Five Most Common New Business Mistakes and How to
Fix Them
by Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D.
Q. Some time ago, I put up a website for my new business and I haven't
attracted a single customer! Coaches have suggested optimizing for
search engines, promoting myself through live events, branding and
banishing negative thoughts. I'm feeling dizzy.
A. When you're spending time, money and energy with
no results, you're probably making at least one of these five common
mistakes. Here's now to get back on track.
Mistake #1. Assuming a market exists for
every business idea.
The Fix: Before spending more money, be
sure you've identified customers with an ability and a willingness
to buy. Choose a market that not only loves your idea, but also can
afford to buy your service. And go for low-hanging fruit: a market
that values your service and expects to pay for it.
Mistake #2: Focusing on a narrow slice of
marketing.
The Fix: Consultants can resemble the fable
of the ten blind men and the elephant. Web designers will encourage
a website makeover. Copywriters will critique your choice of words.
Think strategy first, specialists second.
Mistake #3: Tossing all your marketing budget
into one basket
The Fix: Spend frugally (but professionally)
while building your customer base. Want to host a catered party with
live music and catered refreshments? Test your market with low-cost
panel discussions, free content articles and speeches to community
groups. Want a brilliant website? Start with a simple calling card,
minus the flash. Spend big bucks after you've learned what works.
Mistake #4: Listening to cheerleaders and
wet blankets.
The Fix: Learn to ignore advice to "just
dive in" before you've learned to swim. And run from those who
warn, "You'll probably go under" before you step into the
pool. Create your own support team of experts who can give you a balanced,
realistic perspective.
By arming yourself with information, you can not
only survive but also thrive in your new venture. And confidence comes
from information combined with experiences of small but significant
success.
Mistake #5: Saying, "If this doesn't
work, I can always get a job."
The Fix: Operate from a position of strength.
Get an interim source of income before money gets tight. Your old
job will be different, even after six months. And after six months
of testing the business waters, your old job will seem different.
You may not be able to go home again.
Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D., is an author, speaker and career/business consultant.
"Stop pounding on closed doors and let your next career find
you."
http://www.cathygoodwin.com/attract.html
"Ten secrets of mastering a major life change"
mailto:subscribe@cathygoodwin.com
Contact: mailto:cathy@cathygoodwin.com,
505-534-4294
|