Entrepreneurship Tips
Scale Sooner and Perform Better - An interview with Go Solo
Posted by Robert Norton on
Scale Sooner and Perform Better - AirTight Management An interview with Go Solo This interview speaks to what I want to talk about most in newer articles, which is scaling and targeting companies that have some product market fit and are ready to begin growing. What's your business, and who are your customers?We help businesses with 5 to 200 employees scale their business by installing all the systems needed for strategy, management, metrics, process improvement, budgeting, and human capital. Tell us about yourselfAs a serial entrepreneur for 14 years, I built and sold four different companies, returning 25x ROI to...
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- Tags: Business Tips, Founder
What are the most common starting mistakes made by the founders?
Posted by Robert Norton on
Prepare for years in advance by study and experience in management, leadership and smaller companies. Read 2–4 books per month. Always be learning. Now, you can build a tiny house alone, but building a significant company requires a team without about 20 different skills that no one person possesses. Many think they can build a skyscraper alone, even without capital! Dumb. A formula for disaster and why 85% of new companies fail. It takes tremendous commitment and perseverance and is always a rollercoaster ride. Almost never a straight, predictable, linear process. Here are some great educational sources I have created...
Is it the VC that proposes the amount for the pre-seed startup?
Posted by Robert Norton on
No good investors would want to invest in a company where the CEO did not have their head around the capital needed. A financial projections and plan is required to even get a meeting with most investors. That said, there can always be some back and forth negotiations. A VC might want to put more money in to scale faster. A CEO wants minimum dilution and to get the valuation up by achieving key milestones like MVP, traction, team building and quantification of customer acquisition costs. All of these reduce risk and hence increase the share and valuation price. Click...
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- Tags: Financing, Pre-Startup
Should I join a company as a Founder?
Posted by Robert Norton on
If you have to ask this question, you are likely not passionate enough or ready in other ways to do this. The commitment to any startup is likely five or more years. And long working hours that can easily be sixty-to-eighty-hour weeks at times. As a result, you need to know for certain you would both enjoy the work and are qualified to do the job offered. You also need to do your due diligence to understand the company’s team, finances and chances of success. About 85% of startups will fail. Just a fact. Asking about a specific company is...
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- Tags: Co-Founder, Founder
When is the right time to get adviser/board of directors for a startup?
Posted by Robert Norton on
Firstly, these are two very different things. A BOA is usually a domain expert while a BOD member may bring skills like finance, sales, operation, scaling, marketing or other expertise. Too many boards are dominated by investors who only know finance. The right time to start is yesterday. Usually as soon as you are clear on the mission of the company, which allows you to build out the skills you need on your team. It takes time and patience to develop a BOA member. Few want any formal connection until some value has been built, as the risk is so...
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- Tags: Business Tips, Co-Founder, Management