businesses
owners must either be heavily capitalized or be able to pick up extra income to
shore up cash reserves when needed. This is why many small businesses start out
with the founders working a job and building a business simultaneously. While
this split focus can make it difficult to grow a business, running out of cash
makes growing a business impossible.
Money management becomes even more important when cash is
flowing into the business and to the owner. Although handling business
accounting and taxes may be within the capabilities of most business owners,
professional help is usually a good idea. The complexity of a business' books
go up with each client and employee, so getting an assist on the book keeping
can prevent it from becoming a reason not to expand.
3)Founder Dependence
If you get hit by a car, is your business still producing
income the next day? A business that can't operate without its founder is a
business with a deadline. Many businesses suffer from founder dependence, and
this dependence is often caused by the founder being unable to let go of
certain decisions and responsibilities as the business grows. Meeting this
challenge is easy in theory – a business owner merely has to give over more
control to their employees or partners. In practice, however, this is a big
stumbling block for founders because it usually involves compromising (at least
initially) on the quality of work being done until the person doing the work
learns the ropes.
4)Balancing Quality and Growth
Even when a business is not founder dependent, there comes a
time when the issues from growth seems to match or even outweigh the benefits.
Whether a service or a product, at some point a business must sacrifice in
order to scale – this may mean not being able to personally manage every client
relationship or not inspecting every widget.
Unfortunately, it is usually that level of personal
engagement and that attention to detail that makes a business semi-successful.
Therefore, many small business owners often find themselves tied to these
habits to the detriment of the company's growth. There is a large middle ground
between shoddy work and an unhealthy obsession with quality, so it is up to the
business owner to navigate the company's processes towards a compromise that
allows scale without hurting the brand.
5)The Bottom Line
These are challenges, but not death sentences. One of the
worst things a would-be-business owner can do is to go into a small business
without considering the challenges ahead. We've looked at some things that can
help make these challenges easier, but there is no avoiding them. An important
step in overcoming a challenge is knowing the size of that challenge. Besides,
a competitive drive is often one of the reasons people start their own business
and every challenge represents another opportunity to compete.
To become a successful entrepreneur they have to be smart and know how to manage these constraints. obstacles faced by the entrepreneurs can ripen when he can handle it.
Thirdly, in this post i want to enter the benefit of entrepreneurs to society,economic and more gain.
Entrepreneurs are frequently thought of as national assets
to be cultivated, motivated and remunerated to the greatest possible extent.
Entrepreneurs can change the way we live and work. If
successful, their innovations may improve our standard of living. In short, in
addition to creating wealth from their entrepreneurial ventures, they also
create jobs and the conditions for a prosperous society. . The
following are six reasons why entrepreneurs are important to the economy
http://www.investopedia.com/articles/personal-finance/101414/why-entrepreneurs-are-important-economy.asp
Path breaking offerings by entrepreneurs, in the form of new
goods & services, result in new employment, which can produce a cascading
effect or virtuous circle in the economy. The stimulation of related businesses
or sectors that support the new venture add to further economic development. Businesses in associated industries, like call centre
operations, network maintenance companies and hardware providers, flourished. For example Education and training institutes
nurtured a new class of IT workers offering better, high-paying jobs.
Infrastructure development organizations and even real estate companies
capitalized on this growth as workers migrated to employment hubs seeking new
improved lives.
Similarly, future development efforts in underdeveloped
countries will require robust logistics support, capital investment from
buildings to paper clips and a qualified workforce. From the highly qualified
programmer to the construction worker, the entrepreneur enables benefits across
a broad spectrum of the economy.
2) Entrepreneurs Add to National Income
Entrepreneurial ventures literally generate new wealth.
Existing businesses may remain confined to the scope of existing markets and
may hit the glass ceiling in terms of income. New and improved offerings,
products or technologies from entrepreneurs enable new markets to be developed
and new wealth created.
Additionally, the cascading effect of increased employment
and higher earnings contribute to better national income in form of higher tax
revenue and higher government spending. This revenue can be used by the
government to invest in other, struggling sectors and human capital.
Although it may make a few existing players redundant, the
government can soften the blow by redirecting surplus wealth to retrain
workers.
3) Entrepreneurs Also Create Social Change
Through their unique offerings of new goods and services,
entrepreneurs break away from tradition and indirectly support freedom by
reducing dependence on obsolete systems and technologies. Overall, this results
in an improved quality of life, greater morale and economic freedom.
For a more contemporary example, smartphones and their smart
apps have revolutionized work and play across the globe. Smartphones are not
exclusive to rich countries or rich people either. As the growth of China's
smartphone market and its smartphone industry show, technological
entrepreneurship will have profound, long lasting impacts on the entire human
race.
4)Community Development
Entrepreneurs regularly nurture entrepreneurial ventures by
other like-minded individuals. They also invest in community projects and
provide financial support to local charities. This enables further development
beyond their own ventures.
Some famous entrepreneurs, like Bill Gates, have used their
money to finance good causes, from education to public health. The qualities
that make one an entrepreneur are the same qualities that motivate
entrepreneurs to pay it forward
5) Job Creation
It’s tough to land a job, but entrepreneurs make it easier.
Entrepreneurs create jobs for themselves, but often they need more than just
their skill set and personal initiative to transform their idea to a consumer
product or service. Take Microsoft. In
1975, Bill Gates and Paul Allen started their small software company with
dreams of changing the way we use computers.
They succeeded but not without a great deal of help. Today, Microsoft
employs over 100,000 people worldwide.
Together entrepreneurial companies add even more jobs to the
economy. A 2013 report by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation found that
companies less than a year old with under 5 employees have created about 1
million jobs every year for the last three decades. Those with five to nine
employees add about half a million every year. The Kauffman Foundation is an
organization dedicated to advancing education and entrepreneurship through its
research and initiatives. The National Employment Report found in June that
businesses with fewer than 50 employees created 45% of all jobs.
For summaty in this post i want to say for became entrepreneur succesfull not easy like you think.
Entrepreneurship
puts new business ideas into practice. In doing so, it creates jobs that
facilitate personal development. With their innovative and disruptive ideas,
entrepreneurs can tackle social problems too. It’s a worthy pursuit to
consider, but if it’s not for you, see how to pass down its principles to the
next generation and enroll in How to Encourage and Teach Our Children Entrepreneurship
to see how.
Thank you because spend your time for reading my blog..


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