Peoplepreneurs
Regardless of your career, your career interests, your day-to-day pursuits, your life circumstances . . . regardless of how rich or poor you are, how much or little you are loved, or love, how educated or intuitive or salesy you are . . . regardless of whether you are a small business owner or manager or a government or corporate muckity-muck, and whether you’re a doctor, nurse, lawyer, accountant, grave-digger, tire-changer, astronaut, roofer, artist, teacher, or hamburger flipper:
You need to think like an entrepreneur.
You don’t need to BE an entrepreneur. In fact, most who think they are, probably are not.
Thinking like an entrepreneur translates to taking more reasonable risks.
It means recognizing the expertise you lack, accepting that, and then surrounding yourself with those who can bring those missing links to the table.
It means staying focused on making your ideas work, not on making money. As you get closer to making your ideas work, the money will simply come to you; it will appear seemingly out of nowhere. If you pursue money, your ideas will fail. This conclusion comes from a gazillion tons of experience. Need examples? Try me. Call the number below. No strings attached. I’m happy to share what I’ve learned the hard way.
Thinking like an entrepreneur is taking steps on your own behalf instead of waiting for opportunities to come to you.
Thinking like an entrepreneur requires endless testing of your ideas.
It holds out the expectation that you will fall all over yourself to delight (not just service) your every customer, and that you will constantly solicit the customer feedback you need to adjust, adapt, and adjust again.
Does it matter if your “customer” is a patient or patient family, a client, someone paying you for a service or a product, rich or poor, with three eyes or one, old or young? Of course not.
Entrepreneurs, true entrepreneurs, are passionate about everything they do, every day of the week. But they are also realistic enough to recognize when their passion outstrips the ability to make their ideas work, they will not go down with the ship!
Is this walking a thin line? Not if it’s a reasonable and realistic line to start with (in other words, you’re not “betting the farm” to get where you want to go). When something doesn’t work, you take away what you learned and start out in a new direction making the most of that experience.
Does that remind you of life? Well, how about that? So, how far away from thinking like an entrepreneur has your brain strayed?
Is it time to be a peoplepreneur?
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