Monday, May 25, 2020
12 Fails Top CEOs Overcame Before Building Their Brands - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
12 Fails Top CEOs Overcame Before Building Their Brands - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career What was your biggest fail as a new founder or CEO, and how did you overcome it to focus on building your brand and business instead? The following answers are provided by the Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC), an invite-only nonprofit organization comprised of the worlds most promising young entrepreneurs. In partnership with Citi, the YEC recently launched #StartupLab, a free virtual mentorship program that helps millions of entrepreneurs start and grow businesses via live video chats, an expert content library and email lessons. 1. Waiting to Get Big Enough One of my biggest failures was thinking we should wait until we were big enough before we start doing something. The analogy I use is a professional baseball pitcher waiting to throw an off-speed pitch until hes in the major leagues. That would be ridiculous. You have to practice doing everything you plan to do once you make it, or else youll never have the necessary skills. Phil Frost, Main Street ROI 2. Sweating the Small Stuff I focused on things that didnt matter. I stressed out about our phone system and our logo, and I ended up setting up ridiculously complicated systems. I took a step back and stripped away everything that wasnât needed. I had to get out of my own way in order to move forward. Brent Beshore, AdVentures 3. Too Much Customer Trust I trusted my customers too much. Everybody wishes that we were in a business world where you can take everybody at their word; however, we arenât. Now, I make sure that things are in writing, and I am very clear about expectations. John Hall, Digital Talent Agents 4. Good Apple, Bad Taste We hired an incredibly talented team member and let their negative energy bring down the rest of the team because they were talented. This went on for months until we finally had to part ways. In hindsight, we should have let them go after a week. Ben Wagner, LifeKraze 5. Making Too Many Assumptions Iâve made poor assumptions in the past on go-to-market strategies. As a first-time entrepreneur whoâs just getting started, you can foolishly think youâre right because an idea originated with you. Just because something is working doesnât mean youâve found the best way to do it. Overcoming this took seeing someone else do the same thing better, and seeing how to emulate that. John Berkowitz, Yodle 6. Saying Yes to Everything I was ecstatic when I closed my first client deal; unfortunately, the client wasnt paying, but I didnt care. A successful case study was all that mattered in my mind. But the client completely consumed our energy and attention because we said yes to every new feature they wanted. I overcame this failure in client-management by firing my client. It was the only way to focus on the big picture. Jay Wu, Best Drug Rehabilitation 7. Jack of All Trades, Master of None Early on, we took on projects that were outside of our core focus because we were afraid that other opportunities wouldnt come along. As it turned out, some of those projects took too much time and energy away from our main business focus and set us back by months on our core goals. Once we started focusing, our business became much more successful. Allie Siarto, Loudpixel 8. Not Listening to Those Whove Come Before You One of the biggest mistakes I made was not putting more weight on the suggestions of experienced professionals when I asked their opinions about our website, product, price, etc.. As CEO, sometimes you try to please by taking action on everyones suggestions, when you should put the most weight on the suggestion from the person who failed and learned from it thousands of times. Derek Capo, Next Step China 9. Poor Pricing Strategy With a recent venture I opted for a recurring billing structure, rather than a one time fee. It turns out this particular product didnt suit itself to that type of fee structure, so I worked the product into a new package and put a flat price on it instead. By not being afraid to change what isnt working, the product is now much more viable and successful than it was initially. Sean Ogle, Location 180, LLC 10. Hiring for Sales, Not Execution At the beginning, my responsibilities included customer service, website content, managing relationships with our manufacturer, walking to the post office and more. I focused our hiring on senior people, as I thought we needed more big ideas. The reality is that execution is paramount as a start-up. Only when we hired a junior team member did we free up time for bigger thinking and more growth. Aaron Schwartz, Modify Watches 11. Getting Too Comfortable My biggest fail was getting too comfortable with my success and holding back in areas where I needed to be more aggressive. It was easy to overcome when the competitive landscape got more challenging; it forced me to step up my game and get more creative. Charles Gaudet, Predictable Profits 12. Putting Skills Over Fit We had high turnover in our first year as we struggled to find the right people. In subsequent hiring, it has been helpful to benchmark candidatesâ against the qualifications of people in similar roles at organizations we respect. As we have grown from a team of 5 to a team of 13, it has also helped to analyze the culture within among our core team of leaders to identify people who will fit. Garrett Neiman, CollegeSpring
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