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Here are some tips for anyone considering launching or financing a startup:
The product may be the heart of the company, but the product no more makes a company than a heart makes a human being. There are many components to a company that all have to work together harmoniously to succeed.
The early-stage startup process is one of discovery, not step-by-step execution. Many first-time entrepreneurs believe you come up with a great product idea, then a detailed business plan, and finally hire people to execute the plan. Discovery is the starting point from which the product and business will evolve, iterate, and be refined as the concept meets the customers, the market, and the investors.
Retool and Revise
The first idea is never the final product. The worst work you will ever do is the first work you do. Press forward past the first iteration, and make use of the lessons you learn along the way.
Build Your Team
You need a team, but not just any team. You need the right team for that stage of a company's life. You wouldn't hire a college professor to teach kindergarten. For that, you need early elementary teachers. Startups also need to find the right people for the right jobs. Those people need to have the right attitude and need to be at a stage of their careers that makes them a match for a startup.
Think Like an Investor
Investing in a startup is risky. If investors wanted a moderate return, they'd invest in public companies like IBM and Coca-Cola. What entrepreneurs don't get is that, to an investor, the company is the product. Entrepreneurs need to understand the investor's perspective. Entrepreneurs create end products, but they also need to create the company. Investors buy companies, not products. For an investor, the best-case scenario is a tested, proven business with a market poised to grow rapidly.
The spirit of American business is embodied in the startup. Innovation and guts are the foundation of the startup, and those qualities also happen to be characteristic of the most successful mega-firms. Let those qualities form the dynamic of your startup. and you’ll be off to a good start.
Cynthia Kocialski has founded three high-tech companies and now is a consultant for startups. She is the author of Startup from the Ground Up.
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