8 Strategies to Balance Perspiration With Inspiration in Your Business Venture
Success is business requires achieving that delicate equilibrium between dreaming big and hard work.
EXPERT OPINION BY MARTIN ZWILLING, FOUNDER AND CEO, STARTUP PROFESSIONALS @STARTUPPRO
Photo: Getty Images
I’m convinced that both inspiration and perspiration are required as you start and manage your own business. Yet many people seem to be stuck on one end or other of this equation — all perspiration with no dream, or all inspiration with no reality. Success is the right balance of purpose and profit.
Often, aspiring new business owners ask me why their great idea hasn’t been done before; they talk about it endlessly, and they wait for others to do the hard work of development, finance, and marketing work for them. Those at the other extreme don’t look up from the grindstone long enough to notice whether all their work is producing sweat equity or just sweat.
You may see starting a business as fun, but it’s certainly not easy. No matter how many times you’ve done it or seen it done, the stresses are tremendous. It can also be very inspiring, as you watch your dream morph into reality, or as you feel each little element of success:
1. Watch your team develop new skills.
There is nothing more inspiring than seeing the results of your mentoring and leadership. Your learning should be the biggest inspiration of all.
2. Your solution fills a real market need.
Truly satisfied customers are a joy to every business person. Watching the orders come in, or the product moving off the shelf, is the feedback you have been looking for.
3. A business model that works.
You have figured out how to undercut your competitor’s price, and still hold your margin. Taking that first salary after a long dry spell is an inspiring moment and a great celebration with friends.
4. Love that sustainable competitive advantage.
Working on that unique design or completing the breakthrough for an innovative patent is a moment of inspiration that you will never forget, especially if it becomes your competitive edge.
5. Bask in the success as it happens.
Maybe it’s that first customer testimonial, or that first congratulations from someone you respect, or seeing your story in the newspaper. You knew all along that you could do it.
Of course, never forget those ongoing perspiration items that seem to haunt you every day:
6. Need to create intellectual property.
Incorporate, register your domain name, trademarks, and copyrights, and then patent if possible. Reserve the same names on the leading social networks and blogs.
7. Keep marketing as a top priority.
Start even before the product is ready. Word-of-mouth advertising and viral marketing cost big bucks these days, so budget for it. It takes leverage, effort, and money to get in the public eye and stay there.
8. Rein in expenses continuously.
Review every expense with a miserly hand. Do not delegate this task. Make every effort to do things in-house, rather than relying on outside services, accountants, and law firms.
Though innumerable factors are a part of every success, it’s arguable that the ratio of effort to inspiration can make the difference between just spinning your wheels, on the one hand, and ideas that never come to fruition, on the other.
Some say the internet is a metaphor for our brains. Both are networks. Maybe inspiration is feeding your brain as much information as possible and then figuring out how it connects when the time comes. Perspiration is the lubrication to keep your senses open to all the possibilities. Keep doing both.
The opinions expressed here by Inc.com columnists are their own, not those of Inc.com.
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