So you've decided to start a business. Maybe you have
a brilliant idea, and you're trying to figure out if
it's viable or not. Or maybe you're out of work, or
just fed up with your current job, and looking for an
alternative.
Whatever the circumstances that have brought you to
this point, the first question you need to ask
yourself is, "Is owning a business right for
me?" Are you cut out for entrepreneurship? Not
everybody is. The rewards can be great, but so are the
risks. And it will change your lifestyle in ways that
you may not be prepared for. If you haven't explored
this question yet, take a few minutes to review some
of the resources in the Becoming
an Entrepreneur section.
Once you've decided to walk the entrepreneurial
path, the next question to ask yourself is, "What
type of business do I want to start?" There are,
of course, thousands of choices. Even things you might
think are out of your reach may not be. Short of
something like pharmaceuticals that requires enormous
research & development budgets, there are
virtually no limits: automobile manufacturing, food
products, import/export, and many others are open to
even the individual entrepreneur. With an infinity of
choices, how are you going to decide?
The Traditional Approach
The traditional approach to entrepreneurship is a
methodical, scientific process. Generally speaking,
the approach consists of researching the market,
identifying a need, and creating a business to fill
it. More specifically, the steps of the process are:
- Select the industry you're interested in working
in.
- Research the kinds of businesses and various
business models within that industry.
- Perform market research to see where there is an
unmet need -- geographically, pricewise,
complementary products and services, etc.
- Analyze the competition.
- Develop a preliminary business plan for a
business to meet that need.
- Do some more market research to assess the
realistic market potential for your business. Will
people buy it?
- Revise the business plan and determine your
funding requirements.
- If needed, seek out lenders or investors.
- Start the business.
Needless to say, this is not something you just knock
out in a weekend. The most obvious problem to this
approach is that it's extremely labor-intensive and
potentially expensive to even decide whether or not to
go into business. Of course, that time spent on the
front end reduces the risk of failure down the road.
The other problem is that you may very well end up
realizing far too late that you're doing something you
really don't want to be doing, just because you
figured you could make some decent money at it. Even
when you're the boss, you can still end up feeling
stuck and unfulfilled.
Do What You Love, and the Money Will Follow
In recent years, this philosophy has become
increasingly popular following the success of the book
Do
What You Love, The Money Will Follow by Marsha
Sinetar. While the approach sounds great, as career
coach Dr. Marty Nemko puts it, "Millions of
people have followed their passion and still haven't
earned enough money to even pay back their student
loans, let alone make even a bare middle-class living
doing what they love."
It's not the book's fault. In fact, it's a very
fine book that will take you through a number of
exercises to help you discover your true life purpose
and find a number of different ways in which you can
fulfill that purpose in your work. It will teach you
to distinguish the true inner voice from the
flash-in-the-pan ideas that constantly run through
your head. And maybe it will help you be one of the
few to beat the odds and pursue your dream career.
The problem is that most people don't read the book
and go through the intensive self-discovery exercises
it prescribes. And when it gets boiled down to a mere
slogan, it's more likely to become, "Do what you
love until you go broke and can't do it any
more."
Some of the common scenarios include:
- No one wants to buy it. You're passionate
about it, but apparently no one else is. You can't
sell people something they don't want to buy.
- Someone else already thought of it. You
have a great idea, but it's a niche market, and
someone's already beat you to it. And if they're
better funded, they may be doing it
better/faster/cheaper. (It happened to my first
company - a mistake I won't repeat!)
- A lot of people already thought of it.
Highly competitive markets are no fun. I don't
care how much you love the business you're in, if
you're constantly having to go head-to-head with
competitors, it will get old very quickly.
- There's more to it than you realized. You
underestimated the costs, or the development time,
or the incubation
period for the marketing to take effect, or
the amount of energy required, or the toll it
would take on your personal life.
So while pursuing your passion is an admirable goal,
doing so to the exclusion of all reason and
responsibility isn't. If you have family depending on
you for income, you have to consider that, as well.