WHY YOUNG ENTREPRENUERS FAIL (THE AFTERMATH OF FEAR)
REASONS WHY YOUNG ENTREPRENEURS
FAIL AT START UP. (FORBES 2017)
Entrepreneurs fail for lots of reasons. Most
entrepreneurs fail, by the way, so lists that describe why they
fail should be helpful if only as mirrors entrepreneurs can hold up to their
faces.
It’s hard to be an entrepreneur for at least
10 reasons.
- Not Smart Enough
 
Not talking about IQ here. Entrepreneurial IQ (EIQ)
is about holistic understanding of situations. Many entrepreneurs understand
their idea, but not the market that will accept or reject the idea. Nor do they
understand how accidental, uncontrollable, unscheduled innovation actually
works. Or who the real competitors are. Often entrepreneurs have too little
domain depth: they literally do not know what they’re talking about (though they
often talk a good game). Many entrepreneurs fail because they’re not actually
entrepreneurs but some variation on the theme. Even worse are entrepreneurs who
believe they’re terrific at activities at which everyone else believes they’re
horrible. If an entrepreneur is incapable of seeing what everyone else sees, he
or she is blind to success.
- Not Knowing Who’s Who
 
Entrepreneurs often fail because they cannot
separate friends from enemies. They cannot identify EIQ from fluff or bluff.
They cannot find a good part-time accountant and they have no idea how to
assess the skills and experience of legal counsel. They also fail because they
cannot recognize smart loyal co-founders and employees or how to optimize their
contributions. They fail because they cannot separate dumb Angel investors from
disciplined ones. There’s a lot to know, and many entrepreneurs just don’t know
enough about the players.
- Not Finding Enough (of the Right Kind of) Funding
 
Entrepreneurs often fail because they cannot raise
the right kind of funding at the right time at the right valuation. They use
too much of their own money and way too much money from friends and family –
which becomes a distraction every time a friend or family member asks about how
the company – and their investment – is doing. Entrepreneurs fail because they
do not know how to value their company or phase investments along timelines
designed to optimize valuations. They fail to appreciate how much money it
takes to meet milestones. Or how to respect their investors who deserve
professional communications on a regular basis – especially if they plan to
keep asking them for money.
- Grandiose Expectations
 
While it’s sometimes good to believe in miracles,
it’s no way to run a start-up. Entrepreneurs who fail often do so because they
believe they will change the world and if the world doesn’t welcome their
authority, it’s the world’s fault, not theirs. Entrepreneurs fail because
they’re often self-delusional and greedy believing that they’re just a sale
away from revolutionizing an industry and becoming filthy rich.
- Horrible Soft Skills
 
Entrepreneurs often fail because they’re not
housebroken, because they speak their minds no matter how inappropriate or
inopportune the situation may be. Some entrepreneurs are famously outspoken and
controversial – we know who they are – but they generally became that way after
their first hit start-up. If an entrepreneur cannot listen, is insecure,
short-tempered and intolerant of opposing opinions, he or she will fail. The
worst entrepreneurs are the ones who cannot accept responsibility for anyone
and spend their days and nights looking for someone – anyone – to blame for
their mistakes.
- Bad Partners
 
Entrepreneurs often fail because they hang out with
the wrong people. “Wrong” here is a broad term. It includes colleagues
who agree with everything the entrepreneur says, “good guys” that others
endorse but are unfamiliar to the entrepreneur, channel partners who use the
entrepreneur to channel their own sales, legal counsel that rack up unnecessary
fees and gurus that know just about everything about anything. Good
entrepreneurs have a purpose-filter through which they pass their time: is
this partner really worth my time? Entrepreneurs who fail do not have this
filter.
- Ineffective Sales
 
Entrepreneurs often fail because they cannot sell
to the right clients at the right time for the right price. Start-up sales are
obviously fundamentally different from the sales that established companies
enjoy on an almost automatic pace. Good entrepreneurs understand all forms and
flavors of lighthouse sales processes, logo hunting, how to buy the right early
customers. Entrepreneurs who fail shortchange sales in favor of competing
activities, especially R&D.
- Market Invisibility
 
Entrepreneurs often fail because their companies
are invisible to the world because they cannot bear to spend money on marketing
and PR. This is a huge mistake that some entrepreneurs make when the money gets
tight. Polishing products and services until they shine brightly in the sunshine
is a waste of money. Smart entrepreneurs get the word out early and often via
all available media, especially digital media: if they cannot find you, they
cannot buy you.
- Pivot Paralysis
 
Entrepreneurs often fail because they cannot adapt
to unpredictable events and conditions (as if any entrepreneurial events or
conditions are predictable). All start-ups require pivots. Unsuccessful
entrepreneurs cannot pivot. Instead, they stay their own courses – even when
the entire world believes they’re severely off course and about to crash into
the side of a large mountain.
- No Sense of the Inevitable Exit
 
Entrepreneurs often fail because they cannot gauge
their ultimate exit relatively early in their journey. Call it instinct or
judgment, the range of exit outcomes begins to reveal itself once the products
and services hit the market and once the source and pace of competition
clarifies. Is the exit an IPO or an acquisition? Is it an acqui-hire or a recapitalization?
Good entrepreneurs have a sense of how an exit will occur (if one occurs at
all) within a year of their launch. Bad ones believe in miracles.


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